U-T OpEd: Reforms needed to help San Diego city hall regain credibility with residents
By Jan Goldsmith / OpEd San Diego U-T / December 12, 2025
It was advertised as bargain day at the local supermarket, 25% off all cans of tuna. You visit the store, select cans of tuna and go to the register, but the store refuses to honor its advertisement. “The advertisement contained an inadvertent error,” the store manager explains. “The price applies only if you buy over $50 in groceries.”
The San Diego City Attorney’s Consumer Protection Unit might investigate such bait and switch practices in the retail world, but is unlikely to investigate its own client, the city of San Diego, which engaged in bait and switch arising from the 2022 elections.
In November 2022, San Diego voters approved Measure B by less than 1%, permitting the city of San Diego to charge a fee for trash-hauling services.
Voters were told in the fiscal analysis supporting the ballot measure that the city’s “best estimate” was the fee would range from $23 to $29 per month. “This range,” the fiscal analysis explained, “is similar to the fees charged by other peer cities that offer similar services.”
After the election, the City Council voted to impose a $43.60 per month fee, significantly higher than fees charged by surrounding cities.

Friends and family of popular fisherman and YouTuber, Mikey Rijavec, came together Saturday, Dec. 13, to honor his memory after his body was found off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, in November this year.
By Jillian Butler
Developers of 186-unit apartment building have the green light to continue work
By Lori Saldaña / Op-Ed
Coalition Bulletin: “This Week at City Hall”
From
By Paul Krueger / 

Editordude: Since the issue of “middle managers” employed by the City of San Diego has again emerged during the most recent debates over the city’s budget, we thought it appropriate to re-publish U-T reporter
By Michael J. Stepner & Mary Lydon / The Daily Transcript / Dec. 10, 2025
By Francine Maxwell




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