After massive and rapid rainfall overwhelmed the aging, outdated infrastructure meant to mitigate flooding, the deluge took everything from thousands of residents and killed at least five people.
A one-cent sales tax measure which could have shored up that deficit narrowly failed in November. As a result, Gloria and the city will have to determine how to maintain service levels and what must be cut.
One year after flood waters tore through homes in Southeast San Diego, neighbors are still rebuilding their homes and lives. CBS 8 walked through Mary Angie Landavazo's home with her. The first floor still hasn't been repaired.
Our journalists asked tough questions as Gloria looked back at the year that way, where he places the blame and where he takes accountability.
While his speech at City Hall was often upbeat, Gloria was aggressive when he declared that it’s not acceptable for city of San Diego taxpayers to pay the lion’s share of regional
With the looming danger of Santa Ana winds and red flag warnings in San Diego County, a battalion chief explains some of the strategies firefighters use to help get flames under control.
Mayor Todd Gloria delivered the 2025 State of the City address this afternoon, one week after the Office of the Independent Budget Analyst released its review of the Mayor's upcoming Five-Year Financial Outlook,
In delivering his fifth State of the City address on Wednesday, Mayor Todd Gloria offered a pointed, accurate critique of other local governments and Caltrans for letting San Diego bear so much of
Facing a $258M deficit, Mayor Gloria's address will focus on budget cuts, public safety, and the homelessness crisis at 3 p.m. Jan. 15.
San Diego is facing a big budget deficit. The County Board of Supervisors is once again without a leader. And the devastation from […]
San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria delivered his State of the City address Tuesday, offering a blunt outlook on the city’s financial challenges as it faces a projected $258 million budget deficit for the
One year ago, on Jan. 22, a historic rainstorm hit the San Diego region, bringing 2.73 inches of rain in a 24-hour period, making it the highest level of precipitation since 1850.