
The five-year shortfall has more than tripled since early 2020. And city officials estimate that projects they'll need after 2030 will cost another $8.9 billion.
{ "@context": "http:\/\/schema.org", "@type": "Article", "image": "https:\/\/sandiegouniontribune.noticiasalagoansandiegouniontribune.noticiasalagoanas.com\/wp-content\/s\/2025\/02\/SUT-L-flood-anniversary-4.jpg?w=150&strip=all", "headline": "San Diego\u2019s infrastructure funding gap surges to $6.5 billion as growing needs outpace money", "datePublished": "2025-02-23 05:00:08", "author": { "@type": "Person", "workLocation": { "@type": "Place" }, "Point": { "@type": "Point", "Type": "Journalist" }, "sameAs": [ "https:\/\/sandiegouniontribune.noticiasalagoansandiegouniontribune.noticiasalagoanas.com\/author\/gqlshare\/" ], "name": "gqlshare" } }
Skip to contentThe five-year shortfall has more than tripled since early 2020. And city officials estimate that projects they'll need after 2030 will cost another $8.9 billion.