By KAREN VELIE After years of servility and deference, the City of San Luis Obispo turned on marijuana mogul Helios Dayspring, terminating his application
Heidi Harmon gets threatening nude email on her last day as mayor newtimesslo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newtimesslo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
After Dayspring's quiet exit, Natural Healing Center can still open its dispensary in SLO, but there's a deadline newtimesslo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newtimesslo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
At an April 13 special meeting, the San Luis Obispo City Council amended its municipal code to explicitly ban the use of tents in public parks and passed a new ordinance regulating shopping carts both moves that aim to curb the impacts of homelessness, but that opponents say target and punish the unhoused during a pandemic.
The City Council voted 4-1 to pass the prohibition on tents at parks. In January, city officials began interpreting existing laws on encroachment to include tents which had proliferated in parks, especially Mitchell Park issuing three citations thus far. The April 13 amendment codified that interpretation into law, officials told the council.
While the city of San Luis Obispo clashes with a local gym chain over its adherence to state COVID-19 regulations, on Jan. 19, the SLO City Council passed an emergency ordinance that reinforces the city s authority to issue citations to COVID-19 rule violators. The ordinance passed unanimously as the city s Administrative Review Board is hearing multiple appeals from Kennedy Club Fitness that are challenging three $1,000 citations issued to the gym that came amid its public decision to allow indoor exercise in defiance of state health orders. click to enlarge Photo Courtesy Of The City Of San Luis Obispo
WORKING OUT SLO has cited Kennedy Club Fitness (pictured) three times for allegedly violating COVID-19 health orders by allowing indoor exercise.