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Waymo Comes to San Diego: What the Safety Record and the Economics Really Show

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As Waymo expands to San Diego, rideshare drivers say they’re concerned about safety – NBC 7 San Diego Transportation & Technology Report March 2026  ·  Special Report Autonomous Vehicles   BLUF:   Waymo is launching driverless robotaxi service in San Diego in mid-2026, starting downtown and in adjacent neighborhoods. Its safety record is statistically strong — roughly 90% fewer serious crashes than human drivers — but local transit authorities, rideshare drivers, and labor groups are pushing back over job displacement, behavioral edge cases, and the absence of any local government oversight authority under current California law. Pricing runs 10–27% above Uber/Lyft with slightly longer wait times. The core unresolved tension is not safety performance but democratic accountability: cities have no legal tools to regulate fleet size, operating zones, or data sharing, and the state legislation that would change that (SB 1246) remains in commi...

Revolt Against the Quota Machine

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North County Report: Not Many Homes for the Low Incomes |  San Diego County, California Special Report March 25, 2026 Housing Policy & Local Control California cities are pushing back — through council chambers, courtrooms, and a looming ballot initiative — against state housing mandates that many officials say are arbitrary, unachievable, and built on flawed data.   Every year, when cities across California release their annual housing progress reports, a predictable picture emerges: market-rate housing is advancing, and affordable housing for low- and very-low-income residents is lagging — sometimes dramatically. In San Diego's North County, that picture is now sparking something that looks increasingly like a coordinated political rebellion. From Escondido to Del Mar, from Solana Beach to Encinitas, city leaders are pushing back against the state's Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) system — the mechanism by which Sacrament...

Uniform, Rank, and the Ballot Box: Reserve Officers, Political Campaigns, and DoDD 1344.10

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Navy 'looking into' Campa-Najjar's use of military status in campaign | KPBS Public Media Civil–Military Relations  /  Law & Policy Bottom Line Up Front   The Navy has opened an inquiry into whether Lt. j.g. Ammar Campa-Najjar, a Reserve public affairs officer running for Congress in California's 48th District, has violated DoD Directive 1344.10 by failing to consistently identify his reserve status, displaying uniform photographs as primary campaign imagery, and depicting an outdated rank across campaign materials. The case arrives amid a high-stakes, heavily redistributed congressional contest between two San Diego-area candidates with Navy credentials — Campa-Najjar (D) and retired naval aviator Jim Desmond (R) — in a region hosting the nation's largest military community. The regulatory framework governing reservists who run for office is clear but routinely misunderstood, and the enforcement record is thin. Whether or not the ...