Now That You Have Your New Garbage Bin and Paid Your Fee, Are You Ready for the Lid Inspectors?
Plastic in your green bin? Batteries in the trash? City inspectors are checking to see if your garbage is in compliance
By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / November 11, 2025
San Diego has begun sending teams of trash inspectors to neighborhoods across the city to gauge whether people are using the proper bins for trash, organics recycling and traditional recycling of glass, metal, plastic and paper.
The inspectors — code compliance officers who’ve been nicknamed “lid lifters” — aren’t issuing fines or punishing city trash customers who mistakenly put the wrong items in either their gray, blue or green bins.
Focused on education instead of punishment, the inspectors place either “oops” tags on bins that contain improper materials or “do not collect” tags on bins with dangerous materials like propane tanks or lithium batteries.
Customers who get a “do not collect” tag must remove any dangerous materials and then call the city to send out a trash crew to handle the container.

By Ezra Klein /
By Jillian Butler
The San Diego City Council will go into closed session next Monday, November 17 to discuss a possible appeal of the recent court ruling on the Midway District height limit.
by Beacon Staff and Wire Reports /
Please see an update in a
Editordude: The following report by David Garrick has been edited to focus mainly on entry fees for Mission Bay Park and the idea of paid parking at the beach.
By Lori Weisberg / The
by Brooke Clifford /
A man and his dog suffered only minor injuries after sliding 20-feet down a cliff near the 900 block of Sunset Cliffs Boulevard, according to San Diego Fire Department’s Battalion Chief James Diaz.
The following is a published Letter to the Editor at the San Diego U-T by College area resident Danna Givot, printed in the U-T on November 8.




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