San Diego|News|
Morning Report: School Quarantine Protocols Are Almost Unintelligible
Classroom challenges are reminiscent of the previous school year, and the city will pay $3 million to the family of Fridoon Nehad.

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Classroom challenges are reminiscent of the previous school year, and the city will pay $3 million to the family of Fridoon Nehad.

The Housing Commission scandal now turns to its CEO as a broker alleges commission staff knew and approved of controversial investment.
The case drives home the impacts of the city attorney's decision to hand over responsibility of prosecuting infraction cases to police.
The priorities and bills to watch look an awful lot like the priorities and bills to watch at this time last year.
This week on the VOSD Podcast, hosts Scott Lewis, Sara Libby and Andrew Keatts go through the San Diego Sheriff Department's crazy week.
A tossed out case against a homeless man and the U.S., California and San Diego County have grown more diverse in the past decade.
The broker says San Diego Housing Commission officials knew he had invested in the company that sold one of the hotels.
Three Housing Commission members said, “Either it’s false, or the board was not informed of key facts.”
Regional planners outlining the future of transportation in San Diego are acknowledging which highway and transit projects aren’t happening.
Some 19 freeway projects are not part of the plan and the city’s Office of Homeland Security relaunches Office of Emergency Services.
Kevin Faulconer’s recent pledge to protect single-family zoning is also at odds with his own administration’s take on his approach.
If someone is shot in Mexico, odds are the gun came from the United States.
One of the women harassed by a Cal State University San Marcos professor said she decided to speak publicly about her ordeal.
A harassed student speaks out, Kevin Faulconer disavows some YIMBY properties and mayor of Coronado challenges Rep. Scott Peters.
Early in the pandemic, most jail bookings for misdemeanor offenses ground to a halt. Some policies have since shifted.
The Sheriff’s Department refuses to clarify which offenses make someone eligible to be booked in jail and their fentanyl claim is bizarre.
The city of San Diego is not allowing employees to opt out of vaccines by submitting to weekly testing.
This week the hosts discuss the city of San Diego’s mandate that all employees get vaccinated — with no testing alternative.
Almost none of the high-profile politicians who recently endorsed Kelly Martinez for sheriff wanted to talk about the decision. But one did.
Some Republican leaders have decided new surges are tolerable and do not require a robust response to quell.