Business & Tech

Marin County Inspectors Find 241% Increase In Overcharges To Customers

In 2022, Marin County inspectors who check the accuracy of pricing in the local marketplace doubled the number of onsite inspections.

Marine County Agriculture/Weights & Measures inspector Johanna Good checks volume accuracy at a service station pump.
Marine County Agriculture/Weights & Measures inspector Johanna Good checks volume accuracy at a service station pump. (Marin County Department of Agriculture, Weights and Measures.)

MARIN COUNTY, CA -- As the COVID-19 pandemic eased in 2022, local government inspectors who check the accuracy of pricing in the Marin County marketplace doubled the number of on-site inspections when compared with the previous year. The result was a 241% increase in items found overcharged to customers.

However, there was a larger increase – 281% -- in items found to be undercharged to customers, according to the county.

Staff from the Marin County Department of Agriculture/Weights and Measures (AWMs) performed 12,537 inspections (up from 6,449 in 2021) at 387 businesses (up from 307) to ensure accuracy of measuring devices and checking the prices charged to consumers.

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The inspection numbers were some of the key figures mentioned in the latest Marin County Consumer Protection Report, presented to the Marin County Board of Supervisors on March 7.

AWMs Inspector Raoul Wertz said there were 467 overcharged items discovered during unannounced routine inspections in 2022, up from 137 in 2021. Undercharged items went from 87 to 332.

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The department responded to 41 customer inquiries, concerns, and complaints about Marin businesses, a 70% increase from the prior year. Complaints often involve retail overcharging, allegations of gas pumps “shorting” customers on fuel, or credit/debit card skimmers.

Wertz also pointed out that 4.5% of all retail items randomly price-checked by inspectors in 2022 rang up at a higher price than posted. For instance, a grocery cart with 25 items likely includes one overcharge, he said.

“We attribute the increase in complaints in 2022 to consumers being more aware of prices in the wake of pandemic pricing and media coverage of price gouging,” Wertz said.

AWMs Assistant Director Scott Wise acknowledged that since the pandemic brick-and-mortar retail stores have faced significant challenges such as reduced sales, increased online competition, supply chain disruptions, inflation, and worker shortages.

There were 226 notices of violation issued in the 2021-22 fiscal year to 169 local businesses, data show.

This marked the seventh consecutive year the AWMs staff produced a Consumer Protection Report. The department’s weights and measures inspection staff has only 2.3 full-time positions, but employees spent 4,599 hours serving t­he public’s interest by ensuring accuracy and equity in the marke­­­­tplace and protecting the health and welfare of Marin residents.


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