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Check your drink
A really important story - glad to hear victims and bars' staff are working together. Whatever happened afterward, the people who were drugged were first assaulted by being poisoned. It compounds the embarrassment of victims when 'care providers' act like it was the victims' fault. Please report the doctor and any other sneering staff to both the California state medical board and the hospital administration. There are laws to protect victims from this kind of maltreatment and to make sure that authorities know when there's a string of attacks.— October 9, 2018 6:09 p.m.
monaghan: This whole "debate" is -- you should pardon the ex...
The Museum of Contemporary Art's Kettner St. location remains open and is featuring works of San Diego and Tijuana artists in an installation opening Sept. 20th, BTW. And the Venturi Pergola and Garden at the La Jolla Historical Society is set to open officially on Sept. 15th.— August 30, 2018 1:38 a.m.
monaghan: This whole "debate" is -- you should pardon the ex...
The Museum of Contemporary Art's Kettner St. location remains open and is featuring works of 22 San Diego and Tijuana artists in an installation opening Sept. 20th.— August 30, 2018 1:35 a.m.
Trapped in Scripps Ranch
Your linked article describes the very limitations to the current approach. As ever, Streetsblog wants the government to turn to and subsidize the free market (Uber and Lyft) to solve those problems without recognizing that the free market is how the problems were created. There are restrictions on who the patchwork of services will transport, including the JFS program you mention. They transport seniors who are ambulatory, so forget about bringing the grandkids. They also require a week's notice. Others transport only people with specific disabilities and illnesses - not mixed groups. A blind 40 year old with a mom who is a senior might be able to strike a deal outside those restrictions, but not reliably. Many rely on volunteers and their personal vehicles, so whether or not they can transport someone in a wheelchair comes down to the volunteers' vehicles. All those services are incredibly valuable and clearly needed, but can accurately be described as a patchwork. Keep in mind that there are 1,100 households in Scripps Ranch alone (not including North Miramar Ranch) that have incomes of less than $40,000, and 4,500 people who are 60 or older - with 2,300 over the age of 70. They've spent a lifetime paying taxes for services too. The county's highly promoted 'Aging in Place' is supposed to be a positive choice, not a trap.— August 16, 2018 11:53 a.m.
Trapped in Scripps Ranch
So anyone who unexpectedly becomes disabled should be forced by circumstance to move out of their home?— August 15, 2018 11:45 a.m.
Angry PB residents don’t like mayor’s plan
That's my understanding too - and I'm hearing there will be fewer restrictions in Mission Beach tho that may be a negotiating ploy. The sorting I did on the earlier story was by zip code by necessity. So there's some blurring of neighborhoods. MB has long had a ton of second home/vacation rentals there, even before AirBNB.— July 5, 2018 7:41 p.m.
Angry PB residents don’t like mayor’s plan
Here's the Coats proposals, keep in mind it's early in the negotiations. http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/photos/2018/j…— June 29, 2018 4:35 p.m.
Too close to Rancho Santa Fe
I found those criminal cases too, but for publication, well, it just hurts his family and further angers him. I did reveal his last name to his neighbors for the first time and the rest you can find by Googling. Think about what this guy is doing: trotting out his wife and kids like props, convincing himself he's being persecuted by the neighbors and the law; and best of all, buying and selling used medical equipment.— May 24, 2018 10:22 p.m.
Out-of-town money cascades into supervisor race
I am drowning in huge colorful mailings about Mr. Fletcher. Fletcher bad, Fletcher good and so on. Where's the money coming from? is my first question. Thanks for telling my why my mail carrier is out with an injury and I'm not getting my supermarket fliers.— May 24, 2018 4:54 p.m.
One million dollar houses atop San Pasqual Valley
· Paragraphs Eight & Eleven: The emergency access roads will be built to accommodate two-way traffic during emergencies to help provide efficient evacuations and improve emergency access into the San Pasqual Valley. · Paragraph Twelve: Safari Highlands Ranch will contribute $7.8 million dollars to local schools, which will create windfall capital for campus improvements and programming. It should be noted it is an environment of severe declining school enrollment, not overcrowding, within every district near the project. Since the project will not increase enrollment at the San Pasqual Union School and the project will contribute approximately $3 million in capital to just this K-8 school, it is not reasonable to suggest that Safari Highlands Ranch will not mitigate impacts to the school, nor has any school official said or implied this.— May 23, 2018 10:56 a.m.