by Miriam Raftery | April 29, 2026 10:33 pm
Dear Readers:
April 28, 2026 (San Diego’s East County) — Our new, redesigned website has finally launched! Posting comments will be restored soon. We’re deeply grateful to the Prebys Foundation for their generous grant for our new site layout, new logo, improved navigation, plus security upgrades. We also thank our many readers who sent donations. Here’s what’s new, and some tips for navigating our new site.
We are proud to unveil our beautiful new “Visit East County[1]” section! It includes a video about East County, detailed articles on our nine regions in East County[2] , numerous guides to activities[3] such as dining, golf, liv
e entertainment, and more. You can also view “Best of East County” seasonal attractions[4] updated regularly. If you’d like to sponsor Visit East County to help us bring more visitors to East County with seasonal stories each month, please let me know!
We have a new Wildfire & Emergency Resources[5] section to help keep you safe. Thanks to the San Diego Fire Foundation and San Diego River Park Foundation.
Everyone with an account to post comments will soon be sent an email to reset your password on the new site so you can soon start posting again. We had to be sure the site was safe from the AI bots that were attacking us, with new security programs installed first.
All subsections from our old site are still here! But a few have been consolidated or moved to other sections. Use the dropdowns by hovering over sections in the top menu to find all your favorite places.
You can see the top 12 stories chosen by our editor in the “breaking news” newsflasher at the top of our site, just like on the old site. Below that, we now have feeds for our top nine most-read sections, showing you the most recent headlines in each.
If you don’t want to miss anything, go to the “latest stories” below section feeds, or in the top menu under News Center, click “latest stories[6].” That will show you everything from every section posted most recently.
We’re still working on a few issues. The site should soon be running faster, with a few formatting issues fixed. If you find any nonworking links, missing photos or articles, or other errors, or If anything is confusing, please let me know at editor@eastcountymagazine.org[7].
If you’re not yet a subscriber (it’s free!) sign up to get our free newsletter and our wildfire/emergency alerts here: https://eastcountymagazine.org/subscribe/[8]
If you love our work and want to help us report more local stories in your community, please donate at https://eastcountymagazine.org/donate/[9] or better yet, become a sustaining monthly donor to help us budget ahead to insure the most important stories each month will be covered.
We hope you enjoy our new and improved East County Magazine website!
Please reply in the comments below with your feedback, ideas and suggestions!
Best wishes,
Miriam Raftery, Editor
www.EastCountyMagazine.org[10]
(619)698-7617
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/welcome-to-our-new-site-tips-for-our-readers/
by Karen Pearlman | April 29, 2026 6:56 pm

Andrew Hayes, a representative from Supervisor Anderson’s office, heard from constituents at the town hall, that also included members of the Boulevard and Jacumba community planning groups and other community leaders.
Residents and regional groups in the east desert communities dread the impact of the growing number of industrial solar, battery, and wind turbine projects in the Mountain Empire region, saying it disrupts their way of life, harms wildlife and nature, creates visual blight, and perhaps most importantly, increases fire danger.
Boulevard resident Thomas Wall, left, speaks to the audience at an April 15 Town Hall about their concerns. Photo by Karen Pearlman
If it passes through County vetting, Starlight Solar will join the JVR Energy Park, a 90 Megawatt solar and 70 megawatt battery storage project in Jacumba Hot Springs. The Starlight Project includes photovoltaic solar arrays capable of generating up to 100 megawatts of alternating current electricity and a 217.4 MW battery energy storage system, to be constructed in two phases.
The JVR project, scheduled to be operational by fall 2026, the project aims to power over 57,000 homes. with a 435-acre biological open space easement and a new fire station included in the design.
The Starlight site, south of Old Highway 80 and north of the international border, is less than a mile from Clover Flat Elementary School, near key evacuation routes, and encompasses land that is home to sensitive species. The land is owned by the Haagen Company[1].
Some green energy projects already built in East County and adjacent Imperial County have posed threats to residents, including wind turbines bursting into flames and sparking fires, multi-ton blades hurled off, chemical leaks, stray voltage, noise and visual blight.
Former Boulevard Community Planning Group Chair Donna Tisdale described the region as an “energy sacrifice zone” after the county approved numerous massive wind and solar projects across the rural southeastern part of the county. Tisdale moved out of the state, after unsuccessfully fighting to oppose projects approved by the County, including a large wind project next to her ranch.
One resident at the Town Hall meeting lamented the lack of solar panels over parking structures in the county, offering that San Diego Gas & Electric makes more money building these large industrial energy sites and then transporting the power long distances, including to Los Angeles.
Another resident wanted to know how much of the power generated in the backcountry was going to locals, and if it would lower their electric rates, which are some of the highest per kilowatt hour in the County.
Previously, Jim Whalen[2], the land use consultant hired to lobby the County for the project, has said that Starlight Solar’s proposal does not include a community benefit fund for Boulevard. Whalen said that Haagen would refurbish Boulevard’s Backcountry Resource Center.
When asked if the County and the solar developers were to offer a “community benefit” package that actually addressed the trash, a park and restrooms, if that would change how people feel about the project, Wall said that “it would at least feel better, rather than these projects only taking from the community.”
Osbourne said the piecemealing of the region is deeply troubling as well as against the law and that he felt “we’re turning into a sacrifice zone.”
“None of us are planners, or engineers, or biologists…the county just facilitates this. “Experts who know the process are gaming it.”
He said that Whalen has 18 projects and said “he literally is here to destroy this community with these big projects… The county needs to do more to represent this community against these experts… There is no way to level the playing field.”
Hayes urged residents to participate and submit comments as Starlight Solar goes through the process. He indicated that he would speak with the County’s Planning and Development Services Department to state, “This is what the community wants. What are you doing about it?”
Harris and others are working together collectively to send a message to the San Diego County Board of Supervisors that Boulevard, Campo, Potrero and other locales are not part of a “dead desert, but in fact a precious ecosystem filled with valuable families, unique artisans, rare plants and animals,” she said.
Harris and several other locals have been working hard to create the Backcountry Resource Center on Ribbonwood Road next to the main fire station, and are working toward a park in the back of the center.
Local businessowner Dennis Berglund has applied for a grant to bring the center’s kitchen up to compliance so locals can serve food as well as build a new outdoor patio area.
Berglund said that the Backcountry center was a vision of the late Mark Ostrander and his wife, Lorrie, and that he is confident that the community will step up and see it all through.
“Mark and Lorrie bought this building from the county,” Berglund said. “The community owns this building. This (where the meeting was held) was the firetruck bay. He made it into a community meeting room — 2,000 people can meet here! There’s a community room out back and another room will be used by artists.”
An art show was held before the meeting, displaying creations by local artists and crafts people in the new Boulevard Community Resource Center.
Artwork by Linda Churchhill, photo by Miriam Raftery (right) on display in new Boulevard Community Resource Center.
Hayes offered to return hold a county-led grant-writing workshop in Boulevard to help the community members fulfill their visions for the new resource center, such as creating a backcountry visitors’ center to highlight the attractions in this beautiful but often overlooked area in San Diego’s East County.
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/backcountry-residents-raise-concerns-over-industrial-energy-projects-during-energetic-townhall-meeting/
by Miriam Raftery | April 29, 2026 1:24 am
By Miriam Raftery
April 28, 2026 (Borrego Springs) – “California’s largest state park — and one of the last true wild places in Southern California — could face one of the biggest industrial threats in its history,” states a website set up by the Anza-Borrego Foundation[1] at https://theabf.org/park-threat/[2] . “A proposed 500-kV transmission line, the Golden Pacific Powerlink, could cut through Anza-Borrego Desert State Park[3]— impacting wilderness, wildlife habitat, scenic landscapes, dark skies, and cultural resources.”
SDG&E released a proposed route map on April 13, 2026 and is accepting stakeholder feedback through early November 2026. You can learn more about what’s at stake, and how you can help defend the park, at the ABF’s site. Below are details. (more…)[4]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/anza-borrego-foundation-leads-opposition-to-new-golden-pacific-powerlink-through-heart-of-anza-borrego-desert-state-park/
by Miriam Raftery | April 28, 2026 9:39 pm
April 28, 2026 (San Diego) – Top U.S. and world news includes DACA deportation threats, a presidential assassination foiled, Forest Service offices closing, the treasury declaring insolvency, a majority of Americans supporting impeachment, Iran rebuilding its arsenal during the ceasefire, the EU sending aid to Ukraine, the UAE withdrawing from OPEC, and more. (more…)[1]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/ecm-world-watch-national-and-global-news-433/
by Miriam Raftery | April 28, 2026 9:17 pm
April 28, 2026 (San Diego) – This week’s Roundup includes video of the governor candidates’ debate, funding cuts to local arts, a tax the billionaire measure that’s qualified for the ballot, speed warnings in El Cajon, a court strikes down a California law regarding ICE agents, and more. (more…)[1]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/east-county-roundup-local-and-statewide-news-447/
by Miriam Raftery | April 28, 2026 2:51 am
By Miriam Raftery
April 27, 2026 (San Diego’s East County) – Car shows, farm tours, Mother’s Day teas, a music festival, a country dance, and concerts including the famed rock band Three Dog Night are all coming to East County from mid-May to mid-June.
Scroll down for all the fun and festive details on these events and more. (more…)[1]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/destination-east-county-festive-events-from-mid-may-through-mid-june/
by Eliza Bethalper | April 27, 2026 10:10 pm
East County News Service
April 27, 2026 (El Cajon) – Celebrate the iconic sound of Gloria Estefan at The Magnolia one night only, Saturday, May 23. This high‑energy tribute performance brings her greatest hits to life.
Located in the heart of downtown El Cajon, The Magnolia is one of San Diego County’s premier entertainment destinations. The venue features a beautifully renovated theater with modern sound, lighting, and projection systems, a spacious outdoor plaza with unique local dining options and at a capacity of 1,200 offers an intimate yet dynamic concert experience.
Whether you’re a longtime Gloria Estefan fan or simply looking for a fun night out, The Magnolia provides the perfect setting to enjoy live music at its best. Find tickets at Livenation.com and Ticketmaster.com.
(more…)[1]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/the-magnolia-presents-a-tribute-to-gloria-estefan/
by Miriam Raftery | April 27, 2026 8:12 pm
Source: Cal Fire
Following another wet winter that produced significant vegetation growth across the region, rising temperatures, low humidity, and seasonal winds are rapidly curing grasses and light fuels. These conditions are increasing wildfire risk across San Diego County, prompting Cal Fire to suspend all residential outdoor burn permits within the State Responsibility Area. This suspension takes effect at 8:00am on May 1st, 2026, and suspends all residential outdoor burning of landscape debris such as branches and leaves. (more…)[1]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/cal-fire-suspends-burn-permits-2/
by Miriam Raftery | April 27, 2026 7:11 pm
Hear our interview with SDG&E’s project manager on the
proposed route
By Miriam Raftery
April 27, 2026 (San Diego’s East County) – The state wants SDG&E to build Golden Pacific Powerlink[1], a new 500 kilovolt high-voltage line. The project would run from Imperial County through San Diego’s East County and North County, including Anza Borrego Desert State Park, then head northeast near Santa Ysabel and Warner Sprigns and into Riverside and Orange Counties. SDG&E will host two virtual open houses on May 12 and 14 at 12 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. both days. Sign up to attend[2].
ECM’s editor interviewed Erica Martin, SDG&E’s project director, for our show on KNSJ.
Read highlights below, or click the audio link below this article to hear the full interview. (more…)[3]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/new-high-voltage-golden-pacific-powerlink-proposed-in-east-county-sdge-hosts-virtual-meetings-may-12-and-14/
by Miriam Raftery | April 26, 2026 9:28 pm
April 26, 2026 (San Diego’s East County) –Top health/science stories include the CDC blocking a report on COVID vaccines, the federal government reclassifying marijuana, flu vaccines no longer mandated for U.S. troops, and gas-powered AI centers emitting more greenhouse gases than many nations.
HEALTH
SCIENCE AND TECH
For excerpts and links to full stories, click “read more” and scroll down. (more…)[6]
Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/124130-2/
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