Inland Edition, July 26, 2019

Page 1

The Coast News INLAND EDITION

.com

VISTA, SAN MARCOS, ESCONDIDO

VOL. 5, N0. 16

JULY 26, 2019

Protesters greet track opening day

$4M boost for housing in Escondido

By Lexy Brodt

By Steve Horn

DEL MAR — As opening day on July 17 drew thousands of festively dressed patrons to the Del Mar racetrack, a line of solemn protesters lined up at the fairgrounds entrance holding signs with ominous captions: “you bet, they die,” and “raced to death.” Many stood quietly, dressed in all black or gray. Erin Riley-Carrasco was likely the most outspoken of the approximately 30 protesters, intermittently repeating “get all dressed up in your finest to watch horses die,” to passing women dressed in ornate hats and dresses. She said people often look away. Others make joking or disparaging comments. But to many, the protesters were likely not a surprising sight. After 30 race horses died at the Santa Anita Park racetrack in Arcadia from late December 2018 through June 2019, public attention has honed in on racetrack conditions across the country. Safety concerns have run the gamut, with media outlets and animal rights advocates drawing attention to the drugs administered to horses, the use of unfit horses in races and rigorous training schedules. In light of the growing controversy, the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club is implementing a broad swath of safety measures during its 80th summer season. TURN TO PROTEST ON 15

nance, when we adopt service contracts our Sheriff’s Department, it’s all based on what the General Plan says and what our vision is for the community.” The 13 members of the Advisory Committee range from the real estate industry, academia at California State University-San Marcos and Palomar College, policy wonks in the water and public parks orbit and

ESCONDIDO — Three new federal affordable housing projects may soon be in the works in Escondido. City Council voted 4-0 at its July 17 meeting to allocate funds toward construction and rehabilitation costs of over 130 new units. Councilman John Masson abstained from both voting and the public hearing preceding the vote, as he has a contractual business interest in one of the proposed housing complexes through his architectural services company, Masson & Associates. Nearly half of the units voted on by the City Council will be for military veterans — a demographic which often struggles with homelessness — owned by the company Veterans Village of San Diego. The $1 million in money for that project, dubbed Veterans Villas and slated for a location of 1540 S. Escondido Boulevard, came from federal Special Housing Adaptation (SHA) funds allocated for low- and middle-income military veterans. SHA grants, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, help veterans “with certain service-connected disabilities adapt or purchase a home to accommodate the disability.” The site formerly served as the home of New Resolve, a 44-bed sober living center which shut its doors in 2013. Taking its place will be a 54-unit affordable housing complex, 25 units of which

TURN TO GENERAL PLAN ON 7

TURN TO HOUSING ON 6

SUPERGIRL PRO IS HERE North County resident Alyssa Spencer, who lives in Encinitas, is shown competing in a previous year’s SuperGirl Surf Pro. The SuperGirl, the largest all-women’s World Surf League event in North America, returns to Oceanside this weekend. The event is free and open to the public. MORE ON PAGE 8. Photo courtesy of ASA/WSL/Steinmetz

San Marcos undertakes new General Plan By Steve Horn

SAN MARCOS — City Council has begun creating a new General Plan, which one member referred to as “our constitution or Bible or whatever you want to call it” for city planning and development. At its July 23 meeting, City Council announced the formation of a General Plan Advisory Committee and introduced the members. Council members also shared their visions of what

a city plan for the next decade could look like, conveying what they might consider in their deliberations in the months ahead. A General Plan is a document guiding all city decision-making, with all approved projects and legislation abiding by its regulatory language. A city General Plan includes everything from land use codes and distinctions, plans for parks and trails, funding mechanisms and

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its vision for law enforcement and firefighting capacity, transit mechanism and roads and more. “To me, what makes this document so important is that every decision that we make follows what a General Plan says,” Councilman Jay Petrek, who also works as the Escondido assistant city planner, said. “When we adopt our budget, when we adopt our city master plans, when we adopt the zoning ordi-

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