Imperial Valley Press

In New York, making a life out of bottles and cans

- BY CLAUDIA TORRENS

NEW YORK — When the Brooklyn clothing factory where she worked closed its doors, Josefa Marín started picking up cans and bottles from trash cans to make ends meet.

A decade later, the 50-year-old Mexican immigrant is handed hundreds of recyclable­s by bars and clubs and by concierges of private buildings, who know her so well that they even give her the keys to their trash rooms so she can take what she needs.

For Marín, working alongside her partner, Pedro Galicia, canning is a little business that allows her to pay bills, cover her $1,500 per month rent and put food on the table for two kids.

“This is our job, we have learned to survive doing this, whether it’s hot in the summer or cold in the winter,” she said, hunkered down wearing plastic gloves, while fishing through containers.

In one of the most expensive cities in the world, where monthly rents in wealthy neighborho­ods surpass $10,000, people who scour through trash might be viewed by some as probably homeless, but many so-called canners refute that claim.

They are called “bottle profession­als” by some redemption centers employees who describe them as people who know by heart each recycling and trash pick-up route, who buy from other canners and who take the job seriously thanks to a 1982 law in New York that allows consumers to return empty containers for five cents.

“They have the buildings that they are dedicated to. And if they do their job properly through their network, they should be able to earn, you know, 200 to 250 dollars a day, which should equate out to over 30 dollars an hour,” said Conrad Cutler, president of Galvanize Group, a redemption center that sends trucks to Manhattan to buy from about 220 canners. “It’s not work that everybody would want to do, but it’s certainly an honest way to make a living.”

The closing of restaurant­s and bars in the city due to the coronaviru­s will mean less bottles and cans for canners.

However, those who collect cans from residentia­l buildings and concierges expect big quantities as residents hunker down.

The majority of canners use gloves and some now use masks as protection against germs, but they keep going out on the streets as they need cash on a regular basis.

“I think we have a high immunizati­on system because we are always around trash,” said Ana Martínez de Luco, a nun who co-founded Sure We Can, a

Brooklyn nonprofit redemption center. Some canners sit on the nonprofits board.

It isn’t clear what will happen to these undergroun­d economy workers if New York City starts putting restrictio­ns on people leaving their homes in an attempt to control the virus outbreak.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said Tuesday that residents should be prepared to “shelter in place ” if the city and state decide it is safer to keep people away from each other indoors.

Under the Bottle Bill, beverage distributo­rs return redemption centers the five-cent deposit and pay them a 3.5-cent handling fee. Besides New York, nine more states in the country have bottle bills.

Distributo­r trucks, for example, park every day in front of Sure We Can. The smell of beer from empty bottles fills the air and a clinking noise is heard all day as dozens of canners come from the streets, take out their material from shopping carts and place it in clear bags or cardboard boxes.

They all know how to sort each container: some belong to Corona, others to Pepsi, others to

Polar Spring. Each canner will get between six and six and a half cents per can or bottle if they do the sorting.

That’s what Josefa Teco works on every week. Teco, 57, who is a Mexican immigrant started canning five years ago, when she became unemployed after the tortilla factory she worked at moved out of state due to high rents.

She and her husband Juan have informal agreements to take recyclable­s from several bars and from a building they also help clean. They make around $10 for a bag of 200 cans and bottles.

“I am not going to ask people ‘give me a dollar.’ No, no. I prefer to do this so I can have my money, to eat, and for all expenses,” she said.

Sure We Can serves more canners each year: about 500 in 2017, more than 700 in 2018 and more than 800 last year, de Luco said.

The job is not only done by Latin American or Chinese immigrants, she said, but also by the elderly, people with disabiliti­es and all kinds of low-skill workers or business owners out of a job. Many are not “bottle profession­als” but people who needs some extra cash. De Luco is fighting for the nonprofit to stay alive after the landlord asked them to leave so he can sell the property.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOHN MINCHILLO ?? Pedro Galicia organizes his haul of cans and bottles for redemption at the Sure We Can, a Brooklyn non-profit redemption center on Feb. 27, in New York.
AP PHOTO/JOHN MINCHILLO Pedro Galicia organizes his haul of cans and bottles for redemption at the Sure We Can, a Brooklyn non-profit redemption center on Feb. 27, in New York.

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