Stuff You Should Know - NYC Trash: A study in persistence
Episode Date: May 14, 2024Taking care of 12,000 tons of residential trash every day is a hard job. But how does that even work? Listen in to marvel at the NYC sanitation system.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy informati...on.
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Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
And it's just the three of us, Oscar the Grouch and it, here on Stuff You Should Know.
Yeah, I think this, I think there may be one more in this sort of semi-suite
that we've been tackling over the years,
which is to say the operations of New York City.
It's fascinating stuff.
I love it, because every time I'm there,
I'm like, how do they deal with all this trash
and deliver all that mail?
So if mail is interesting enough,
well, I'm gonna do a little research
and see if New York City mail is worth enough, well, I'm going to do a little research and see if New York city mail is, uh, worth its own deal.
Okay.
We did one on the USPS before.
Oh, sure.
That was a class.
We've done stuff on landfills and all kinds of things, but New York city
is very specific to its own self.
Yeah.
As they say, living it up between the moon and New York city.
I can't remember the rest.
Living it up.
Yeah.
And then he says, no, living it up. Yeah.
I like that better.
It's if you get caught, but I like it.
Yeah, I like living it up better too.
Oh goodness.
All right.
So we're talking New York City trash Chuck.
I didn't ever really give much thought to it.
I've been to New York plenty of times and been like, wow, there's a lot of trash everywhere
all the time.
Some of it in bags, some of it on the street, some of it in overflowing trash containers.
But it turns out that it is an enormous issue and has been an ongoing and very longstanding
issue in New York.
And they now have a mayor and a sanitation commissioner who's like, enough, it's done,
we're cleaning the city up once and for all.
And what's, yeah, Eric Adams, he's got a whole like, his whole campaign is called get stuff done and the, the trash branch of that is
get stuff clean and Jessica Tish, the new garbage
commissioner is from one of the wealthiest families
in America, possibly the world.
Oh wow.
Who's decided to dedicate her career to civil
service specifically in New York.
So she's worked in a few agencies and now she's the head of the sanitation department, the DSNY,
and is basically just like steamrolling through with new changes and just being like,
oh, I don't care, that's the way you used to do it.
Apparently it's wrong because it didn't get it done.
We're doing it this way now.
So they're actually making huge enormous changes by leaps and bounds that seem like they actually
possibly could clean New York up in the next couple years.
Do you know what, how the Tisch family, what their deal is?
What their deal is, like how they communicate Thanksgiving?
Well, no, you said one of the wealthiest families
in the world, I was kind of curious.
Oh, I get what you mean.
So.
What from or whatever. Her father is the of, um, like the Lowe's theaters, the
Lowe's hotels, apparently they own a distilling brand, like the, the parent
companies, the CEO of the parent company.
But I have a feeling like, like her family is like legacy wealthy.
That's my impression.
Yeah, New York NYU has the Tisch School of Arts.
I'm sure it's the same family.
Yes, it is.
As a matter of fact, there's a really interesting profile
on her and the New York Sanitation Department
and the New Yorker of all places.
And they rattled off three different things
that are named after her family.
So yes, they've been around for a while, but apparently that's pretty cool.
She's like, I'm incredibly wealthy, but I'm going to go, you know, work my way up in New York bureaucracy.
You know, it's really pretty incredible.
So should we go back in time? Yeah, let's.
Yeah, we've talked before about what old New York was like.
And when you see movies about old New York
they you know, they might grunge it up a little bit like
Scorsese's gangs of New York probably did one of the closest
truest depictions of early New York and just kind of how disgusting it could be right and we've talked about the amounts of
Manure from horses on the sides of the street, but it was really, really gross.
New York was a disgusting place back in the day. They did have a law, and this show's
kind of got it all. It's got like amazing facts of the episode. Right off the bat, we
have a great album title, which was this law from the 1650s that banned tubs of odor and nastiness. If
that's not like a Stooges album title or something, I don't know what it is.
But it was gross. I think the first fact of the podcast for me is
that about 20% of Manhattan, or really the whole metro area,
is built on land that didn't used to be there.
It's literally land that came from garbage fill,
from construction debris, dirt from the subway project,
like lower Manhattan in particular,
just kept growing and expanding in size.
And here's another fun fact on that.
Ellis Island is 28 acres now.
It started out as three acres.
Oh, wow.
It's was literally built from, I guess, just waste.
Yeah.
Because I mean, if you think about it, if you just go dump one load off of an island,
you just, you just littered, but if you keep doing it, you're developing the land.
It becomes art.
Yeah, you just gotta stick with it
and eventually it becomes an okay thing, right?
Yeah, it's really pretty incredible to think about that.
There are overlays that show how lower Manhattan grew
just from dumping stuff.
Oh yeah, I'll bet there's pretty cool maps like that.
I love that kind of stuff too.
Like I love walking around and being like, what,
what was this building originally?
You know, what used to be here?
I asked that out loud sometimes.
And people just building never answers.
Doesn't know.
So, um, this is not the first time under Eric Adams and Jessica Tish that, um, a
New York administrator has tried to
clean the city up. Plenty have tried, but the last truly successful one was in the
century before last. A Civil War, I think, colonel, a Union colonel named George
Waring, who became the head of the Department of Street Cleaning, which is
what the Sanitation Department was called back then.
And he cleaned up the city starting around 1895, but he was not the first
head of the Department of Street Cleaning. That department was almost 20 years old by the time he came along, but it had just basically been a place where Tammany Hall and the political machine
gave jobs to supporters, political supporters, and it was like you don't need to gave jobs to supporters,
political supporters, and it was like,
you don't need to show up to work,
you're still gonna get a paycheck kind of thing.
Yeah, I mean, they either did that or they outright
just stole money that was allocated for those
cleaning up projects to begin with.
I saw a name back then in the 1800s that the sludge
a name back then in the 1800s that the sludge of just manure and garbage and
cess, cess a thing, I guess?
Cess is the best.
The pool, I know it says pool is a thing, but is cess the thing in the pool?
I would think so.
All right.
Anyway, they called this sludge that lined the streets corporate pudding. So gross.
Because I guess it was just, you know, it wasn't getting cleaned up because all that
money, like I said, was either stolen or reallocated to cronies.
There's someone named Robin Nagel, who's an NYU professor who, it's an unpaid position but has basically worked as the unsanctioned,
unsalaried anthropologist for the Sanitation Department of New York and
just has an incredible amount of knowledge about this stuff. Yeah we've
talked about Robin Nagle before and George Waring and the changes he made so
supposedly you can look at Harper's magazine
between 1893 and 1895, and it's like George Waring
came along and waved a magic wand.
Like the difference is so distinct.
Like he created kind of like a military type
institution hierarchy.
He outfitted his people with white outfits designed by Jean Paul Gaultier,
um, and pith helmets.
And they went around and they cleaned up New York and apparently they throw
parades for him once in a while because they were just so successful and loved
and revered cause they did such a good job.
Um, but you can see the difference between these, these photos in Harper's Weekly that Robin Nagel has,
and I think we talked about all this in the
Typhoid Mary episode.
I think it was in the beginning of that one.
That makes sense.
I'm pretty sure that's where it was.
Yeah, I imagine George Waring came in on day one
and was like, for starters, how about you get that
dead hog off the side of the road?
Somebody's like genius.
He was famous by the way for designing the Memphis sewage system
after the civil war before New York. They're like, hey, you did such a good job,
you know, working out the sanitary sewage, I guess, in Memphis. Come on to New York,
because we have sewage in the streets.
Nice, it worked its way up.
Yeah.
If you can make it in New York's sanitation,
you can make it anywhere with sanitation, believe me.
So as things were going, they had landfills
that came along obviously, but a lot of the trash
was handled by incinerators, still is to great controversy as we'll get to later.
But a lot of these smaller apartment buildings
had their own incinerators.
They would just burn their trash.
The city was like, this is an air quality nightmare.
I can't imagine.
So let's ban these things.
And I thought it said 1889,
but they were banned finally in 1989.
Yeah, that tracks.
I mean, it wasn't until the 90s
that New York really started to kind of turn around some.
Yeah, that's true.
So one of the other things they did,
aside from banning individual buildings having incinerators,
which just seems like madness in retrospect,
you know what I mean?
It kind of does, yeah.
They also started slowly shutting down the, um, landfills that were within the city limits.
And finally, the last one, fresh kills on Staten Island, um, was famously shut down,
uh, in 2001.
And the, the, one of the reasons it became famous is it was the the landfill that accepted a lot of the waste from the
Twin Towers after the World Trade Center attacks
And that was it. It's kind of like kind of fitting. You know what I mean in a really weird bittersweet poetic way
Yeah, like a turning of the page. I guess so. Yeah
But that was it. So the thing is is New York still has tons of trash
That they accumulate every day But that was it. So the thing is, is New York still has tons of trash
that they accumulate every day. I mean, just as we'll see a mind boggling amount of trash
is generated by New York every day.
And they have trouble getting it off the street,
but then also they're starting to find like we are having problems
identifying where to send this trash.
Yeah, for sure.
So getting back to Waring,
back then he was like, all right,
we gotta figure out a way to get this trash.
People just threw it in the street.
And Waring was like, that's not a good system.
I don't know if anyone's noticed.
But just throwing your trash out of your,
literally out of your window sometimes of your apartment
isn't the way to go about things
if we wanna live a healthy life as a city.
And so why don't we get trash cans? You mentioned Oscar the Grouch. They were just sort of those standard
metal Oscar the Grouch cans
for a long long time until 1968 when there was a
sanitation strike that was only nine days long, but it doesn't take long for a sanitation strike to really, I guess,
get a little steam.
Not in New York.
A little steam going, because there were 100,000 tons
of garbage on the city streets by the end of that nine days,
and it was just a mess.
So they said, all right, how about this?
These trash cans were working for a long time,
but you're just dumping your trash right in these cans. Why don't you put it in trash bags inside the can? So they said, all right, how about this? These trash cans were working for a long time,
but you're just dumping your trash right in these cans.
Why don't you put it in trash bags inside the can?
And very sweetly, they thought that might help
the rat situation.
Like contain the smell enough
where rats wouldn't get to it.
Which is kind of kooky to think about.
Of course, rats will get to trash anywhere.
And it was better than, you know,
lifting up these big heavy trash cans
because they could just pick the bags
out of the trash cans and throw them in.
And then finally, just a few years later in 71,
they said, let's just get rid of these cans
and just put it in bags and put it out on the sidewalk.
Yeah, let's, one of the greatest,
most important cities in the world,
just leave our trash laying around in bags for hours on end, multiple of the greatest, most important cities in the world, just leave our trash laying around in bags
for hours on end, multiple times a week, every week.
Let's do that instead because you can stick them anywhere. They'll fit anywhere.
That's one of the challenges that New York has is it lacks a lot of the alleys and a lot of the little side,
well, alleys, I think is good enough to where people in other cities
store trash cans and trash bins like sane people.
So instead they have to use these trash bags
and basically tuck them wherever they can,
kind of out of the way and very frequently
not out of the way, you have to walk around them
on the sidewalk pretty often too.
So that's the state of New York trash collection now.
People leave their trash out in bags on the sidewalk, the sanitation department
workers come along and pick up the bags and throw them in the trash manually.
Throw them in the garbage trucks manually. And this is staggeringly behind
the times. Like garbage technology has advanced by leaps and bounds
since then.
And New York, just because of some of its unique
characteristics and traits, has had a really hard time
implementing them like other cities have.
Yeah, absolutely.
But like you said, there's good news on the horizon.
You wanna take a break now?
Yeah.
All right, we'll take a break.
Good little set up.
We'll come back and talk about just how much trash
there is right after this.
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All right. So we promised talk of just how much trash New Yorkers produce.
I don't think like per person they're creating an exceptional amount of trash, not picking on New Yorkers.
There's just a lot of people there, 800,000, more than 800,000 residential apartment buildings.
And they produce about four and a half million tons of just residential trash every year. So 24
million pounds a day or about 12,000 tons per day of just residential people trash
from apartments. Yeah. So every day they generate an equivalent weight of trash
to 50 million 526 thousand316 Big Macs.
I knew something like that was coming.
That's a lot of Big Macs.
Imagine all of that being produced every day.
Is that net weight after cooking?
Sorry.
Yes, that's the completed weight.
That's what you get when they put it on the tray.
Okay, gotcha.
And what's interesting is eating either one
has about the same impact on your health.
That's good.
Thank you.
It's morning for us, which is unusual.
So I'm a little slower and a little, a little less giving with my laugh count.
As long as I'm getting a little bit of it, a little bit goes a long way.
You've had plenty.
You got me right off the bat there with the, what was that
first joke that really got me?
The Oscar the Grouch one?
No, that was okay though.
Oh, the mistaken living it up in New York City.
Yeah, yeah. That got me going right off the bat.
So you would not be surprised to learn, dear listener,
that the DSNY, which is
the New York City's sanitation department,
is the largest in the country.
One reason is obviously because there are so many
people and so much trash, but also, uh, New York is a
little bit unique among large cities in that they are
responsible for more trash than other large cities are.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
A lot of other cities, they, they'll handle some,
like maybe houses or something on the outskirts of town
or in neighborhoods, but the apartment buildings
and commercial stuff, all that's handled by private companies.
And then in other cities, it's all private companies
these days in some cases too, especially suburbs.
But yeah, with New York, they're like,
nope, we're gonna handle it.
If you're a resident, we're gonna take care of your trash.
That's right, and as we're gonna handle it. If you're a resident, we're gonna take care of your trash. That's right.
And as we'll see, on the private side,
they handle the commercial trash.
That's coming up shortly.
But as far as the residential stuff goes,
they collect from each residential building
two or three times a week.
There are 59 different districts that cover New York,
each having its own garage that house more than 2,000 collection trucks
over those 59 districts.
Yeah, and that's just the collection trucks.
They have other kinds of trucks too.
Yeah, I saw that, I was trying to find out about
maintenance of these things, but collectively,
just the garbage trucks of New York drive about
four and a half million miles a year.
That's crazy.
Yeah, it's a lot of miles a year. That's crazy.
Yeah, it's a lot of miles.
So, yeah, they have all sorts of different trucks.
This is where the part of me who was once a little boy
who loved looking at picture books of like caterpillar earth movers
and those giant Volvo dump trucks really kind of came back to the surface.
But they've got some dual bin models.
And if you look at them, they basically do what it says on the tin. There's half divided into half for trash and the other half for recycling.
So you can pick up both on the same day at the same time.
Yeah.
They have top loaders that, you know, go up to like a dumpster and just pick it up
and shake it like a, and some, an enemy you might on the street who's, who weighed
much less than you.
All right.
And then the, the, they also have on the street who weighed much less than you.
Right.
And then they also have just the regular kind
that are called the white elephants.
And those are just so incredibly massive.
Each of the New York City regular single bin
garbage trucks can hold 12 tons of waste.
That's incredible. A full-size American standard school bus weighs 14 tons.
So they fit almost a school bus weight of trash in just one single truck at a time.
How many Big Macs is that?
I didn't do that one.
Okay.
This is the other fact of the podcast for me is that every garbage truck in New York has two
sets of steering wheels and pedals on both sides so either person can drive
and
No matter who's driving each brake pedal is live so
The if someone doesn't see somebody and the person that's not driving see someone,, you know, dart in front of the garbage truck, they can hit the brakes
as well.
Yep.
Uh, they, yeah, it's a good idea.
They also have street sweepers, AKA mechanical
brooms.
And I should say, I've seen those are starting to
be rolled out in electric versions, but
apparently they're trying to slowly electrify their
entire fleet.
It seems like street sweepers were one of the
first to be electrify their entire fleet. It seems like street sweepers were one of the first
to be electrified.
Salt spreaders, snow plows, front end loaders,
basically everything you could possibly need
to clean up and clear trash,
the New York City Department of Sanitation has it.
Yeah, for sure.
And if you're like, well, why do they have snow plows
and all that kind of stuff,
is because besides trash and recycling and
Composting which there is sort of a newer program
And it came about because it's it's a big problem. I think about 20% of
New York City's garbage is food waste me. I can really really cut down on that with a good composting
System in the city, but they're working on that. We'll get to that later, but they have to clean vacant lots. They're the ones who
remove the snow. Here's another fun fact. If there's a car on the street that has
the license plates torn off of it and someone has just dumped it and it's
worth under $1,250, the police say, that's a garbage car,
it's not our responsibility,
so the DSNY has to take care of it.
Yeah, so I looked up a little bit on that
and I couldn't find how they make that assessment
of how much the thing is worth.
No, Kelly Blue Book?
I guess, I would think just by virtue
of having the license plate removed
and it being abandoned on the street would indicate that it was worth less than $1,250, you know?
Well, usually. The $50 is what kills me.
That's true.
Like, that's where they landed instead of just $1,200 or $1,300.
Yeah.
But hey, I guess it was a formula.
Similarly, they also clean up abandoned bikes that are like chained to public property.
If the bike can just no longer be ridden because it's so bent or it's missing some essential parts, they will take care of it. They'll clip that chain and throw the whole thing away. But if you have a
bike that you want to get rid of, you don't have to abandon it. In New York City, you can take the
wheels off, put them in with your trash, and then you can put the bike itself out with your recycling.
Oh, very nice. Yeah, I thought so too. And as if that wasn't enough, last year in 2023,
Eric Adams, the mayor said, all right, you also now have to regulate and enforce street vendors,
you got to clean up the highways and take care of the graffiti in New York. And I'm sure they were
like, great,
it's not like we didn't have enough to do already.
Well, what's interesting is that's creating a lot of grumbling
because there's a lot of jobs from other agencies
that are just being taken.
Oh, I'm sure.
And the justification is like, hey, you're doing other stuff,
you have other stuff to focus on.
So this part has become kind of low priority.
So it makes sense the Department of Sanitation
would clean up graffiti.
We're cleaning up the whole city.
And apparently there was a backlog of a thousand
requests for graffiti removal.
They cleared 800 of them in one month.
So they're doing some amazing work there.
That's awesome.
I mean, I like good graffiti, like graffiti art.
Yes.
So if you're a resident of New York, you put in a
request for graffiti removal you can also
Request that graffiti be left alone
And there's like this whole procedure and process
But they give you like a certain amount of time between the time you say it
I want this graffiti removed and then the time they come out
I guess to give you a chance to really think about whether you want it removed or not and then they'll remove it
Yeah, like do you want the the vulgar tag just spray-painted across the front of a business removed or is it art?
Exactly depends on who did it. I guess so
8,000 sanitation workers total 2,000 other employees
Well, yeah, so I guess that's 10,000 total,
but 8,000 actual sort of bag slingers and cleaner uppers.
They're known as New York's strongest.
They are 90% male right now, so props to that 90%,
and really props to that 10% of these ladies that are getting in there
and getting their hands dirty
because it is tough, tough, dangerous work.
Yes, so one of the things, one of the reasons
that it's particularly dangerous for sanitation workers
in New York is again, because they use bags.
They're not in cans.
If you've not been to New York,
just imagine bags of trash just piled everywhere. The problem is when they're grabbing them
and throwing them in the truck, they're probably trying to avoid garbage juice,
which is a very distracting thing. It's very gross. It's rarely harmful, but you
don't want it on you, but it can distract you from things that can harm you.
So like some rusty sharp thing poking out of the
bag that you put your hand on.
There's a lot of hazards.
Sometimes the stuff that's in there could pose a
hazard to you in other ways like garbage juice
would.
There's an article I found from 1996 where a
sanitation worker named Michael Hanley died
because some jerk threw hydrofluoric acid away in with the regular garbage.
And when it was compressed in the hopper,
it exploded and Hanley inhaled it and died,
basically on the spot.
Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, that's the thing that happens when that hopper,
you know, squishes all that stuff down.
There's gonna be stuff that sprays out.
They, you know, try to get out of the way,
but sometimes they can't.
And Olivia found this, another fun little factoid here
that apparently enough of that garbage juice
is coffee related that whatever season it is,
if it's like pumpkin spice season or whatever,
the sanitation workers just like,
it's like, oh God, here comes the pumpkin this fall.
Yeah, I can imagine that just gets really old really fast. Can you imagine? The sanitation workers just like, it's like, Oh God, here comes the pumpkin. This, you know, this fall.
Yeah.
I can imagine that just gets really old, really fast when it's.
Yeah.
Cause it's the worst version of that coffee.
It's not hot and fresh and in the cup.
It's, it's cold and runny and mixed with other stuff and
leaking out of a garbage bag.
Like hydrofluoric acid.
Right.
So there's also, it's also just hard.
Like a lot of this stuff is very heavy.
You can fit a lot of stuff into a trash bag and apparently residential
places with compactors use what are called sausage bags, where you can fit
multiple compacted rounds of trash into one single bag.
You need two people to toss those in.
And then the cans, they're also in charge of the cans, right?
And then the cans, they're also in charge of the cans, right? Like, I think those little very famous kind of mesh wire New York City trash cans
that open like a door, I think, at the base.
Am I making sense here?
Sort of. Just street corner trash cans.
Let's just call them that.
Those weigh 30 pounds empty, so I've never seen a New York City trash can that wasn't absolutely overflowing.
So that's a lot more weight, and they're doing that by hand.
Some of these routes can have as many as 400 of these.
That's so crazy, dude.
That's just really, really, really hard, strenuous labor.
You also said that there's never a New York City corner trash can
that is empty. So I found a study from 1987 that estimated that a 60 pound can,
so a trash can with about 30 pounds of waste, you can imagine this probably
pretty average, to lift it the 40 inches into the hopper and dump it requires
three and a half horsepower from the sanitation worker. And then, like you said, there might be 400 of those on a route.
I just can't imagine how just tired you would be at the end of this.
Well, and all the stuff you're breathing in too, especially if you're a street
sweeper, all kinds of, you know, sort of respiratory issues can pop up before
COVID, you know, before people are like, hey, maybe we should wear masks and sanitize things.
Thousands of New York City workers got sick
during the early COVID days.
Nine of them died.
About 100 sanitation workers died
from illnesses cleaning up ground zero.
So it is, you know, not only is it a strenuous job and can be dangerous
because of you know sharp and rusty things but it's just it's just hard on
your body period. Right. Fortunately they have a really good union. They're members
of Teamsters Local 831 the Uniform Sanitation Men's Association and thanks
to the union they when you are an entry level
sanitation worker, you start out making $43,305 a
year.
Not great.
Which is no, especially in New York.
It's hard to live on that.
But if you stick with it for five and a half years,
it more than doubles to $88,979.
That's pretty great.
Yeah.
And once you reach that point, there are plenty of
New York City sanitation workers that are
making $100,000 or over from all of the extra pay that can come from bonus work.
Like they get triple overtime for snow removal and stuff like that.
So you can make a pretty good middle class income for New York City as a sanitation worker
just from sticking with it for a few years.
Plus also, you can retire in just over 20 years too, with full benefits.
Yeah.
I mean, that's a big deal.
You get about 18 days of vacation, but if you start in your early 20s, you put in your
22 years, they don't have like an age thing where like you have to work to a certain age.
So if you start in your early 20s you can potentially retire with your
full pension
in your early to mid 40s and
You know you can do a lot worse than that
For sure. Yeah, cuz I mean you just be like well
I want to keep working but I'll go over here and take this other job
But I'll still get paid for my old job because I retired. Exactly. You do have to pass a civil service exam.
You have to get your CDL, your commercial driver's license.
There's about a month of training.
And then you have to, you know, once you get that license,
they have a little practice area where they practice
like a little obstacle course, basically.
Yeah.
You practice driving that garbage truck
because, you know, driving through through New York is I find it enjoyable
and kind of fun and exciting but driving a garbage truck imagine is tough
there's stuff all over the place and you can't just Mad Max it through there you
know. No you can't because people get killed like that because there's a lot
of people walking and running and riding bikes around New York that you have to look out for.
Yeah, increasingly distracted people we should add.
Right.
Yeah.
So we said that they shut down all of the
landfills within New York's borders, but that
means that they have to ship this trash one way or
another outside of New York.
Some of it gets diverted to incinerators.
They're like, we don't want incinerators in New York
because it contributes to poor air quality,
but we'll pay you to burn it for us elsewhere.
Fortunately, they've now converted some of those incinerators
to waste to energy plants.
So you're actually getting something out of burning the trash.
As far as these waste to energy plants go,
if you're thinking like, what do you mean they burn
trash and get something out of it?
It's basically works just like coal would like any
kind of energy creation like that is just burning
something to create steam, to spend that, you know,
to boil water, to create steam, to spend that
turbine.
And in this case, they just burn trash instead of
coal, which you think is like, Oh, that's great.
You know, uh, that's great.
Maybe this should be a whole episode at one point, but there are a lot of people who say
like, these are an environmental nightmare.
You are creating energy, but you're also creating a landfill in the sky by what you're putting
into the air.
So we might want to look into that as a full one at some point.
Remember, we did our plasma waste generator generator episode and that thing was flawless in its
design and execution, but I don't think that's what they're using for these waste energy
plants.
I don't think so.
So some of the garbage is being diverted and incinerated, but from what I understand the
vast majority is sent outside of New York to landfills in places like Virginia or South Carolina or Ohio.
And the way that they get there predominantly is by rail and by barge.
And so New York set up five what are called marine transfer stations that are amazing.
If you look into it, did you look into them at all?
Because they're crazy awesome.
I did. And they are crazy awesome.
Uh, yeah, those Marine stations, I think, uh, they built those over about a 20
year period, uh, starting in the early two thousands, uh, there's five of them.
Um, the neighborhoods, you know, where these were going to be near, we're
obviously not too excited about them.
Uh, when, you know, when they were first proposed, uh, but apparently they've
done a pretty good job
as far as the smell goes.
They aren't too stinky.
I think it's noise more than anything
because you constantly just have trucks
going in and out of there.
But they've done a great job with deodorizing and venting
this stuff.
Even have hawk calls being played on loudspeakers
to keep seagulls away, because that would be a nightmare.
Oh yeah.
Um, but apparently they're not as bad as everyone thought they were going to be.
No, plus also the neighborhoods that they're in are like already kind of
ports and there's other industry nearby anyway, and they set up essentially
access roads so that when the trucks start backing up, they're not on the
street, they're off of the street.
And then the whole thing is enclosed,
right? So garbage truck goes into the building, sealed shipping container comes out the other side.
And inside the building, like you said, they've taken all these measures to keep the smell down
and just keep it from being gross. But what happens is the garbage truck comes in, backs up
to the tipping station, tips its contents all the way down
to the to the next story down.
Next story down is just basically like that trash compactor in Star Wars, the first one.
It's essentially like that, but rather than having like that pneumatic arm crush everything,
they have front loaders that basically push all the stuff into shipping containers.
And a shipping container can hold just over about two full trucks worth of
waste, I think 25 tons. They top that thing off,
seal it, and say, here you go waste management, take over from here.
Yeah, and you know, you mentioned some of this goes to different states. I saw that almost all of Manhattan's trash
goes to New Jersey.
Oh, nice.
Sorry, New Jersey.
Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Ohio
is where most of the rest of it goes,
as far as landfills go.
And then weirdly, Staten Island trash
goes to South Carolina.
That is a little weird.
I don't know why, but I guess they just, you know,
worked out an exchange program or something.
Yeah, and I guess it's totally up to private companies,
like I said, waste management's a good example
of taking possession of the shipping containers,
stacking them up on barges.
I think you can fit like 48 full on a barge,
and taking that on a slowboat
to South Carolina or taking it upriver to Niagara Falls, I think that's where one of
the incinerators is, Niagara, New York.
And then also if it's somewhere like Ohio, it's very tough to sail a barge to Ohio, so
you just take it to a rail station and the shipping containers get shipped by rail to
Ohio where it gets
dumped. All right maybe, or actually right before we take a break let's cover
this one more thing I think. Which is if you've lost something and you want to
get it back in the trash it's probably not gonna happen but it really
depends on how good of a looker you are. Because what you'll do is, is you'll call up, you'll say, I lost a wedding ring in
the garbage, I'm pretty upset about this, and they say, oh great, we have a program
called the Lost Valuable Search, just come on down to the Marine Transfer
Station, we'll work with you to determine which truck is yours, and then there's a
huge pile of trash, and you have 90 minutes to
go through and find it by yourself and or I guess with whatever friends you are
able to talk into coming with you. And people have they found all sorts of
stuff. Sure it happens. Yeah it does happen apparently also there's people
who are like oh that's what I have to do just forget about it I'm good. Thanks
anyway. Yeah I'll get a new wedding ring.
So let's take a break and we'll come back and talk about some of the shady business
that goes on in the private industry.
All right, cool. I'm Elliot Coney and this is Family Therapy.
In my best hopes, I guess, identify the life that I want and work towards it.
I never seen a man take care of my mother the way she needed to be taken care of.
I get the impression that you don't feel like you've done everything right as a father.
Is that true?
That's true and I'm not offended by that.
Thank you for going through those things and thank you for overcoming them.
Wow.
Thank God for deliverance.
Every time I have one of our sessions, our sessions be positive.
It just keeps me going.
I feel like my focus is redirected in a different
aspect of my life now.
So how'd we do today?
We did good.
The Black Effect presents Family Therapy.
Listen now on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
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I'm Tamika D. Mallory. And it's your boy, my son, the General. your podcasts.
I'm Tamika D. Mallory. And it's your boy, Mike Saunders General.
And we are your host of TMI.
New year, new name, new energy.
But same old.
And catch us every Wednesday on the Black Effect Network,
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that's not all. We will also have special guests to add their
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listen to TMI on the Black Effect podcast network,
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That's right.
As important as choosing the right destination
when traveling is choosing the right travel partner.
Gene! Eugene Fodor! Gene!
Much of the joy you will find on the road comes from the person you share it with.
So you hide the books, Gene. I have a lot of stuff on the sea business.
I understand now. He's a wise man, Mary is a wise woman.
But be careful and choose your travel partner well,
because the worst trips result when two partners
have two different agendas.
Get down!
I'm not stupid, Gene.
Something is going on in it's high time.
You tell me the truth.
Freeze, Americano!
Gene, run!
So travel before it's too late.
Your money will return, your time won't, and we're all too quickly approaching that final
destination.
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts. Okay, Chuck, so we said that the city picks up residential trash, but for the most part
commercial trash like stores, office buildings, industry, that's handled by private companies.
And that's not actually new, that goes all the way back to, I think, the mid to late 50s, 1957, I think, when
the city was like, hey, we, we could use some help collecting trash.
How about private companies get involved?
And the mafia sat up and said, yes, let's do that.
And apparently the Gambino and Genovese crime families were really big
into what's called carting.
It's private trash collection.
For decades, it was extraordinarily corrupt.
And finally in the nineties, um, New York did something about it, got the, got the
crime families out of the carting business, but the companies are like no less shady
than they were before and they're just shady in different ways.
Whereas before they were screwing over the customers,
now they're screwing over the workers.
Because back then at least they had, they were mob-run,
but they were in really good unions.
And as these private companies came along, they don't have very good unions.
So I saw somewhere that a worker at a private company today makes less as a
driver for a truck than a helper made in 1985.
Wow.
$16 an hour.
They make less than that.
1985 to 2016.
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah.
That's what happens when you have a union that's good, that goes away in favor of
union that's bad and that's in cahoots with the ownership. Or if there is no union at all, which
is the case sometimes. True that. Wouldn't Tony Soprano in sanitation? Or didn't he say he was? Yes, he was in
carding. Yeah, yeah. I remember that. I also remember when I lived in New Jersey, the Italian, I'm not
saying it was a mafia truck,
because that would be wrong to assume,
but whoever picked up our trash had a big Italian name
on the side of the truck.
And it was during that time of The Sopranos
where I was kind of like, what's going on here?
Oh, you know what's going on there,
but supposedly that was after they cleaned things up,
although that was Jersey, huh?
So yeah, they probably didn't, that was probably mafia run. Well, although that was Jersey, huh? So yeah, they probably didn't,
that was probably mafia run.
Well, and it was also mid 90s,
so I think they were just like,
that's when they were cleaning it up.
Gotcha.
So there are about 250 private handlers
that are now overseen by the Business Integrity Commission,
which may as well be called the
Don't Let the mafia get involved commission.
And sometimes, yeah, except exactly.
So you mentioned, you know, just bad conditions
and some of these private companies,
like very long work hours, maybe safety training,
maybe not, maybe safety gear, maybe not.
There, if you hear of a story about a pedestrian
that's killed in New York by a garbage truck,
chances are it's a private company, not always,
but there are much, much higher incidents of,
I didn't say incidences, somebody called us out on that.
You remember that?
Yeah. Yeah.
It's an incident. Nice work.
We're really progressing here in year 16.
Hey, we're trying to.
But many more incidents from the private companies, you know, running over somebody than the DSNY,
and largely because of training, but also because they're just, they're working too long, they're too tired, and they have too much to do in general.
Yeah, an investigative journalist named Kira Feldman wrote an article for ProPublica called Trashed.
And I don't remember what came after the colon,
but it's really eye-opening.
I mean, even if you don't care about Trashed Collection
or New York City, just the fact that people
are being treated this way is just nuts, man.
So it's definitely worth a read
if this episode piqued your interest at all.
Yeah, there's an African immigrant named Mukhtar Diallo, and I don't think we mentioned that some of these private companies will just like, you know, pick up the dude in the parking lot that's looking for day work.
So they're not covered at all or insured or anything like that. They'll just like, we'll pay you under the table to like run out in front of the truck and get bags out, you know,
to where they can be collected easier.
And Mukhtar was one of these guys
and he was crushed under a truck.
And when it came time to talk about this,
the company said, we don't know this guy,
he just, he's a homeless guy that ran out
in front of the truck.
And of course it later came out what really happened so in 2019 a New York
passed a law that said all right we're dividing this into zones now there can
be no more than three companies picking up in each zone just trying to sort of
rein in the chaos a little bit right and you have to if you want to do this you
have to sign a contract that meets certain standards of safety and working conditions.
And it's, you know, it's kind of being implemented now.
So it is still currently changing for the better.
Yeah.
And you mentioned all the miles that the DSNY travels just on their routes every year.
These commercial haulers might be driving from one spot to many, many blocks over to
the next spot and just wasting so much time and burning so much gas.
Whereas if it's like there's only three companies in this one quadrant, they're going
to be driving a lot around, a lot less, and they're also going to be burning a lot more,
a lot fewer fossil fuels and releasing fewer emissions too.
So it's all together a pretty good plan.
Of course, the companies are like, can't do that.
Like what about competition?
But New York's not really listening apparently.
And that's what's happening right now.
And that's just part of a, another, again, this
larger push for reforming the whole place under
Eric Adams and Jessica Tisch.
And one of the big ones is getting rid of the
black bags in favor of containers, like the same
plastic bins that you see in basically every other
city in the world in one way, shape or form or
another.
New York's finally being like, we're going to
get in on that.
Are they black bags?
I think they were blue.
There's blue too.
Yeah, they have all different colors, but
there's definitely blue as well, yes.
Okay. I wasn't sure. It's been a while,
but I just have a visual in my head of mountains of blue bags on trash day.
If you've never been to New York at all or you haven't been many times,
you would probably be shocked to come out on trash day on a hot summer rainy trash day. Because it's quite a sight and quite a smell,
but like you said, they're moving toward bins.
Just a few months ago in February of this year,
they said, all right, here's our new plan.
We're gonna get, if you got a smaller apartment building,
you're gonna have those little wheelie bins
like almost every other city in the United States.
If you are in a really big apartment building, it's basically a dumpster, but it's plastic, but it's like a large container. You mentioned the fact that there aren't a lot of alleys in New York.
It's kind of a movie trope when you've seen alley scenes set in New York City,
probably not being filmed in New York because most of the buildings on a block
are just crammed right next to each other.
So these dumpsters have to go somewhere
and they said, all right, we'll make them small enough
to fit in a parking spot.
We'll lose 150,000 parking spots all over the city,
but we have to do it and it'll also help us reclaim
some of this sidewalk space that we're losing.
Yeah, and apparently parking spots is one of the most politically charged issues in all of New York politics.
I'm sure.
So that's really gutsy to be like 150,000 parking spots are going away so we can put these bins there.
And it's not even across the board. There's some blocks I read that are losing a quarter
of their parking spots.
Oh, I'm sure.
So it's definitely going to take an adjustment for
sure, but there won't be bags of trash everywhere.
They'll just be like different colored bins that
are on the street, just off the sidewalk.
Um, that a truck comes along and picks up that it
doesn't require human hands to throw bag after bag
into the truck anymore.
Oh, in New York City, the residents really have to get
on board with this to make that work.
Well, they did a pilot study of it in Harlem,
and this is back in September of 2023,
and apparently it was extremely successful.
Rat sightings were down 68%.
Where did they go?
I don't know.
I think they just kind of, they disappear.
They go poof into nothingness after they don't eat for two days.
Oh boy.
That means they're organizing.
This could get really scary.
But supposedly, um, they, the people of Harlem were like, this is, this is cool.
We can, we can definitely deal with this.
So they're rolling it out to the rest of New York.
Yeah.
I think they will see the benefit
to where people get on board
because what would really screw up that system
is that truck is going using the mechanics
to dump those cans, but then there's four or five bags
that wouldn't fit in the can just sitting there.
So you're still gonna have to have some people
down there slinging bags.
Definitely, for sure.
But it should speed up the whole thing and clean it up if everyone chips in.
Yeah, and isn't that what living in New York is all about?
Everybody chipping in.
A little bit, for sure.
You got anything else?
No, just another mention of composting.
They're getting that going, I mentioned earlier.
Still pretty new program,
since 20% of that total waste is food waste.
If they really got a pretty efficient composting system
going, then it would do a lot to reduce trash
and do better things for Mother Earth.
So you did have something else.
I did.
Well, if you want to know more
about New York trash collection, go to New York and just
walk around and you'll find out everything you need to know about it.
And while you're booking your flight, how about it's time for Listener Man.
I'm going to call this, what is this?
Oh, Arson Investigation.
Okay.
Hey guys, in 2019 I moved to St. Paul with some friends from college.
It's really fun.
I made many new friends.
In fact, two of my roommates I had never met.
One was a local rapper.
The other was a firefighter EMT.
St. Paul is the arson capital of the country.
Is it really?
It wouldn't surprise me.
After listening to this story, this guy said it was a glorious era of my life filled with
healing, fun, and
young adulting. Within a few months I got a job at a discount movie theater and I was
working one day when the theater got a call from our boss and said, hey, your house is
on fire, you should come by. So the firefighters walked me through the burning home. I saw no flames,
but it was S-M-O-K-E-Y. Went up to my room. Nothing was burnt there, which is great, but
it did smell like a bonfire for about a year after that.
Man.
Everyone was gone at the time, so nobody was hurt. About a month later, my landlord slash
boss, same person, which is why that sounded weird earlier. Mm-hmm mentioned that there was a big break in the fire investigation
But made me do a little work to figure out who it was
It turns out the firefighter EMT that I live with
Decided he didn't want to live with us anymore
So a week before he moved a couch to the basement and set it on fire and walked away. Oh my god
I only
I only found out because he admitted it to me.
My life went haywire for a while after that, but I'm happy to report that I'm settled in full-on adulting with love.
That is Tegan Torres.
Fantastic. What a great, great story. Thanks a lot, Tegan.
Who saw that coming?
Not me. That was a twist that you'd find at a discount movie
theater.
Right.
Well, if you want to be like Tegan
and send us an amazing story about something we talked
about, we love that kind of thing,
you can send it via email to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, My Heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, As important as choosing the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel
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Gene!
Gene Fodor! Gene, what's going on?
But be careful, because the worst trips result
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The CIA really need your help, Gene.
Freeze, Americano!
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Gene, run!
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever
you get your podcasts.
John Stewart is back in the host chair at The Daily Show, which means he's also back
in our ears on The Daily Show Ears Edition podcast.
Join late night legend John Stewart and the best news team for today's biggest headlines,
exclusive extended interviews, and more.
Now this is a second term we can all get behind.
Listen to The Daily Show, Ears Edition
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
More than a movie is back with season two.
I'm your host, Alex Fumero, and each week,
I'm gonna talk to the people behind your favorite movies.
From the Godfather, Andy Garcia.
He has the smarts of Vito, the temper of Sonny, the warmth of Fredo, and the coldness of Michael.
To the legend behind La Bamba, Lou Diamond Phillips.
When I walked in, I didn't think I had a shot at Richie because John Stamos' picture was already
up on the wall. Listen to more than a movie on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.