MORE STORIES
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The two blocks of state-owned land could become a mixed-use community with affordable housing at the center.
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Turkeys, PPE and COVID-19 booster shots were all available Monday outside of National City’s public library.
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Many of the stations remain difficult to access by foot, wheelchair, or bike.
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A new California law will make it easier to remove racially restrictive covenants from the deeds of their homes. However, some homeowners believe the language should remain so San Diego's racist past is not forgotten.
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For nearly a century, Rancho Santa Fe has boasted one of the most expensive and sought after ZIP codes in the country. But the discriminatory document that established the enclave remains a flashpoint.
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The owner of Geppetto's toy stores tells KPBS how he has managed to keep inventory on the shelves even with supply chain challenges.
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A proposed ballot initiative seeks to increase educational and recreational opportunities in some of the city's underserved neighborhoods.
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Racially restrictive covenants were once common across San Diego County. Though deemed illegal in 1948, the language still appears in many home and property deeds across the county.
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A city audit says recreation centers in the northern neighborhoods of San Diego are significantly better off than those in the city’s southern neighborhoods.
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Chuck Marohn is president of the nonprofit Strong Towns and author of the new book "Confessions of a Recovering Engineer."
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