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Trash it man
Trash it man













trash it man

The government typically oversees garbage collection, but private companies like Waste Management and BFI play a big role. Garbage men need strong legs, arms, and backs combined with good balance to manage the heavy loads. Garbage men hate rain the most because it makes all of the heavy trash even heavier. Waste collection goes on every day of the week in every town and community in every sort of weather. Steel toed boots, protective gloves, hard hats, and reflective suits are industry standards. Garbage men wear protective clothing to keep themselves safe.

trash it man

#Trash it man full

Besides the odors, trash collection is ripe with other hazards – used needles, broken glass, dead animals, blinding dusts, angry customers, illegal dumps, hazardous materials, vicious dogs, backed up traffic, or trashcans full of maggots. Vulgar smells and indescribable oozes constantly assault waste management workers. Garbage men deal with things that the rest of society wants to forget.

trash it man

Next time you’re wondering what’s inside an 18-wheeler, it might just be garbage. In bigger cities, where there is less landfill space, the trash is loaded onto big rig trucks and transported to areas where there is more room. At the end of the route or when the truck is full, the team transports the garbage to a sorting facility, unloads the garbage, sorts any waste, cleans the truck, and heads home.įrom the sorting facility, the garbage is either combusted, transported to landfills, or recycled. Net a giant trash compactor crushes the trash. On a typical route they may make 100’s or even 1000’s of stops, where they pick up countless trash bins and load them into the back of the garbage truck. Early each morning they get into a $185,000 garbage truck and go to work. Every single day garbage trucks rumble down streets and alleys collecting our non-hazardous trash from trashcans and dumpsters. Trash is the unwanted and undesired junk and filth that we need to get rid of – useless packaging, yard waste, construction materials, food scraps, old newspapers, dead batteries, old appliances, empty bottles, used Kleenex, expired milk, empty soda cans, discarded pizza boxes, soiled carpets, or dead plants. That’s 4.3 pounds of trash per person per day. In the United States in 2009, garbage men collected 243 million tons of trash. It’s a full time job for people all over the world. Waste management workers, or garbage men, collect, sort, and dispose of trash, waste, and refuse. Luckily there are devoted, hard working, individuals who make their living collecting our trash. There would be mountains of trash, flourishing diseases, and countless rats and pests on every street corner and in every neighborhood around the world. Imagine our world without waste management.















Trash it man