VOLUME 20 ISSUE 1
January 2019 Follow us on Facebook and Twitter sdcnn.com
Columbia • Core/Civic • Cortez Hill • East Village • Gaslamp/Horton Plaza • Little Italy • Marina
OPINION P. 6
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SAN DIEGO DOWNTOWN NEWS
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1/9/12
Port of San Diego’s growing diversity
A vision for San Diego
Local attorney earns prestigious award Albert H. Fulcher | Editor
TOWN VOICES P. 9
‘Thar she blows!’ Rich history of Downtown’s oldest standing structure
An adult humpback whale, along with her calf come up for air while feeding off the coast of San Diego (Photo by Albert H. Fulcher)
Whale watching with Next Level Sailing NEWS P. 11
Albert H. Fulcher | Editor With a slight off-ocean breeze, we glided through San Diego Bay, leaving the beautiful landscape of behind us. The morning crisp air brushed across our faces as the sun began warming our backs. Mists broke over the bow, bringing the fresh smell of salt water as the undulate ocean beckoned the boat as it reached the open water. Slowly heading through a fair-to-middlin’ marine layer, the air cleared, and the quest had begun. On this day, the short voyage the crew
Business for Good recognizes San Diego’s best
DINING P. 14
accommodated me as a quest and approximately 25 people who were visually impaired, many getting the first tastes, feel and sounds that sailing in open water provides. It wasn’t long before we heard the first breach and the words we all had been waiting for: “Thar she blows!” It was like a step back in time aboard 19th century yacht America in full sail. As we neared the pod of humpback whales, Captain Troy Sears, cut the engine and the America drifted in circles as we watched these magnificent animals, some
The largest commercial inventory of whiskey in the world?
see Sailing, pg 3
Index Politics
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Opinion
6
Puzzles
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Calendar
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By Vince Meehan Father Joe’s Villages, in partnership with Chelsea Investment Corporation, announced plans to create 273 affordable homes by building a mixed-use residential tower Downtown at the corner of 13th Avenue and Broadway. These units are intended to house low- to moderate-income families, including people who have experienced, or are at risk of, homelessness. Deacon Jim Vargas, president and CEO of Father Joe’s Villages, said this is a major step in a program called the “Turning the Key” initiative
see Father Joe’s, pg 3
In 1980, Paul E. Robinson became senior partner for Hecht Solberg Robinson Goldberg & Bagley, a practice that emphasizes land use, environmental and government law. Recently, Robinson was honored as the 2019 San Diego Land Use and Zoning Law Lawyer of the Year by Best Lawyers in America. This is not the first time Robinson has been recognized with the esteemed award — he received the honor both in 2014 and 2016 as well.
with calves, as they fed in open water, apparently oblivious or uncaring whether we watched or not. When they ate, the hump of the whale’s back would breach high above the water line and as it disappeared, its large fluke pulled out of the water pointing to the sky as we watched it slowly withdraw into the ocean. Everyone aboard watched and listened from all sides for the next whale to appear, never knowing where they would breach again after an average
Affordable housing tower planned for Downtown
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The 14-story high-rise is designed by local award-winning architectural firm Joseph Wong Design Associates to create 273 affordable homes building a mixed used residential tower in Downtown. (Courtesy photo)
Paul E. Robinson was honored as the 2019 San Diego Land Use and Zoning Law Lawyer of the Year by Best Lawyers in America. (Courtesy of Hecht Solberg Robinson Goldberg & Bagley)
Robinson represents developers with the permits and entitlements that are necessary for them to develop their properties and represents San Diego’s redevelopment growth with his years of experience in negotiating with and appearing before all public agencies with land-use jurisdiction. “It’s a very specific area, land use and planning,” Robinson said. “When I was in law school, a long-time real estate attorney came to speak to us and told us that there was one area in real estate that very few people practice in and it is the land-use field. So I decided that that was going to be me.”
see Paul Robinson, pg 7