["Let Inga Tell You," La Jolla Light, published June 16, 2025] 2025
On June 9, the San Diego City Council voted 6-3 to approve trash fees for 223,000 single family homes as part of Measure B, which was approved by voters by a squeaker margin of 50.5-49.5% in 2022. The actual costs will be double or triple Measure B's estimates and are mired in bureaucratic convolution so mind-numbing it made my head want to explode. Yours will too.
If the accurate figures for these costs had been presented to the voters, it wouldn't have had a snowball's chance of passing. This is exactly why it should have been put to a re-vote. Or at the very least, the fees kept at the level that were voted for.
The city needs money. Duping the citizenry is a pretty low way to get it. Even the people who voted for it didn't vote for this.
I've written two double-length columns on this topic already so I won't cover all the issues involved again. The level of deceit of this entire plan is mind boggling.
The city paid a staggering $4.5 million to a consulting firm to estimate the fees that would be charged. Afterwards, the consultant mea culpa-ed his gross miscalculations with "Sorry. I'm human." Just wondering if he's giving the $4.5 million back to the city? It could sure use the money.
The affected homeowners were allegedly sent a six-page flier with the details of the new plan and a protest form on page six that could be cut out, filled in, and snail-mailed to the city clerk's office. Most people thought it was junk mail and threw it out. Lots of people (including me, and I was on the lookout for it) didn't receive it. Few people had the fortitude to wade through the soul crushing five pages of details.
For enough protest votes to count, 111,000 people would have had to send that form in. According to the City Clerk s office, "only" 46,000 did.
But wait! While the form asked only for a name, it came out later that the protest form had to indicate the name of the property as listed on county property tax rolls. So if it were a trust, that had to be indicated, otherwise the protest vote wouldn't be counted. Inquiring minds want to know: how many such protest votes weren't counted?
And in the sleaziest move yet, anyone who didn't send in a protest vote was counted as a yes vote for the new fees. This is truly an insult to the democratic process. It was stacked against any possibility of there being 111,000 protest votes.
One of the biggest downsides to the new fee structure is the plan to save billing costs by charging the fees on property tax bills, with adjustments only coming months - or years - after the fact. This is just the wrong place for trash fees to be charged and are pretty much guaranteed to create massive headaches for homeowners. Here s why:
Affected home owners are being offered three bundle options with options to add additional bins at additional cost. Bundle 3, the default option, includes three 95-gallon bins (one green, one blue, one black). In teeny 8-point font below the table are three very important footnotes which should actually be in 16-point bold-face font at the top:
Footnote 1: The City proposes to provide recycling and organics [green bin] collection at the service level of 95-gal containers only. Customers may request a 35-gal or 65-gal recycling and/or organics container at the same time if they prefer a small container for reasons unrelated to solid waste services, for example, if they would like a smaller size due to space considerations. However, all customers will be charged at the 95-gal container rate for recycling and organics collection services. [Italics mine]
Footnote 2: Under the proposed rate plan, the City would charge all customers at the Bundle Option 3: 95-gal container rate during Fiscal Year 2026. Customers will be asked to select a service level and bundled rate option during Fiscal Year 2026. Customers that select the 35-gal or 65-gal service level for their trash container will receive a credit on their Fiscal 2027 bill [italics mine] for the difference between the rates associated with their selected service level and the 95-gal service level for the period of time between when the customers subscribed to and received the smaller containers and the end of Fiscal Year 2026. [Translation: you re going to be charged the maximum rate and wait at least a year to get this credit.]
Footnote 3: Customers that select additional containers beyond the initial bundle will receive a debit on their Fiscal Year 2027 bill for the cost of the additional container for the period of time between when the customers subscribed to and received the additional containers and the end of Fiscal Year 2026.
Who in God s name came up with this insane plan? And can they be legally enjoined from ever being involved in city planning again?
Are people in condo complexes subjected to this kind of convoluted billing? Don't think so.
I, for example, need two 95-gallon green bins (big yard), plus a 65-gallon black bin (we're retired, just the two of us) plus two 35-gallon blue recycling bins since that is what fits in our limited space. The City stopped issuing that size blue bin some years ago so after the trucks destroyed the city-issued ones, I had to pay $120 each at Home Depot for replacement ones that are compatible with the city's trash trucks. They're practically new but now about to be obsolete (see below) and replaced with new city-issued bins for which I will have to pay $13.78 (now) per month (going up to $17.74 per month in 2028) in perpetuity.
Why can't I keep my new blue bins? All blue recycling bins and black trash bins are to be replaced and new ones provided with RFID (Radio frequency identification) sensors. I've made several jokes in previous columns about our trash spying on us, wondering if the garbage police will show up if a green bin-designated banana peel is sensed in a black bin, or God forbid, a blue recycle bin. But it is unclear exactly how these sensors will work. The sensors will not be in the green (greenery-food waste) bins presumably because these bins are fairly new. Are these sensors bar codes? Or? Can the city's notorious trash bin-destroying trucks disable them? Can people steal other people's bins so that someone else is being charged for your trash? Honestly, I haven t been able to find out any real information about how they will work.
A really really important question that hasn't been addressed in all this is what happens to the half million to million old blue and black bins that are going to be replaced, especially if one of the motivations of the new system is supposed to be landfill reduction, A June 8 article in the Times of San Diego noted: A million plastic containers will be recycled and a million new ones will be purchased. California's lawsuit against big oil companies over plastics recycling tells us they will be burned. This is a horrifying possibility.
The same article queries: Can't we simply attach RFID chips to the existing bins?
The fee structure doesn't take into account people, say, retirees living alone who generate very little trash. You're paying anyway.
By the way, the weekly recycling program that was a draw to many isn't scheduled to start until the summer of 2027.
As for poor people or those on fixed incomes, the city documents proposes setting aside $3 million for a financial assistance program that would provide a full subsidy for about 2% of customers, a 50% subsidy for 3.5% of customers, and a 20% subsidy for 10% of customers. How that will all work out in reality is still being determined. And here s the deal: you re probably going to have to pay up front now and wait a considerable amount of time for a credit on your tax bill.
The three City Council members who voted against the new fee plan are Raul Campillo, Henry Foster, and Marni Von Wilpert. Those voting for it are Sean Elo-Rivera, Jennifer Campbell, Kent Lee, Stephen Whitburn, Vivian Moreno, and La Jolla's own City Councilman Joe LaCava, who has been an active supporter of this perfidious plan.
I've previously been a huge fan of Joe LaCava in his capacity as a community volunteer and I voted for him for City Council. Right now I wouldn't vote for him for Supervisor of Waste Water Management. Or then, maybe I would.
Twenty-two percent of those 223,000 single family homes have renters in them. They can expect their already-astronomical rents to go up commensurately.
On June 24, the City Council will approve the plan to collect the new fees on your property tax bill, and on July 1 the whole new plan becomes effective.
On May 19, five home owners engaged the services of the law firm of former City Attorney Michael Aguirre to file a lawsuit accusing Mayor Gloria and others of violating Proposition 218, a ballot measure passed some 30 years ago, that prohibits government agencies from charging more for services than the actual cost of delivering those services. The five plaintiffs are asking the Superior Court judge to render the city s previous approval of the trash fee null and void. Is it too late?
I can't even imagine a plan more devious, inept, and just plain unworkable and incomprehensible that could have been inflicted on the citizenry than this one. Regardless of how you feel about trash fees, the whole thing is just plain wrong.