Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d talk to them about it. They might not even know.
+1
Our contractor dumped his construction trash in my neighbor’s empty trash bin. Thankfully my neighbor walked over and told me while the contractor was talking to me. I asked the contractor to empty it out.
BTW, the trash collectors had not come for pickup, and neighbors trash can also had her trash. My contractor justified his action based on that. Ugh, no. If he needed to throw trash, he could use my trash can. There was no reason to inconvenience my neighbor. Other people’s trash can is not public property.
Anonymous wrote:I’d talk to them about it. They might not even know.
Anonymous wrote:I know my neighbors would offer to help, make space in their trash can, drive us to city dump to make the drop or whatever to make it easy. I would never do it but if I do dump something in their trashcan, no one would bat an eye knowing it must be a last resort and there must be an explanatory message in their inbox.
iAnonymous wrote:I know my neighbors would offer to help, make space in their trash can, drive us to city dump to make the drop or whatever to make it easy. I would never do it but if I do dump something in their trashcan, no one would bat an eye knowing it must be a last resort and there must be an explanatory message in their inbox.
Anonymous wrote:Why not walk over there and ask them, like a grown up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Technically, once the trashcan is on the curb of a public street it becomes fair game for anyone to use ...or in the case of the police during an investigation, can take items from said trash to obtain DNA w/o your permission (pizza crust, cigarettes, etc).
So unless Op's neighbors came onto her property to dispose of trash she doesn't gave much of an argument except ethically.
There's a difference between adding trash and removing trash. The precedent from those cases is that you have no expectation of privacy after discarding something. The precedent isn't that your trash is now available for public use.
Anonymous wrote:Technically, once the trashcan is on the curb of a public street it becomes fair game for anyone to use ...or in the case of the police during an investigation, can take items from said trash to obtain DNA w/o your permission (pizza crust, cigarettes, etc).
So unless Op's neighbors came onto her property to dispose of trash she doesn't gave much of an argument except ethically.
Anonymous wrote:I would just ask them about it/ask them not to do it again. Our neighbors were dumping in our trash at one point and we politely asked them not to, saying it took up space for our trash, and they stopped.