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Related: About this forumTrashed: Inside the Deadly World of Private Garbage Collection
Trashed: Inside the Deadly World of Private Garbage Collection
Waste removal is one of the most dangerous jobs in the country. On the darkened streets of New York City, its a race for survival.
by Kiera Feldman, The Investigative Fund Jan. 4, 8 a.m. EST
Shortly before 5 a.m. on a recent November night, a garbage truck with a New York Yankees decal on the side sped through a red light on an empty street in the Bronx. The two workers aboard were running late. Before long, they would start getting calls from their boss. Where are you on the route? Hurry up, it shouldnt take this long. Theirs was one of 133 garbage trucks owned by Action Carting, the largest waste company in New York City, which picks up the garbage and recycling from 16,700 businesses. ... Going 20 miles per hour above the citys 25 mph limit, the Action truck ran another red light with a worker, called a helper, hanging off the back. Just a few miles away the week before, another man had died in the middle of the night beneath the wheels of another companys garbage truck. The Action truck began driving on the wrong side of the road in preparation for the next stop. The workers were racing to pick up as much garbage as possible before dawn arrived and the streets filled with slow traffic. This route should take you twelve hours, the boss often told them. It shouldnt take you fourteen hours.
....
In the universe of New Yorks garbage industry, Action is considered a company that takes the high road. A union shop, it offers starting pay of about $16 per hour for helpers and $23 for drivers, far more than many other companies. And unlike some other companies, Action provides high-visibility gear and conducts safety meetings. But since 2008, the companys trucks have killed five pedestrians or cyclists. ... In New York City overall, private sanitation trucks killed seven people in 2017. By contrast, city municipal sanitation trucks havent caused a fatality since 2014.
Pedestrians arent the only casualties, and Action isnt the only company involved in fatalities. Waste and recycling work is the fifth most fatal job in America far more deadly than serving as a police officer or a firefighter. Loggers have the highest fatality rate, followed by fishing workers, aircraft pilots and roofers. From the collection out on garbage trucks, to the processing at transfer stations and recycling centers, to the dumping at landfills, the waste industry averages about one worker fatality a week. Nationally, in 2016, 82 percent of waste-worker deaths occurred in the private sector.
There are two vastly different worlds of garbage in New York City: day and night. By day, 7,200 uniformed municipal workers from the citys Department of Sanitation go door-to-door, collecting the residential trash. Like postal workers, they tend to follow compact routes. They work eight-hour days with time-and-a-half for overtime and snow removal and double-time for Sundays. With a median base pay of $69,000 plus health care, a pension, almost four weeks of paid vacation and unlimited sick days, the Department of Sanitation workforce is overwhelmingly full time and unionized. Its also 55 percent white, and 91 percent male. ... But come nightfall, an army of private garbage trucks from more than 250 sanitation companies zigzag across town in ad hoc fashion, carting away the trash and recycling from every business every bodega, restaurant and office building in the five boroughs. Those private carters remove more than half of the citys total waste.
....
This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute.
Waste removal is one of the most dangerous jobs in the country. On the darkened streets of New York City, its a race for survival.
by Kiera Feldman, The Investigative Fund Jan. 4, 8 a.m. EST
Shortly before 5 a.m. on a recent November night, a garbage truck with a New York Yankees decal on the side sped through a red light on an empty street in the Bronx. The two workers aboard were running late. Before long, they would start getting calls from their boss. Where are you on the route? Hurry up, it shouldnt take this long. Theirs was one of 133 garbage trucks owned by Action Carting, the largest waste company in New York City, which picks up the garbage and recycling from 16,700 businesses. ... Going 20 miles per hour above the citys 25 mph limit, the Action truck ran another red light with a worker, called a helper, hanging off the back. Just a few miles away the week before, another man had died in the middle of the night beneath the wheels of another companys garbage truck. The Action truck began driving on the wrong side of the road in preparation for the next stop. The workers were racing to pick up as much garbage as possible before dawn arrived and the streets filled with slow traffic. This route should take you twelve hours, the boss often told them. It shouldnt take you fourteen hours.
....
In the universe of New Yorks garbage industry, Action is considered a company that takes the high road. A union shop, it offers starting pay of about $16 per hour for helpers and $23 for drivers, far more than many other companies. And unlike some other companies, Action provides high-visibility gear and conducts safety meetings. But since 2008, the companys trucks have killed five pedestrians or cyclists. ... In New York City overall, private sanitation trucks killed seven people in 2017. By contrast, city municipal sanitation trucks havent caused a fatality since 2014.
Pedestrians arent the only casualties, and Action isnt the only company involved in fatalities. Waste and recycling work is the fifth most fatal job in America far more deadly than serving as a police officer or a firefighter. Loggers have the highest fatality rate, followed by fishing workers, aircraft pilots and roofers. From the collection out on garbage trucks, to the processing at transfer stations and recycling centers, to the dumping at landfills, the waste industry averages about one worker fatality a week. Nationally, in 2016, 82 percent of waste-worker deaths occurred in the private sector.
There are two vastly different worlds of garbage in New York City: day and night. By day, 7,200 uniformed municipal workers from the citys Department of Sanitation go door-to-door, collecting the residential trash. Like postal workers, they tend to follow compact routes. They work eight-hour days with time-and-a-half for overtime and snow removal and double-time for Sundays. With a median base pay of $69,000 plus health care, a pension, almost four weeks of paid vacation and unlimited sick days, the Department of Sanitation workforce is overwhelmingly full time and unionized. Its also 55 percent white, and 91 percent male. ... But come nightfall, an army of private garbage trucks from more than 250 sanitation companies zigzag across town in ad hoc fashion, carting away the trash and recycling from every business every bodega, restaurant and office building in the five boroughs. Those private carters remove more than half of the citys total waste.
....
This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute.
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Trashed: Inside the Deadly World of Private Garbage Collection (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jan 2018
OP
msongs
(67,441 posts)1. good story. thanks for posting it nt