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Letters to the Editor
Take a look at what people are talking about on our Letters to the Editor page:
Why are we allowing unreasonable people to demand that we spend money to disturb the seal colony that so many people enjoy visiting?
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Guillermo Gomez left behind a decade of experience and took a $10,000 pay cut to be part of the new Lincoln High. Now, thanks to an automated formula, he and other talented teachers could get the axe.
Michael Uberuaga, who led the city for years, is back in the news.
The three most prominent candidates for City Council District 3 each offer residents a strikingly different style of representation.
The market appears to be doing something rapidly -- and without tax dollars -- that the government has spent millions of dollars and years trying to do: make housing affordable.
The City Council president would love nothing more than for voters to say he won the argument -- the long argument -- he's waged with something bigger than Mike Aguirre.
The city attorney's most prominent challenger so far stumbles into the world of unsubstantiated accusations.
What if the Chargers were to take over development of the bay-front convention center and resort as a financing tool for the new stadium? Hmmm.
Some may have hoped that soon we'd be seeing a proposal for a new football stadium in the region. They'll need a very liberal definition of the word 'soon.'
The mayor says he would never use city funds for a library and he has to beg corporations to pay for a fire helicopter. That doesn't add up.
Now that the hoteliers have set up their own quasi-government slush fund with the mission to promote San Diego, perhaps they should take on some of the city's aged pork.
After creating a political ruckus with an editorial claiming Mike Aguirre broke the law, the local newspaper issues a whisper of an incorrect correction. The only way to level the playing field for independent-minded candidates is to raise their fundraising limits.
Chula Vista's city manager has shocked everyone by proposing cuts to the fire and police departments after a major disaster. But what's really shocking is to hear a city manager speak with such candor.
Lots of numbers float around, and you may wonder how big of a deal this thing is. After all, it can't hurt that bad when you're insured, right?
We've had nearly two years to watch the City Hall adjust to a new form of government. Without a shot of courage, people are going to start to get nostalgic.
Like the hedge funds so popular with government pension funds, Long-Term Capital Management confidently believed that its formulas for investing had distributed the risks properly. It was wrong.
Mayor Jerry Sanders sits down for another conversation, and he reveals that he's soured on the idea that businesspeople can run city government as he tries to become a 'senior statesman.'
At least two CCDC staffers won't be able to negotiate with a developer after the costs of his party forces a summer scramble.
It's another interesting incarnation of the man who wants to be mayor.
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