San Diego|News|
Morning Report: Big Questions About San Diego Seditious Language Law Remain
The San Diego Police Department, once it was called out, said it would immediately stop enforcing the law.
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The San Diego Police Department, once it was called out, said it would immediately stop enforcing the law.
The reason for pride and hope seems to keep dimming each time our leaders are faced with an actual decision on police reform.
Even if the measure is removed from the books, plenty of questions remain about how police wielded the law.
Enrollment at La Jolla Elementary is down 20 percent with only 496 currently enrolled.
Parents who believe education officials are bringing children back into classrooms too slowly are opting out of traditional public schools.
Investors in the city’s controversial 101 Ash St. lease-to-own deal are demanding to be paid.
SANDAG will hire another law firm to determine whether there was anything illegal found in the audit.
SANDAG’s board of directors is scheduled during a special meeting Friday to discuss an audit into the agency’s hiring and firing practices.
The San Diego County Board of Supervisors and Mayor Kevin Faulconer made their support for Prop. 20 official.
A school board member said one silver lining to distance learning was that more students could access prestigious AP classes online.
Students with special needs and some elementary students are returning to classrooms as early as this month across North County.
San Diego may be placed into tighter restrictions, after Gov. Newsom rejected a request to exclude San Diego University's Covid-19 cases.
Youth athletics largely remained banned under state rules aimed at preventing the spread of the virus.
Residents should know by next Tuesday if San Diego County will be forced to shutter most indoor business again.
Oceanside was set to consider only internal candidates to replace its outgoing police chief, without holding community forums.
Water customers in Imperial Beach and Coronado were at risk of a suspect pricing mechanism.
"The city is overlooking the Mission Valley aquifer water as a resource."
Research has proven gang injunctions harmful to families, communities, the individual and eventually society.
An objective and thorough analysis would have produced a much more limited scope of work recommendation and a dramatically lower cost.