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Great news about the Courthouse!
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I met DeMaio. What a tool.
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can someone point me in the right direction? I am looking for some historical information on the issue of moving Lindbergh Field out of Downtown. Any voting issues, proposals, comments by affluent people (law makers, planners, architects, etc) about keeping it there or moving it out? I am putting together a paper for school and need some data, ideally the paper will eventually and hopefully make it to the desk of someone in charge. Please help.
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Its very easy to badmouth the investments that they city has made that boost jobs, property values and redevelopment, but the elephant in the room are the pensions that our union-owned council have put us in hock for. |
wtf
I just found out about the 422 overlay of the 760... sounds stupid...i think it would have better to have north county have its own area code instead of an overlay they share with like the entire southeast of the state... |
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I just wonder how the rest of the 760 thinks about the overlay lol.
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Writing an essay for my urban design class and need a little input...
"What has prevented the development of compact, sustainable cities from 1945 to today? What are the most important steps, in your opinion, in addressing these issues in the future, and what lessons does history provide?" Seems easy but I need 10 pages from this... :( |
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The correct answer is that the consumer didnt want compact living at that time in our history. The GI's returning from the war were offered VA home loans and the development of the freeway system encouraged developers to build massive suburbs on cheap available land that surrounded most cities. |
thanks :)
also, what building is going up on the east side of broadway? its roughly broadway and 14th st or something, northside of broadway, to the east of the police station |
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Hey I was reading a bit on the history of Miramar and came across something that made my jaw hit the laptop and I thought, "WTF!"
Here it is: "On May 1, 1946, the Navy departed Camp Kearny and the station became MCAS Miramar. After only a year, the Marines closed the base and moved all units to El Toro. On June 30, 1947, the Navy redesignated Miramar an NAAS. In July 1949, the Navy began a project to improve the runways and establish a Master Jet Base. The station upgraded to an NAS on April 1, 1952. Following the Korean War, the Navy faced a cutback and offered Miramar to the City of San Diego in 1954 for $1. In what will go down in San Diego's history as the most idiotic decision ever made by the City's leaders, the offer was turned down! In the Author's opinion, San Diego's Lindbergh Airport remains today one of the worst commercial airports in the United States -- obstructions, no CAT II or CAT III approaches, noise problems, and a relatively short runway with no over runs. Miramar would have made a wonderful international airport for San Diego!" Are you kidding me? http://www.militarymuseum.org/MCASMiramar.html |
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Well isn't that a real kick in the nuts. For all its weather and scenery, sometimes I really hate living in San Diego. |
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2) Cheap energy 3) Heavily subsidized highways and roadways 4) A growing, but insufficient knowledge and interest over environmetal impacts (air & water quality) |
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