Residents of a street in Hell’s Kitchen are experimenting with putting their trash in metal containers as part of a new pilot program. The metal bins for residential trash and recyclables were designed to clear sidewalks and avoid rats. “This has been a few years in the making that we’ve been agitating and pushing for a pilot here,” Manhattan City Councilman Erik Bottcher said.

The new limited pilot program on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues features a few sets of containers on what used to be parking spots. New Yorkers have been putting out their trash in plastic bags on the sidewalk for half a century. The city is now trying to figure out better ways to manage its annual 14 million tons of residential and commercial waste.

Most major cities around the world use large containers that sanitation trucks lift to empty. In October, the city gave the McKinsey & Company, a consulting firm, a $4 million contract to study how containerization could be implemented in New York. “Containerization of waste will affect every block in the city, every neighborhood, every resident,” Sanitation Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. “It’s just sweeping, and in my opinion you have the chance of rolling out containerization in New York City once, and you have to do it right.”

To read the full story, visit https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/politics/2023/01/11/manhattan-street-pilot-program-puts-residential-trash-in-large-containers.
Author: Juan Manuel Benitez, Spectrum News NY1
Image: 
Juan Manuel Benitez, Spectrum News NY1

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