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Trash To Treasure: Stealing Recyclables
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Every Wednesday night, Bruce Johnson dutifully puts his
garbage and recycling on the curb for pickup, and every week he fumes as small
trucks idle in front of his home and strangers dig through his bins stealing
trash they aim to turn into treasure.
Glass breaks, paper flies - the loot’s gone hours before the waste company
even arrives.
“
They’re like an army out there,” said Johnson. “They’re
in trucks. They’re on cell phones. It’s a business.”
With prices for aluminum, cardboard and newsprint going up and an economic
slowdown putting added pressure on people’s pocketbooks, curbside refuse
has become a hot commodity.
A truck piled high with mixed recyclables can fetch upward of $1,000; newspapers
alone can grab about $600.
“
These guys are becoming much more organized and much more prevalent,” said
Robert Reed, a spokesman for Norcal Waste Systems, Inc., a garbage recycling
company in San Francisco and other cities throughout Northern California. “This
has nothing to do with the lone homeless man picking up cans. We’re seeing
organized fleets of professional poachers with trucks.”
The issue has caught the attention of state and local officials, who are
seeking more stringent regulations to curb theft, saying lost revenue threatens
the
financial viability of their recycling programs.
Pilfering cans, bottles and other recyclables from bins is already illegal
in many places, including San Francisco and New York City.
In San Francisco, poachers can be fined up to $500 and get six months in
jail. In New York, thieves are subject to arrest, vehicle impoundment and fines
of
up to $5,000.
California lawmakers are also considering legislation that would make large-scale,
anonymous recycling more difficult by forcing scrap and paper recyclers to
require picture identification for anyone bringing in more than $50 worth of
cans, bottles
or newspapers and to pay such individuals with checks rather than cash.
Companies are also taking measures of their own.
Norcal Waste contracted private investigators and installed surveillance
cameras at San Francisco spots frequented by poachers. The investigators compiled
dozens
of photographs of old pickup trucks covered by spray-painted graffiti and piled
high with recyclables allegedly stolen from residents.
The free weekly The East Bay Express, which covers Oakland, Berkeley and
other Bay Area cities, hired an ex-police detective to stake out thieves and
began
retrofitting curbside newspaper racks to make them theft-resistant because
thousands of fresh copies go missing some weeks.
“
We don’t want to be spending all our energy printing papers that people
take directly to the recyclers,” said Hal Brody, the paper’s president.
Mike Costello, vice president of circulation at the free San Francisco daily,
The Examiner, has taken to doing stakeouts of his own.
In April, Costello followed a man driving around the city, emptying newspaper
racks and loading the stolen papers into a van. He eventually pulled up alongside
him, and told him, “Stay where you are. You’re in big trouble,” Costello
recalled.
Costello called police and the man unloaded his spoils - thousands of copies
of more than 15 publications, including multiple newspapers and piles of free
San Francisco tourist maps and brochures.
NorCal Waste Systems estimates that in 2007, more than $469,000 in recyclables
were stolen by hundreds of trucks. Officials from the City of Concord, some
30 miles east of San Francisco, figure they’re out $40,000 a year, while
the city of Berkeley values the loss upward of $50,000 annually.
In the last five years, aluminum prices on the London Metal Exchange have
climbed from around 65 cents a pound in 2003 to a record high of $1.50 a pound
in July.
Recycled paper and cardboard prices have also spiked, driven in large part
by a burgeoning recycled paper export market.
“
Newsprint is a hot grade,” said Mark Arzoumanian, editor in chief of Official
Board Markets, a publication covering the paper industry. “There is a
voracious demand in China and India for recycled paper.”
By cargo container load, the United States exports more waste paper than
any other product. Last year, 20 million tons of recycled paper were shipped
from
U.S. ports. Approximately 75 percent of that paper goes to China, where it
is reprocessed into shoe boxes, newspapers, cereal boxes, and the assortment
of
cardboard packages encasing all the consumer products China manufactures.
“
China just doesn’t have a heck of a lot of trees to make paper with,” said
Arzoumanian.
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