Dumpster Divers: Helping The Environment On The Daily

in #green8 years ago (edited)

In most big cities, there is a market that has organically formed that most people don’t talk about or aren’t really aware it exists. I’m referring to the addicts/homeless people who scavenge through dumpsters for a living. At first glance you might be thinking “gross”, but this dirty job actually plays an important role within the metropolitan ecosystem.

When most people walk by and see someone who is head first and ankle deep in a dumpster, they might scoff and think how horrible it is a that a person can be reduced to such activity. While the job is indeed dirty, the people engaged in it are doing their part in helping the environment, and they didn’t need any government decree to do it.

The most common items these folks are looking for are cans and bottles, because they can both be taken to recycling centers in exchange for some cold hard cash. The for-profit recycling model works far better than government mandated recycling schemes or the variety of carbon taxes. This model works because of two things: incentive and the profit-motive. These two things are basically combined, because the ability to make a profit is what incentivizes the dumpster diving in the first place.

They aren’t making chump change for this either. Dumpster diving can be rather lucrative for the person willing to stick to it. While many of the divers inevitably use their profit to support their addiction, the fact of the matter is they are helping the environment by finding so many recyclables that other people have simply thrown out. No government mandate will accomplish what these hard workers are doing day in and day out.

Some companies lock their dumpsters in order to avoid people going through them, and while there is a legitimate concern about the divers being on private property in the first place, the ownership rights of the garbage is more or less being relinquished once it’s tossed in the dumpster. Certain cities have also banned dumpster diving, which is something they clearly shouldn’t be involved in. In this regard, companies and governments should free the dumpsters!

Some people who go dumpster diving have deemed their efforts a sort of 'food rescue' and it's amazing to see the amount of high quality produce and other items that can be found right there inside a dirty overlooked bin.

Let the market in dumpster diving continue, and the environment will benefit as a result.

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I live in an Apartment Complex. Over a hundred apartments. We have four or five dumpsters strategically located around the complex so that we can dump our trash. Usually in trash bags. Oddly enough the people from the surrounding subdivisions seem to think that the dumpsters are theirs to use also.

I go for walks occasionally and pass each dumpster in turn. You would not BELIEVE what people throw away. Like furniture. Right now I'm sitting in a very nice office chair that I 'rescued' from the dumpster. I've seen a LOT of various types of furniture, clothes, electronics (a computer!)...just about anything actually.

I'd actually thought of 'salvage-resale' myself.

that is awesome that you were able to get a chair and rescue it! I have seen amazing things thrown into the dumpster -- laptops, cellphones, never opened cologne, etc.If you aren't afraid to get a little dirty.. you can find some amazing things sometimes! thanks for your feedback :D

I've eked out a living by peddling stuff I got from the trash (mostly furniture, computers and knick-knacks) at various points in my life. The end/beginning of the month is a good time to do this (because people are moving). And college campus housing around the end of a school year is ... well ... my friends and I call this hippie christmas.

that is amazing!
thanks for sharing!!~

I have heard of people finding items that are wr
worth a lot of money in a bin. Some people don't know there value then throw it out. I say go for it

isn't that the truth? ^_^

I think you'd enjoy a book called Evasion. Its a collection of zines from around USA, and dumpster diving features prominently in them

After searching for a few hours, I have come to conclude that Dumpster Diving in this area is not at all worth it. Most places such as grocery stores that would have something useful use trash compactors to dispose of their waste. Most dumpsters belong to companies that sell other goods or services. After digging through about 10 different dumpsters, I did find some wooden shelving that I happily accepted for my efforts. Otherwise it was two hours of getting shut out by most places. The best bet to finding useful stuff is finding companies without trash compactors. Suburbia has little to offer in it's dumpsters. Probably better off looking on tree lawns (assuming its not food you are looking for.)

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