
Other devices include LG/Samsung Smart TVs, or Xbox One You can use Sling on web browsers, Android, or iOS as well as Amazon Fire, Roku, Chromecast, or Apple TV. Sling Local Channels & Regional Sports Networksįind out which local channels and regional sports networks Sling has in your area. The Sling Orange+Blue package allows you to stream a total of 50 channels including San Diego Padres games and FOX, NBC, or MSNBC for 50. The Sling Blue package allows you to stream a total of 45 channels including San Diego Padres games and FOX, NBC, or MSNBC for 35. The Sling Orange package allows you to stream a total of 30 channels including San Diego Padres games and Bloomberg, BBC America, Cheddar Business, or Newsy for 35. No hearings have yet been scheduled.You can learn more about Sling pricing and packages here. The case was assigned to Superior Court Judge Matthew C. In addition to the request for an injunction and judicial finding that laws were not followed, the lawsuit seeks attorney fees and legal costs incurred by the plaintiff. “Respondent is selling Tailgate Park for less than fair-market value and is thereby making a gift of public funds,” the complaint states. The 5.25 acres was valued at $76 million by an independent appraiser, but was reduced to $35.1 million based on a $42 million credit for the cost of replacing the 1,200 parking spaces. The Project for Open Government lawsuit also questioned the sale price for the publicly owned parking lot that has generated millions of dollars in revenue for San Diego taxpayers. Under the state law that governs surplus public property, the required amount of affordable housing would have increased to a minimum of 25 percent if the council waited until January to consider the deal.īefore the council approved the East Village Quarter proposal, several affordable-housing advocates urged the city to require the developer to add more rent-restricted units to the plan.

“We can’t say, on one hand, that affordable housing is a top priority for us at the city and then, on the other hand, fail to seize the opportunity to build 100 percent affordable homes on a city-controlled site,” she said last month.

Moreno said the city should do more to promote affordable housing - especially on publicly owned land like Tailgate Park. “There is no more important priority in our city than to address our homelessness crisis,” Councilman Stephen Whitburn said at the time. In approving the project, the council majority praised the affordable housing that would be included: 180 apartments with rents limited to 60 percent of the area median income, and 90 other units with rents capped at 150 percent of AMI. The development site is bounded by 12th and Imperial avenues and 14th and K streets. The East Village Quarter, which consists of four towers up to 500 feet high, also includes a public park and a 1,200-space parking garage to replace the lost surface spaces. The agreement calls for the Padres and its partners to construct 1,800 apartments and 50,000 square feet of retail space on the four-block parcel just east of Petco Park.

Councilwoman Vivian Moreno was the lone opponent.

The City Council voted 8-1 on April 19 to approve the project despite questions surrounding the development and the $35.1 million sale price for the 5.25 acres of public property. The Padres, who are partnering with Tishman Speyer of New York City and Ascendant Capital Partners of Los Angeles on the East Village Quarter project, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. “Our office will have no comment on this pending litigation,” Leslie Wolf Branscomb, the spokeswoman for City Attorney Mara Elliott, wrote in an email.
