On June 17, 2026, the Alameda County Grand Jury published its final report for the 2025 to 2026 term. The first chapter, titled “Illegal Dumping in Oakland: City Buried Under Trash,” is 25 pages of the most comprehensive official accounting of Oakland’s illegal dumping crisis ever made public.
“Scenes from refugee camps in another country,” one city official told investigators. Another described Oakland streets as “literally like a mini landfill.” A third called it “one of the most intractable problems in Oakland.”
In 2015, the city collected less than 3.2 million pounds. By 2019 that number had risen to roughly 20 million pounds, where it has remained. A sixfold increase in four years. The problem is concentrated in the city’s flatlands, Council Districts 3 (West Oakland) and 6 and 7 (East Oakland), the same neighborhoods that have been systematically underserved for decades.
The Cost to the City
Oakland’s Public Works Department budget for divisions responsible for abating and enforcing illegal dumping is approximately $28.2 million for the current fiscal year. The Oakland City Auditor separately identified nearly $12 million in direct cleanup spending in FY 2024 to 2025.
But the cost goes far beyond what the city pays. Volunteers contributed over 116,000 hours in a partial fiscal year, valued at over $2 million at Oakland’s minimum wage. Residents cleaning up what the system cannot handle.
Education: Nobody Knows
Oakland offers free bulky-waste pickup to residents. In 2022, only 17.5% of eligible households used it. Among multifamily units, just 8.1%. Drop-off slots at the transfer station: only 9% used. Many residents don’t know the proper way to dispose of items, they believe placing a mattress or furniture on the curb is the correct approach. Residents whose primary language is not English were especially unaware. Waste Management provided scheduling services only in English, a problem only recently corrected.
Even when residents know about the service, wait times can be 3 to 4 weeks. The city ended free bulky-waste drop-off events due to budget constraints, even though those events collected over 636 tons in a single fiscal year.
Eradication: Overwhelmed
Keep Oakland Clean and Beautiful (KOCB) is the city’s primary cleanup agency: 58 employees budgeted for illegal dumping, 6 positions frozen by a hiring freeze, 13 vehicles to cover the entire city. The same employees who clean up dumping also clear homeless encampments, hauling between 8.2 million and 10.8 million pounds from encampments in each of the past four fiscal years. Those encampments attract additional dumping, they are seen as safe places to leave trash.
Vehicle and equipment problems persistently slow the work. Fleet Maintenance has vacancies, lacks resources, and has a backlog. Overtime was cut in 2025 due to budget concerns, then temporarily reinstated.
Enforcement: The System Is Broken
The Grand Jury found that “enforcement against illegal dumping has been wholly inadequate.”
Since 2020, Oakland has issued only a few hundred citations per year. Peak was 963 citations in 2021 to 2022. From April 2025: just 213. Compare that to the 24,515 and 23,241 requests for cleanup in 2024 and 2025, respectively. The gap is astronomical.
• 588 internal administrative reviews were conducted
• 566 of those citations were dismissed (a 96.3% dismissal rate)
• Only 14 proceeded to appeal hearings
The city collected just over $16,000 from dumping citations in FY 2024 to 2025. In a memo to the city council, among 270 citations issued in 2025, violators paid only 30. The city received no response to 73% of citations.
Penalties were $100 to $500, not enough to deter most offenders, as the report notes. Those have since been raised to $1,500 for a first offense, but the earlier numbers illustrate just how low the stakes have been. Oakland has not referred a single case to the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office for criminal prosecution in several years. It has filed exactly one civil action.
The Environmental Enforcement Officers (EEOs) who are supposed to enforce the law are under-equipped: 7 budgeted positions, one still frozen, chronic retention problems, and they use paper records in the field. No handheld technology. No tablets. Parking enforcement officers have handheld ticket writers. EEOs do not.
Cameras and Data
Oakland has deployed 30 covert cameras to catch dumpers (up from 14 in 2022). Since April 2022, cameras led to only 17.9% of citations. In 2022 to 2023, cameras captured 492 instances of dumping but led to only 72 citations. Violators frequently cover or remove license plates.
The city has 291 automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras throughout Oakland, but prohibits the Oakland Police Department from sharing this data with Public Works for illegal dumping enforcement. Every official interviewed agreed this should change. In December 2025, the city council authorized Community Safety camera data for dumping enforcement, but most city officials interviewed were unaware of this action.
“Not sharing it, I think, is a disservice,” one official told the Grand Jury.
The report notes that the city council recently approved a pilot drone program to identify dumping locations.
Nobody Is in Charge
The Grand Jury found that Oakland has never had a single point person to coordinate illegal dumping efforts. Officials gave conflicting information on the same issues. They were unaware of recent developments. They couldn’t explain basic program statuses. The city hired a former council member for a one-year special assignment, but that person and other key players had still not worked together. Under Oakland’s charter, the mayor has no direct control over Public Works or other relevant agencies.
The Recommendations
The Grand Jury issued eight recommendations, with deadlines of 90 to 120 days:
- 120 days Enact an ordinance requiring businesses to subscribe to waste collection services.
- 120 days Pass legislation regulating private junk haulers, including registration, a public list of operators, and proof of proper disposal.
- 90 days Launch an improved education campaign for bulky-waste services, targeting non-English speakers and multi-unit properties.
- 120 days Amend the ALPR policy to allow data sharing for illegal dumping enforcement.
- 120 days Provide EEOs with handheld technology for field citation writing.
- 90 days Reinforce training on proper closure of work orders.
- 90 days Designate a single point person for all illegal dumping efforts.
- Ongoing Complete franchise agreement amendments with Waste Management to make larger containers affordable, increase bulky-waste services, and reduce scheduling wait times.
Responses are required from the Oakland City Council and the Mayor of Oakland.
The full report is available from the Alameda County Grand Jury website.