The Oklahoman

Garbage, recyclable­s pile up amid variant

A large number of workers calling in sick

- Travis Loller

“We’re getting calls, emails, everything. People are understand­ably frustrated.” Liliana Bakhtiari Atlanta City Council Member

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The omicron variant is sickening so many sanitation workers around the U.S. that some cities have had to delay or suspend garbage or recycling pickup, angering residents shocked that government­s can’t perform this most basic of functions.

The slowdowns have caused recycling bins full of Christmas gift boxes and wrapping paper to languish on curbs in Nashville, Tennessee; trash bags to pile up on Philadelph­ia streets’ and uncollecte­d yard waste – grass clippings, leaves, branches – to block sidewalks in Atlanta.

“It’s just a shame,” said Madelyn Rubin, who lives in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, where officials have halted recycling.

“You know that they could find the money to do it if they wanted to,” she said. “If it was a business that wanted to come in here, they would dump money in to make it happen.”

Cities including Atlanta; Nashville; and Louisville, Kentucky, are so short-handed they have temporaril­y stopped collecting things like recyclable bottles, cans, paper and plastic, yard waste and oversize junk to focus on the grosser, smellier stuff.

The delays are more than annoyance to residents, creating problems such as clogged storm drains and blocked sidewalks.

Nashville City Council member Freddie O’Connell was just as surprised as his constituen­ts when he received notice before Christmas that the city was halting curbside recycling.

“I was just stunned there wasn’t an alternativ­e or a backup plan,” he said. “No hotline for people who are mobility impaired or don’t have reliable access to a car” to carry their recyclable­s to a central drop-off site.

“It feels like a failure of governance,” he added. The garbage crisis is actually the third of the pandemic. The first happened in the spring of 2020, when COVID-19 took hold in the U.S. Problems arose again as the delta variant spiked over the summer.

The Solid Waste Associatio­n of North America warned government officials and trash haulers in December to “plan now for staffing shortages.”

The highly contagious variant hit just when Americans were generating a lot of trash – over the Christmas holidays. Combine that with a relatively low vaccinatio­n level among front-line sanitation workers and you have a “perfect storm for delayed collection,” the associatio­n’s executive director, David Biderman, said last week.

In some communitie­s, up to a quarter of the wastecolle­ction workforce is calling in sick, Biderman said.

Garbage collection has become just another of the many basic services disrupted by omicron. Around the U.S., teachers, firefighters, police officers and transit workers have been out sick in large numbers.

“We’re getting calls, emails, everything. People are understand­ably frustrated,” said Atlanta City Council member Liliana Bakhtiari.

Atlanta officials said Monday that because of the worker shortage, recycling and yard waste will be picked up “as staffing allows.”

Los Angeles said delays in the collection of recyclable­s could continue through the month.

In Louisville, sanitation workers stopped picking up yard waste in early January until further notice. Residents can drop off branches and clippings at Christmas tree collection sites.

New York City, which boasts the largest municipal sanitation force in the world, had around 2,000 of its 7,000 workers out because of the latest round of the coronaviru­s, but the rest are working long hours to clear a backlog of waste. They city has not suspended any services.

Harry Nespoli, president of the union local representi­ng the city’s sanitation workers, said some are coming back after quarantini­ng, while others are testing positive for the virus: “Right now it’s a swinging door.”

In Philadelph­ia, sometimes called Filthadelp­hia because of the condition of its streets, around 10% to 15% of the 900-person sanitation workforce is out on any given day, leading to delays in waste collection, according to Streets Commission­er Carlton Williams.

“When people are out, we can’t just hire to replace them,” he said. “We have to give them time to get well.”

To keep the trash from piling up, some municipali­ties are hiring temporary workers or contractin­g with private haulers. Some are offering signing or retention bonuses or pay raises.

Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, increased starting wages for drivers by more than 40%, from just over $31,500 to $45,000.

That allowed the city to restore recycling collection in November after halting it in July and continue routine pickups despite the omicron surge, said spokespers­on Mary Beth Ikard.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? Trash sits on the sidewalk for collection in Philadelph­ia last week. Around 10% to 15% of the city’s 900-person sanitation workforce is out on any given day, leading to delays in waste collection, according to Streets Commission­er Carlton Williams.
MATT ROURKE/AP Trash sits on the sidewalk for collection in Philadelph­ia last week. Around 10% to 15% of the city’s 900-person sanitation workforce is out on any given day, leading to delays in waste collection, according to Streets Commission­er Carlton Williams.

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