San Diego Local Pulse

San Diego Local Pulse: June 18, 2026 - Weather, Housing, and Community Updates

2 min · 18. kesä 2026
jakson San Diego Local Pulse: June 18, 2026 - Weather, Housing, and Community Updates kansikuva

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Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for June 18, 2026. We are starting with a heavy story from yesterday, as we follow the death of a University of San Diego student after being struck by a San Diego police vehicle, a tragic event that is still unfolding and weighing on the city. We are also watching public safety closely after weather alerts earlier this week, including a tornado warning in parts of the county and the kind of fast changing conditions that can affect commutes, outdoor plans, and neighborhoods from Mission Valley to the coast. Today we are looking at a cooler, breezier San Diego. Forecasts call for mostly sunny skies, with highs in the upper 70s to near 80 in the city and stronger west winds inland and in the mountains, so drivers on Interstate 8, Highway 163, and along Cabrillo and Point Loma should be ready for gusts. For anyone heading to the beach or Balboa Park, it is a good day for lighter layers and an earlier start. At city hall, Mayor Todd Gloria has announced new appointments to city boards and commissions, part of the ongoing work that shapes housing, neighborhood planning, and daily city services. County leaders are also moving ahead with major clean water and pollution reduction efforts in the Tijuana River Valley, backed by a new 46 million dollar state grant program and a coastal commission approved project near the Saturn Boulevard crossing. In housing, construction is underway on Navajo Family Apartments in San Carlos, bringing 45 affordable homes, including units reserved for residents with intellectual or developmental disabilities. That matters as rents stay high across central San Diego and more families look east toward Chula Vista, El Cajon, and San Marcos for lower prices. In jobs, the local market still leans on health care, tourism, construction, and public sector hiring, with new county mobile service centers also creating short term community based work and outreach opportunities. For culture, Uncle Lucius plays in San Diego today, bringing roots rock and Americana to the local music scene. Looking ahead, we are also seeing Juneteenth observances across the county on Friday, and the San Diego County Board of Education has designated June 19 as Juneteenth Independence Day. There is also a bright spot in the county, where animal services is caring for rescued horses from a Julian property, a reminder that local volunteers and staff are often the backbone of these recovery stories. This has been San Diego Local Pulse. We thank you for tuning in, please subscribe, and we will see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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jakson San Diego Local Pulse: June 18, 2026 - Weather, Housing, and Community Updates kansikuva

San Diego Local Pulse: June 18, 2026 - Weather, Housing, and Community Updates

Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for June 18, 2026. We are starting with a heavy story from yesterday, as we follow the death of a University of San Diego student after being struck by a San Diego police vehicle, a tragic event that is still unfolding and weighing on the city. We are also watching public safety closely after weather alerts earlier this week, including a tornado warning in parts of the county and the kind of fast changing conditions that can affect commutes, outdoor plans, and neighborhoods from Mission Valley to the coast. Today we are looking at a cooler, breezier San Diego. Forecasts call for mostly sunny skies, with highs in the upper 70s to near 80 in the city and stronger west winds inland and in the mountains, so drivers on Interstate 8, Highway 163, and along Cabrillo and Point Loma should be ready for gusts. For anyone heading to the beach or Balboa Park, it is a good day for lighter layers and an earlier start. At city hall, Mayor Todd Gloria has announced new appointments to city boards and commissions, part of the ongoing work that shapes housing, neighborhood planning, and daily city services. County leaders are also moving ahead with major clean water and pollution reduction efforts in the Tijuana River Valley, backed by a new 46 million dollar state grant program and a coastal commission approved project near the Saturn Boulevard crossing. In housing, construction is underway on Navajo Family Apartments in San Carlos, bringing 45 affordable homes, including units reserved for residents with intellectual or developmental disabilities. That matters as rents stay high across central San Diego and more families look east toward Chula Vista, El Cajon, and San Marcos for lower prices. In jobs, the local market still leans on health care, tourism, construction, and public sector hiring, with new county mobile service centers also creating short term community based work and outreach opportunities. For culture, Uncle Lucius plays in San Diego today, bringing roots rock and Americana to the local music scene. Looking ahead, we are also seeing Juneteenth observances across the county on Friday, and the San Diego County Board of Education has designated June 19 as Juneteenth Independence Day. There is also a bright spot in the county, where animal services is caring for rescued horses from a Julian property, a reminder that local volunteers and staff are often the backbone of these recovery stories. This has been San Diego Local Pulse. We thank you for tuning in, please subscribe, and we will see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

18. kesä 20262 min
jakson San Diego Local Pulse: Clear Skies, Infrastructure Updates, and Padres Win kansikuva

San Diego Local Pulse: Clear Skies, Infrastructure Updates, and Padres Win

Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for Sunday, June fourteenth. We wake up today with clear skies over downtown and a cool marine layer hugging the coast. We are looking at highs in the low seventies along Mission Beach, mid seventies in Chula Vista, and close to eighty inland around El Cajon. There is a light onshore breeze, so we plan on a comfortable day for the Bayfront, the Zoo, and hikes around Balboa Park. A slight warmup is on the way early this week, but no big heat wave yet. From City Hall, the city is highlighting new infrastructure work, including fresh street paving and sidewalk repairs in neighborhoods tied to transit routes, with updates coming through the City of San Diego and MTS channels. That means we may see lane closures near key corridors like El Cajon Boulevard and around freeway ramps, but also smoother rides once the projects wrap. On the public safety front, San Diego community members are continuing to press the police department to change its pretext traffic stop policy, according to recent local TV coverage. Advocates say the changes could reduce unnecessary stops in neighborhoods like City Heights and Southeast San Diego, and the department is under growing pressure to respond. Overnight, police report several vehicle break ins around Pacific Beach side streets near Garnet Avenue and a pair of arrests related to a burglary in North Park, but no major citywide incidents. Authorities still remind us to lock cars and keep valuables out of sight. In county news, the San Diego County News Center reports new steps to reduce pollution in the Tijuana River Valley and ongoing concern about hydrogen sulfide odors impacting residents in the South Bay. The county is also inviting public comment on a new three year behavioral health plan, which could expand local mental health services. In sports, our Padres give us something to cheer about. House of Highlights reports San Diego tops Baltimore nine to three last night, with the bats finally waking up at Petco Park. That sets a hopeful tone heading into the rest of the homestand. Around town, we see steady real estate activity, with median home prices hovering around the mid eight hundreds, and local recruiters posting hundreds of openings in tech, biotech, and hospitality, especially around Sorrento Valley, UC San Diego, and the Gaslamp. For culture and community, we have live music tonight in Little Italy and North Park, plus family events along the Embarcadero leading into the workweek. At our schools, several San Diego Unified high school teams are wrapping up strong spring seasons, with local track and baseball athletes earning regional honors. Our feel good note comes from Kearny Mesa and Otay Mesa, where the County Probation department highlights therapy dogs helping youth in custody, a small but powerful reminder of how compassion can change lives. Thank you for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you never miss our local roundup. This has been San Diego Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

14. kesä 20263 min
jakson San Diego Local Pulse: Warm Saturday, Public Health Updates, and Community Events kansikuva

San Diego Local Pulse: Warm Saturday, Public Health Updates, and Community Events

Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for Saturday, June thirteenth, and we are glad you are with us. We wake up to a warm, classic coastal day. The National Weather Service says we have patchy morning fog along the beaches, then mostly sunny skies, with highs in the mid to upper seventies near the coast and low eighties inland. That means a light sweater on the early dog walk in Ocean Beach, and then perfect beach weather by midday in La Jolla and Mission Beach. On the water, marine forecasters expect light west winds around ten knots and seas of three to four feet, so boating and paddleboarding stay fairly calm, but we still keep an eye on rip currents. From local government, the County of San Diego reports new steps to reduce pollution in the Tijuana River Valley, addressing those ongoing odors and water concerns in the South Bay. County officials are also inviting us to review a draft Behavioral Health Services Act plan, a three year roadmap for how mental health funds are spent, which directly affects services from downtown to San Ysidro. At the same time, county leaders say they are reviewing contracting oversight after allegations involving a nonprofit that handled naloxone distribution, a reminder of how closely public dollars and public health are tied. In community health, county public health officials are asking anyone who may have come into contact with two bats in Escondido, later found rabid, to check in with their doctor. It is a low probability risk for most of us, but an important reminder as we head outdoors more this weekend. On the lighter side of civic life, the City of San Diego is hosting a behind the scenes look at where our curbside trash and recycling go, out at the Miramar landfill. Tours this morning give families a chance to see how our blue and green bins really work behind the scenes. In jobs and business, the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation continues to highlight what it calls good news for our innovation economy, with local tech and life science companies adding hundreds of positions across Sorrento Valley, UTC, and downtown. For listeners thinking about real estate, local agents report that the median home price in the city now sits around the high eight hundreds, with condos downtown and in East Village still coming in lower, closer to the mid six hundreds. Looking ahead to events, the Legal Aid Society holds its Youve Been Served gala this evening at the Bahia Resort Hotel on Mission Bay, raising money to support free legal services for local families. Around town, we have live music in North Park and along India Street in Little Italy, and Padres fans are getting ready as the team continues its East Coast series, with today’s game in Baltimore. In schools and youth news, the County Probation department is expanding its therapy dog program in Kearny Mesa and Otay Mesa youth facilities, giving young people a calming, hands on way to manage stress and trauma. Turning to public safety, San Diego police and sheriff’s deputies report a typically busy Friday night into early Saturday across the county, with several DUI arrests and a few non life threatening assaults, mostly in entertainment districts. There are no major citywide alerts this morning, but law enforcement continues to focus on impaired driving and large, late night gatherings, especially around downtown and Pacific Beach. As we move through this warm Saturday, we keep water handy, sunscreen close, and eyes out for our neighbors, whether that is at the beach, on the trolley, or at a neighborhood park. Thank you for tuning in, and dont forget to subscribe so you never miss our daily update. This has been San Diego Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

13. kesä 20263 min
jakson San Diego Local Pulse: Summer Weather, Transit Decisions, and World Cup Prep kansikuva

San Diego Local Pulse: Summer Weather, Transit Decisions, and World Cup Prep

Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for Friday, June 12, 2026. We wake up today to warm, early summer weather along the coast and inland. Forecasters at the National Weather Service in San Diego say we have patchy morning fog near the beaches, then partly sunny skies with highs in the low to mid 70s along the coast and 80s inland. Light west winds pick up this afternoon, and we keep an eye on higher surf at our south facing beaches, especially around Mission Beach and Imperial Beach, where sets can still reach around seven feet. That means we plan our beach time, but we stay cautious in the water. From City Hall and our regional planners, SANDAG holds a special Transportation Committee meeting at 1 p.m. today downtown, focusing on funding priorities for transit and freeway improvements. Decisions coming out of this meeting could shape future traffic relief on corridors like Interstate 5 and State Route 78, so what happens in that room eventually affects our daily commute times and bus service. Culturally, our calendar is full. The San Diego County Fair in Del Mar rolls into the weekend with garden focused events. The Mission Hills Garden Club Spotlight talk starts at 1 p.m., and at 2 p.m. the San Diego Fern Society shows how to build a small tabletop fountain with ferns. Over in Chula Vista, music fans head to the North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre, where Rod Stewart’s One Last Time tour with Richard Marx takes the stage tonight at 7. Looking ahead, Petco Park pivots from baseball to beats tomorrow with the Field of Dreamz music event, bringing big crowds into the Gaslamp and East Village. We will want to plan parking or transit accordingly. On the World Cup front, San Diego continues to gear up as a host region. Local coverage this week highlights that Switzerland’s national team will base at the Fairmont Grand Del Mar, and New Zealand will train in North County, adding an international feel to our hotels and training fields. In jobs and housing, local recruiters report hospitality hiring ticking up around downtown and the waterfront, with starting wages often in the high teens per hour. Real estate agents say the median home price countywide sits near the high eight hundreds, with condos downtown and in Mission Valley still seeing multiple offers, but fewer bidding wars than a year ago. School sports are easing into summer, but several San Diego high school baseball and softball players are named to regional all star lists this week, giving our student athletes a strong sendoff into their break. On public safety, overnight law enforcement reports note several DUI arrests across the county and a couple of non life threatening injury crashes on Interstate 15 and State Route 163. Police continue to stress sober driving and extra caution as traffic builds for fair and concert season. For a feel good moment, volunteers in Ocean Beach are organizing another early morning beach cleanup near the OB Pier this weekend, collecting trash before the crowds arrive and keeping our shoreline welcoming for everyone. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our local roundup. This has been San Diego Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

12. kesä 20263 min
jakson Schools on Alert: San Diego County Responds to Campus Lockdown as Families Demand Answers kansikuva

Schools on Alert: San Diego County Responds to Campus Lockdown as Families Demand Answers

Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for Thursday, June 11, 2026. We are starting with the biggest local note from the last day, and that is the conversation around safety and schools after a lockdown and police response at a San Diego County campus drew attention across the region. Officials have not released every detail yet, but it is a reminder that families are watching every update closely, from San Ysidro to Kearny Mesa, and they are asking for clear answers and faster communication. At City Hall, the focus stays on the basics that affect daily life, especially housing, transit, and how the city manages public spaces. We are also watching regional transportation planning, with SANDAG hosting an online e-bike class at noon today, a small but useful sign of how much attention mobility has shifted toward safer commuting and neighborhood travel. On the weather front, San Diego is starting the day with classic early summer conditions, so we are expecting a mild morning, a warmer afternoon inland, and a marine layer that may linger near the coast before clearing. That should make for a comfortable day at Balboa Park, Petco Park, and the Embarcadero, with the main caution being the usual afternoon sun and a cooler breeze by the water. In the local economy, the job market continues to lean on healthcare, hospitality, and biotech, while real estate remains tight, with the latest talk still centered on high prices and limited supply in neighborhoods from North Park to Clairemont. New openings and business shifts are steady rather than dramatic, but that still matters for daily life because every new cafe, clinic, or service shop changes how residents move through their neighborhoods. For culture and sports, the Padres are still a central story after last night’s game against Cincinnati, and Petco Park keeps downtown buzzing. Looking ahead, the San Diego Smooth Jazz Festival comes to the Rady Shell at Jacobs Park on Saturday, bringing music, food, and bayfront traffic to Marina Park Way. We are also hearing about community momentum at UC San Diego Health, where local recognition for staff and physicians reflects the kind of work that often happens out of the spotlight. This morning’s crime picture is still developing, but public safety alerts and school-related concerns are the main issues people are tracking, especially in South Bay communities. For the feel-good note, we are seeing more attention on scholarship and youth programs across the county, a reminder that not every local headline is about trouble. Thank you for tuning in, please subscribe, and this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11. kesä 20262 min