What Happens To NYC’s 3.2 Million Tons Of Trash | Big Business | Business Insider

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Published 2021-03-21
New York City is one of the most wasteful cities in the world. But none of its trash is actually processed in NYC. It's sent to waste-to-energy facilities and landfills as far away as Ohio and South Carolina. It takes a vast network of sanitation workers, trucks, trains, cranes, and barges — and $429 million a year — to get it there.

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What Happens To NYC’s 3.2 Million Tons Of Trash | Big Business | Business Insider

All Comments (21)
  • I hate how society hates on garbage men and puts them as the bad example what happends when you dont study. Tf, theyre SO important its not even funny. Mad respect. <3
  • @dannyzero692
    “You don’t smell garbage you smell money” Yo someone give this man a raise
  • @jazzyjeff6594
    Amazing i never realized how much goes into the daily grind of handling garbage love and respect to all of our sanitation workers.
  • @notallthatbad
    I used to have the weirdest job years ago. I would follow around a garbage truck in the wee hours of the morning counting how many "yards" (bags) of trash they would throw into the garbage truck. I even got to ride on the back of the truck once when there was nothing else to do and helped load trash into it. Gave me massive respect for sanitation workers. They are literally keeping society clean and disease free. Without them, things would fall apart very quickly.
  • @CockatooDude
    Honestly it's reporting like this that all media outlets should aspire to.
  • @JC02official
    Unless you are living alone in the wilderness you are always relying on other people for everything, even if it doesn't seem like it. This is big work. So much respect to these people
  • I used to pick up recycled cans, paper, for huge recycling company, it's cool to see how they separate and reuse a lot of trash, big money. And when you see it on conveyor belts being separated it's really not dirty like I'd always thought, plastic, paper, glass, aluminum cans, pretty amazing seeing blocks of aluminum just from cans.
  • @mtvh7739
    "you don't smell garbage, you smell money." Frank 2021
  • @october1634
    "Rain, snow, hail, storm. There's no stopping us" The tide: Say no more
  • Crazy seeing those cranes in a video and not just in person. I was part of a crew that installed the ones you see at 4:20
  • I've started appreciating sanitation workers in the pandemic. Respect.
  • @somecuntxxx
    Russell is just that one kind of guy that makes you say he's kind to: neighbors friends family pets fish ghosts the equipment in the factory plants fungus worms inanimate objects the ground the sky trees grass weeds bugs bees anything that exists Russell has to be chill with really
  • @losethegame1991
    As a residential plumber who regularly sticks his whole arm into drains, I have mad respect for trash workers. Hes so right that you dont smell the stink, you smell the $$. These types of jobs keeps America running.
  • @mydear6788
    This video should be played in every class room so kids can see it.
  • @JustinKayce
    This is incredible. I would so like to see this start a movement that helps dispose of trash in a way that can be beneficial on top of being healthy for the environment.
  • @PowerShellNoob
    It’s pretty insane that a lot of these jobs that people make fun of play such a huge part in our daily lives. If these jobs didn’t exist, we probably couldn’t exist or would be a disease ridden world.