November 1, 2011
Gingerbread City Gala 2011
Epilepsy Foundation of
San Diego
November 1-23, 2011
Mama’s Pie in the Sky
Mama’s Kitchen
November 5, 2011
USD Founder’s Gala
University of San Diego
November 12, 2011
Grossmont Hospital
Foundation
26th Anniversary Gala
Sharp Grossmont Hospital
November 12, 2011
3rd Annual PEERS Gala
Just in Time for Foster Youth
November 19, 2011
“Give thanks. Walk.”
St. Jude Children’s Research
Hospital
November 19, 2011
MS Dinner Auction
National Multiple Sclerosis
Society
November 24, 2011
United Run for the Hungry
Jewish Family Services
San Diego Magazine’s
Charitable Events
registry newsletter
Sponsored by
loan money on the roof, his do-it-yourself
gutter can only do so much. Roman has had
to staple and glue wallpaper back to the wall
in the captain’s offi ce because of water dam-
age. The baseboards are peeling. During some
storms, Roman has to empty the trashcan and
put it back to collect more.
It’s taken a long time for the roof at the City
Heights station to get so bad. It’s just one of
the leaks, breaks, and cracks that have contrib-
uted to the city’s decay.
The problems became so pervasive that for
years no one took the time to count them; or
fi gure out how much they’d cost to fi x.
Last March, city offi cials revealed a big part
of the dreaded fi gure. It would cost a whop-
ping $840 million to repair the neglected
streets, storm drains, and city buildings. That’s
more than it costs to fund a year of city police,
fi re, library, and parks and recreation services.
Worse news came a few months later. An
audit said that big sum wasn’t close to the full
answer. At least a quarter of the city’s depart-
ments didn’t even know the condition of their
facilities, let alone the cost to maintain them,
the audit said. The report only added to the
city’s fi x-it list. Parks alone could need more
than $2 billion in repairs, it estimated.
Auditors concluded that no one knew just
how badly city facilities were crumbling.
San Diegans experience this problem every
day. And they don’t want to. In a city survey
last year, residents said no service needed
more improvement than streets.
How did San Diego’s infrastructure get so
bad?
Past city leaders say it became too easy to
ignore as elected offi cials looked to cut taxes
and expand services.
“The invisible cut that usually happens
when things get really bad is maintenance,”
former City Manager Jack McGrory said. “No-
body sees it.”
The neglect of the city’s roads, buildings,
and storm drains shows that the short-term
thinking behind San Diego’s infamous pen-
sion deals weren’t isolated incidents, but sym-
bolic of a larger citywide ill. City road repairs
nearly stopped in 2004, the same time its
political and fi nancial crises started to peak.
That year, the city didn’t do any major road
resurfacing and made only a handful of minor
repairs, down from 125 miles of resurfacing
and minor repairs two years prior.
By 2007, the city’s roads were suffering.
Almost two-thirds were rated unacceptable.
The problem has festered during Sanders’
tenure. In his fi rst few years, Sanders spent
six and a half times more annually on street
repairs than his predecessor Dick Murphy
did at the end of his term. But the fi xes didn’t
keep pace with decay. Roads got worse.
Sanders also had to fi nd a way to fund the
backlog of road repairs from a strained bud-
get. He concluded the city could not set aside
enough money each year to maintain its road
network and make up for past neglect. Instead,
the mayor decided to borrow the money.
Sanders’ choice to take out a $100 million
loan gave the city an immediate cash infl ux.
But borrowing isn’t free. The city has to pay
its debts back with interest. For this $100 mil-
lion, the city will wind up paying twice that
amount over time.
Sanders expects to finish repaving more
than 100 miles of roads funded by the loan—
some of the city’s worst—before he leaves
offi ce next year.
But he still will fall far short of the goals he
set.
Sanders wanted 75 percent of San Diego’s
roads in good condition, typically pothole-
free, before he turned the city over to his suc-
cessor. That won’t happen.
Now, city offi cials have set a much lower
bar. They want to keep just 45 percent of San
Diego’s roads in good condition. Offi cials say
it will take $500 million in loans to improve
roads and keep them in good shape, while
maintaining storm drains and buildings at a
similar level.
After that, it’s anyone’s guess. Once the
loans dry up, the city will again have to fi nd
cash to repave the roads and maintain every-
thing else.
“You’re never done with this,” Heinrichs
said. “You always have to manage it. It goes
into perpetuity.”
MONEY YOU CAN’T SPEND
Twenty-one times in the past two years, fi re-
fi ghters have had to rescue people trapped in
elevators in six Balboa Park museums, the-
aters, and historical buildings.
City offi cials have known about
the problem. When they put together a plan
to spend the $100 million loan two and a half
years ago, they picked only the highest prior-
ity projects—like those six elevators.
›› A CITY IN DISREPAIR
146 SanDiegoMagazine.comNovember2011