San Diego, CA
Water batteries could soon power 130,000 homes in San Diego at night time

At evening, when solar energy is unavailable, operators would open a valve releasing the power of 8 million tons of water and driving generators able to producing 500 megawatts of electrical energy for as much as eight hours, sufficient to energy 130,000 properties.
“It is a water battery!” Neena Kuzmich, Deputy Director of Engineering for the water authority, advised NPR. A sort of battery that’s set to be extra frequent as vitality programs change to renewables.
Throughout the day, particularly in warmth waves, California has a lot solar energy out there that the grid can’t take all of it. Over the past warmth wave, grid operators turned away greater than 2000 megawatt hours of electrical energy. This was wasted electrical energy that would not be saved for evening use the place it was wanted most.
“We now have an issue if we will have these steady warmth waves,” Kuzmich says. “We’d like a facility to retailer vitality in order that we need not flip off our home equipment.”
The expertise that San Diego needs to put in is named pumped hydro vitality storage, and some of those have been constructed over the previous 30 years within the US. Now, there’s renewed curiosity in them.
“Simply up to now a number of years, 92 new initiatives have come into the event pipeline,” advised NPR Malcolm Woolf, president, and CEO of the Nationwide Hydropower Affiliation. Nevertheless, most of them are simply within the planning phases.
Qualifying for tax credit
Fortunately, the local weather invoice President Biden signed in August ensures they now qualify for a similar 30 % tax credit score from which photo voltaic and wind initiatives profit. “That’s an absolute game-changer,” Woolf says. “A lot of these initiatives which were within the pipeline for numerous years now instantly are an entire lot extra bankable.”

San Diego, CA
Children stepped in to help wake people up after private jet crash, neighbor says

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San Diego, CA
Barbara Mathews – San Diego Union-Tribune

Barbara Mathews
OBITUARY
Barbara Mathews, 97, passed away peacefully on March 26, 2025, in Poway, California.
She was born on November 11, 1927, in Pennsylvania and was raised in the Amish community. She later attended business college and worked for many years as a secretary.
Barbara married her beloved husband, Dale Mathews, who preceded her in death. She was a happy mother of two children, Mark and Scott Mathews, and a proud grandmother to Christina Gaskill and Vyctorya Mathews.
She loved baking, church, and had a deep faith in God. She was a talented seamstress and active in the arts and crafts community, known for her sharp mind, wit, and beautiful handmade creations.
She will be deeply missed by her family and all who knew her.
A private service will be held on Saturday, May 31st at 10:00 AM at Mt. Olive Lutheran Church in Poway, CA.
San Diego, CA
Homeowners suing city of San Diego over trash collection fee

Five local homeowners are suing the city of San Diego and six city council members over the city’s proposed trash collection fee, which they allege is unlawful because the fee exceeds the costs of providing trash services.
The lawsuit filed in San Diego Superior Court this week states that with the passage of Measure B — which ended free trash pickup services for single-family homeowners — the city has proposed a nearly $48 monthly fee that should be based on the cost of services, but is instead “based on projections and speculation.”
The residents are asking a judge to block the fee by arguing it violates Proposition 218, a state ballot measure that holds utility fees cannot exceed the costs of providing those services. The city council voted last month to advance the fee proposal to a public hearing, which is scheduled for June 9 and could result in its final approval.
The mayor’s office did not respond to a request for comment and the City Attorney’s Office declined comment on pending litigation, as is customary.
Michael Aguirre, one of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs, said the residents are willing to pay fees if they are closer to what was expected upon Measure B’s passage.
“With this lawsuit, we are attempting to draw a line in the sand,” Aguirre said. “Homeowners are happy to pay their fair share for picking up and collecting solid waste and recycling. But what they’re not going to allow is for the city to impose a tax.”
The complaint states that per a consultant hired by the city, the projected cost of services is nearly $149 million, while solid waste collection costs the year prior were around $89 million. The lawsuit alleges those costs were based on “guess estimates” and the consultant acknowledged in its cost- of-service study that its projections could widely differ from the actual results.
According to the lawsuit, the city was unable to identify all 222,500 city property taxpayers, but Aguirre said those residents should be surveyed in order to determine what level of trash service they want and then calculate an appropriate fee.
“Instead of enrolling the trash collection customers and then allowing the customers to select their level of solid waste collection service, the mayor and most of the city council have arbitrarily decided to impose a tax instead of an actual cost-of-service,” the complaint states.
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