San Diego Government: Frequently Asked Questions

San Diego operates under a layered system of municipal, county, regional, and special district authorities — each with distinct jurisdictions, funding mechanisms, and accountability structures. This page addresses the questions most commonly asked by residents, researchers, journalists, and civic participants who need to understand how government functions across the San Diego region. The answers draw on the formal structure of the San Diego city and county systems and reflect how those systems interact in practice.

What are the most common misconceptions?

One of the most persistent misconceptions is that the City of San Diego and San Diego County are the same governmental entity. They are not. The City of San Diego is a charter municipality governed by the San Diego City Council and administered by a Mayor-Council structure. San Diego County is a separate political subdivision governed by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors, with jurisdiction over unincorporated areas and countywide services such as public health, social services, and the Sheriff's Department.

A second common error involves confusing regional agencies with city departments. Bodies such as SANDAG (the San Diego Association of Governments) and the San Diego Metropolitan Transit System are independent public agencies — not city or county departments — each governed by their own boards and funded through distinct revenue streams.

A third misconception is that the City Attorney acts as a personal legal advisor to residents. The San Diego City Attorney represents the City as an institution, not individual members of the public.

Where can authoritative references be found?

Primary source documents for San Diego city government are maintained through several official repositories:

  1. San Diego Municipal Code — codified ordinances searchable through the City Clerk's official municipal code platform
  2. San Diego City Charter — the foundational governing document establishing powers, officers, and procedures
  3. San Diego County Code of Regulatory Ordinances — county-level rules available through the County's official code platform
  4. California Government Code — state law governing charter cities, counties, special districts, and open-meeting requirements (the Ralph M. Brown Act, California Government Code §54950 et seq.)
  5. San Diego Public Records Requests — California Public Records Act requests submitted to the appropriate custodian of record

For regional planning decisions, SANDAG publishes its Regional Transportation Plan and Regional Plan documents publicly. The San Diego Water Authority and San Diego Port District each maintain independent public document libraries.

How do requirements vary by jurisdiction or context?

San Diego County contains 18 incorporated cities — including Chula Vista, Oceanside, El Cajon, and Escondido — each operating under its own municipal code alongside the City of San Diego. Residents in unincorporated areas fall under County jurisdiction for land use, building permits, and code enforcement rather than any city's rules.

Zoning and land use decisions illustrate this variation sharply. A development project in the City of San Diego follows the San Diego General Plan and the permits and development review process administered by the Development Services Department. The same project proposed in unincorporated El Cajon or Spring Valley would proceed through San Diego County's Planning & Development Services. Coastal development adds another layer: projects within the Coastal Zone require Coastal Development Permits reviewed under California Coastal Act standards.

Special districts — including school districts like San Diego Unified — operate under California Education Code and are governed by independently elected boards, not the City Council or Board of Supervisors.

What triggers a formal review or action?

Formal governmental review is triggered by specific statutory thresholds, not administrative discretion alone. Common triggers include:

How do qualified professionals approach this?

Attorneys, planners, lobbyists, and civic researchers who work regularly with San Diego government develop systematic approaches to navigating the multi-agency environment.

Land use attorneys distinguish between ministerial approvals — which require no discretionary judgment and therefore do not trigger CEQA — and discretionary approvals, which do. This distinction determines the scope, timeline, and cost of a development project by potentially requiring an environmental impact report that can take 18 to 36 months to complete.

Civic researchers and journalists rely on the California Public Records Act and the Brown Act's meeting-notice requirements, which mandate 72-hour advance posting of agendas for regular meetings. City Council meeting agendas are posted to the City Clerk's platform ahead of each Tuesday session.

Government affairs professionals map each issue to the correct decision-maker — distinguishing, for example, whether a transit funding question belongs before the MTS board, the SANDAG policy committee, or a City Council committee.

What should someone know before engaging?

Before engaging with any San Diego government body, the following structural facts are essential:

What does this actually cover?

San Diego city government covers a defined set of municipal functions under the City Charter:

County government covers public health, social services, property tax administration, courts support, the Sheriff's Department, the District Attorney's office, and services to the 18 incorporated cities through contract arrangements.

What are the most common issues encountered?

Residents and civic participants most frequently encounter friction at 4 structural points:

1. Jurisdictional confusion: Filing a complaint or permit application with the wrong agency — City versus County versus a special district — results in delay without resolution. Confirming the correct jurisdiction before submitting any document is the first practical step.

2. Public records response timelines: The California Public Records Act requires initial response within 10 days, with a possible 14-day extension. Delays beyond that window occur and require follow-up with the agency's designated custodian.

3. Land use and zoning appeals: The gap between what a general plan designates and what a specific community plan allows creates frequent confusion for property owners. The San Diego General Plan sets citywide policy, but community plans — which number over 50 across the city — govern specific neighborhoods and may impose stricter or different standards.

4. Homelessness response coordination: Responsibility for homelessness services is divided among the City, County, and regional bodies, with funding flowing through federal HUD allocations, state grants, and local appropriations. Residents seeking to understand who is responsible for a specific encampment or service gap often find the answer spans at least 2 agencies.

For procedural questions about specific County departments or city offices, the public-facing agency websites and the City Clerk's document repository provide the most current procedural guidance.