San Diego|News|
Morning Report: MTS Board To Decide Who Will Lead Agency Through Crisis
Plus: A civic core in pieces, what’s in the Mayor’s budget and the VOSD Podcast recaps the latest news from the Nathan Fletcher.

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Plus: A civic core in pieces, what’s in the Mayor’s budget and the VOSD Podcast recaps the latest news from the Nathan Fletcher.

Another case, filed in 2018, by the same lawyer alleged retaliation by the agency. MTS settled that case for $200,000.
Plus: Proposed homeless camp crackdown faces lots of questions and the summer could be wetter than normal.
San Diego Unified’s board approved a contract to recruit applicants for all six area superintendent positions and leadership roles.
Plus: Hiring of new County Executive on hold, committee to review homeless camp crackdown and the latest installment of the Learning Curve.
City-backed shelters are moving fewer unhoused clients into permanent homes amid a tough housing market and a decrease in housing resources.
The Board of Supervisors officially extended Helen Robbins-Meyer's employment another 180 days.
Plus: Fletcher isn’t out – yet and Biden Administration gives users of endangered Colorado River three options.
There’s almost too much chisme this week. Here’s what you need to know about the scandals and shake-ups across the region.
A wet winter season means water managers in the West aren’t as worried about short-term fixes to overuse on the important river resource.
Plus: More calls on Fletcher to resign and the Colorado River needed all that heavy rain and snow.
For a year, a single father of a San Diego Unified student struggled to find after-school care for his son.
Plus: The latest Politics Report digs into the conversations raging in San Diego politics and the cost of not having after-school care.
Plus: The first major political decision facing the region in the Fletcher aftermath and City deploys wash stations, but not restrooms.
City Manager Brad Raulston is going on administrative leave for ‘personal reasons.’ His contract with the city expires in May 2024.
The San Diego Housing Commission is considering new shelter and outreach programs.
Jesus Cardenas departed his City Hall post earlier this week in the wake of a scandal over his ongoing political consulting work.
A sobering center in Oceanside closed just two years after opening its doors. Limitations imposed by the city may have led to its downfall.
The scandal has quickly engulfed dozens of other people around him.
Plus: Tijuana is literally crumbling and a point on Inspiration Point.