Building inspector
A building inspector at a construction site in San Diego. (File photo from city video)

The San Diego Community Coalition will make its public debut May 1 by addressing the San Diego Planning Commission when it discusses proposed changes to the controversial “Bonus ADU” ordinance.

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The coalition is a citywide network of neighborhood activists focused on two interconnected issues:

  • Overbuilding in residential neighborhoods — from mid-rise towers to giant multi-unit ADU complexes — which erodes our urban infrastructure and produces minimal affordable housing.
  • City Hall’s disrespect for constituents, its refusal to engage the public in open dialogue, and its suppression of community planning groups.

So far, the coalition includes activist leaders in 15 communities: Bay Ho, City Heights, Clairemont, College Area, Encanto, Golden Hill, Linda Vista, Middletown, Mission Hills, North Park, Ocean Beach, Point Loma, Pacific Beach, Talmadge and University City.

The network will empower these leaders to mobilize residents and business owners in their individual communities, turn out large numbers at public meetings, and flood city offices with constituent messages.

The group’s plans include large public rallies at the sites of mega-projects that exemplify how politicians, developers, and corporate investors are colluding to plunder San Diego neighborhoods.

The coalition will have a special focus on two critical issues:

Family Housing: The most pressing housing problem in San Diego by far is the appalling lack of homes for families, especially working families with limited resources. Almost all the rental units produced by the Complete Communities program are unaffordable studios and small one-bedroom apartments.

Fire Safety: The construction of multi-unit complexes with very few or very small setbacks in high-fire zones puts San Diegans at risk for wildfire disasters when residents in saturated housing areas cannot evacuate safely.

The demographic reach of the coalition is bracketed by the two communities that have energized the rest of San Diego.

In 2021, residents of Talmadge who were alarmed over the construction of a multi-unit ADU with no parking, no yard space, and limited set backs formed Neighbors for a Better San Diego. Four years later, the non-profit group has become a powerful engine for educating the public about ADU excesses and for rallying support for sustainable land use policies.

This year, residents of Encanto fought back against the notorious Footnote 7 that sought to cram extremely dense construction into their underserved community. At a remarkable March 4 council meeting, Neighbors for Encanto were joined by hundreds of activists from across the city in a demonstration of united opposition to Footnote 7 and the “Bonus ADU” ordinance.

Faced with the collective anger of these unified neighborhoods and the courageous advocacy of District 4 Councilmember Henry L. Foster III, the council took the surprise step of considering serious reform to the Bonus ADU program.

That was a turning point. The new coalition will build on that momentum.

As current elected officials serve out their lame-duck terms and  candidates emerge to run for their seats, the coalition will demonstrate that when the people of San Diego join forces, they can be more powerful than big donors, lobbyists, and special interest groups. 

Kate Callen is a former chair of the North Park Planning Committee. Paul Krueger is a founding member of Neighbors For A Better San Diego