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Jose Santos and others who sift through garbage for recyclables are being targeted in Santa Ana, Calif.
Jose Santos and others who sift through garbage for recyclables are being targeted in Santa Ana, Calif.
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SANTA ANA, Calif. — They didn’t hold up to the bears of Alaska, but they just might be enough to discourage the scavengers of Santa Ana.

Fed up with urban foragers who root through neighborhood trash in search of plastic and aluminum, residents of one Santa Ana neighborhood are locking up their recyclables in a container designed to withstand the brute strength and cunning of brown and black bears.

So it is that Paula Faccou now keeps a key — on the same chain with her house key — to lock up her trash. And when the hauler drives down the street and upends the cart over his truck with an automated arm, the gravity-driven lock pops open.

Now there’s hope in this Orange County city south of Los Angeles that the bear bins will drive off people like the man Faccou nearly bumped into on her driveway one day as she was carrying in groceries.

“It just scared the living heck out of me,” said the 67-year-old retiree. “A complete stranger, standing outside. It was very brazen, and that’s pushing it too much. They have told me: ‘What’s your problem, lady? It’s just trash,’ but I pay for trash service. . . . I should decide where it goes.”

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