Wednesday, October 25, 2023

10/25/23 City Council meeting open thread

Please use the comments to record your observations.

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Captain Keno’s redevelopment

Union-Tribune:
Captain Keno’s Restaurant, an aging local landmark on North Coast Highway 101 in Encinitas, can be transformed into a “mixed use” development of condominiums and commercial spaces, the Planning Commission decided Thursday.

The commission voted 4-0, with Commissioner Steve Dalton absent, to approve design review and coastal development permits, as well as a project map. A City Council hearing is not required.

This is one of those “bittersweet” moments in Leucadia history, Commission Chairman Kevin Doyle said as he recalled how he felt when he first heard about the development plans several years ago.

Friday, October 20, 2023

Woke city council out of touch with residents' concerns

Coast News letter:
With the city’s recently adopted focus on a “Diversity Equity Inclusion” legislative agenda, initiated by the former mayor and recommended by the Encinitas Equity Committee, also established by the last mayor, the city is walking down a precarious path out of synch with running a city of 63,000 residents. Legislative priorities relating to the appointment of individuals of certain races and genders to the new Public Health and Safety Commission is a case in point and would make Martin Luther King Jr. shiver.

Conducting an “Equity in Housing Survey” that prematurely prescribes solutions before the survey results are final is another questionable DEI priority and city expense. Surrendering to “state housing law” and faulty RHNA numbers? Sending letters of support in favor of transgender mutilation surgeries for minors or letters supporting full-term abortion? All of this is worrisome. Voters must ask if any of these are the priorities and values of Encinitas residents, and why we are involving our city in divisive, partisan, national political agendas.

Why is the city not focusing instead on legislative support letters favoring prioritizing “local control”? Why is the city not sending letters in support of prioritizing public safety legislation, policing and law and order, youth and economic development? What about letters supporting infrastructure investment and improvements, better roadway mobility and safer routes to school, beach sand replenishment and coastal environmental protections, or legislation allowing us to get the homeless off our streets? This is the real work of cities, councils and staff.

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

10/18/23 City Council meeting open thread

Please use the comments to record your observations.