Three separate places I went to at 8 in the morning. Gas station, dunkin' donuts, and then a convenience store. All of them, trash is full. People wonder why they litter in the USA, there's nowhere to throw away trash when you're out. It's unbelievable People can just go to work and choose not to do their job anymore. That people see this and they don't have any problem with it, no interest at all to keep things neat and tidy and clean. Nope.
When the convenience store only has one employee, even often during peak times, that has to run the register, stock shelves, clean, and take out the trash, in that priority order, is it any wonder that the lower priority tasks just don't get done at all?
This likely isn't a matter of people "not doing their job". Did you communicate that there was a problem with those trash cans being full? Likely, no one else did, either. Since everyone seems to expect everyone else to complain?
A similar thought process, even though I agree with your original sentiment that we need to have trash cans available:
If you would have "done your job" and communicated, there may have been 4 more trash cans available.
Eh, It's a bit of both. No amount of societal pressure will solve a complete absence of waste disposal infrastructure. It's a matter of making sure the sense of shame and/or duty is greater than whatever distance there inevitably is to a working bin.
This post gives me "people don't want to work anymore" vibes.
Another way to look at it is, people don't want to pay people to work anymore. Either the pay is such shit that the employees have no incentive to give a crap, or the employer doesn't hire enough people to get the work done.
You don't even know how fast these damn bins fill up. I'm a janitor at McDonald's, and move between 5 locations (same franchise owner). The two that are in a highway rest stop kind of area that get the most customers have several cans around the parking lot. I empty them before the restaurant even opens, and all or most of them are already full by my first break. There's only ever 1 janitor on shift at a time and we can't be everywhere all the time. Something I have had to explain to the owner who constantly gets on my ass about the cans in the parking lot being full. "Do you want me to just spend all day making sure the garbage cans are empty or shall I do the other tasks I have as well?"
The bins themselves look pretty large with the huge stone enclosure they're in; but the actual can inside is not even as big as a standard home kitchen bin, and the amount of trash generated by a single to-go meal from the restaurant is pretty nuts. And this is just from a fast food place. The bins placed by the city or municipality probably have even less of a chance to be serviced when the employees who do that are also in charge of cleaning the park bathrooms, mowing the grass, trimming trees and shrubs, fixing road signs, etc.
Personally, if I see a full trash can I will keep my trash with me until I can find a place to dispose of it. I can’t imagine just throwing it on the ground regardless of the can situation.
In Japan it's almost impossible to find a trash can on the streets and yet people don't litter. The problem is the culture centered around consumerism and waste.
Funnily enough that's where I find most of the litter in Japan, like, if you go to any non-main road that goes through a bit of forest, you will see signs threatening fines for littering, with a bunch of trash tossed in that exact area.
I have seen cans, bottles, ACs, TVs, baby car seats, bags, and general household trash. Also found a golf club once that I actually brought home because I thought that it was neat. And this is only along a single stretch of road that is only like 1km long.
So Japan isn't some miracle society that doesn't litter, it's just that they do it someplace that is somewhat out of sight.
With respect to Japan, there's definitely a culture difference, but I don't think it's the consumerism/waste culture. There's so much excess packaging in Japanese food products.
It's another true half statement the middle management refuses to complete. "Nobody wants to work anymore for the wages offered for these types of jobs". Same old story as middle management accepting "the customer is always right" (and entitling shitty customers) without finishing it with "in terms of market trends"
Short staffing is also an issue. If there are too few employees for the workload then you'll see things fall behind. This is a different flavor of the same ultimate issue though (wanting to pay the least they can get away with for labor).
Don't worry, you'll soon get massive tax cuts for companies and their executives, while basic goods get 25%-35% pricier for the worker class due to the tariffs since the orange potato has to fun those tax cuts somehow.
That’s no excuse for littering - but it is super annoying.
There’s a dunks near me that moved its trash out of the drive in line WAAAAAAY over to the other side of the parking lot. Intentionally, so that I don’t bother them by throwing away, you know, the bag and napkins they give you.
That was the straw that broke the camels back - I just make my coffee now in the morning. It’s 1/100th the price and aggravation.
Or, hear me out... carry it until you find one with room? If finding full trash cans "forces" you to litter, that says more about you being an entitled piece of shit than it does about anything else.
"I couldn't find a single vacant public toilet, so I did what any sensible person would do and took a shit in the middle of the sidewalk." —OP, analogously
Yeah, OP is complaining to the internet when they should be bugging town council. Although they seem to think it's just low-wage workers messing with them personally...
I buy as much as I can second hand. Doing so, I am not bombarded with trash. No boxes, no bags, no plastic wrap.
We should 100% just not be producing all this trash. Coffee at home has zero waste, no plastic cup, no receipt, no carrier, no lid,...... do that shit everyday x millions of people. smh
They get paid more than most people would think but it's still not enough based on the hazards of the job. They get exposed to all sorts of nasty things that can ruin their long term health and they have increased likelihood that they'll get a life-altering injury at work.
Meanwhile in Japan public trash cans are extremely rare and people are expected to bring their trash home and throw it away there. And they do. We are just a spoiled society.
I forgot what event it was here in Germany (where there are plenty of trash cans, at least in the inner cities) but every group of Japanese tourists left places they visit cleaner than they found them. They were nice
In the US we teach kids that trash men are suckers and idiots that didn't work hard enough in school! Also, that trash is an externality: Someone else's problem.
"We pay taxes for people to clean that up! Why should I spend my valuable time doing someone else's job‽"
Maybe you should try to do the job of the trash collectors for a week and see if it's really honest to say "Its unbelievable people go to work and choose not to do their job anymore".
Most jobs have lunatics in leadership positions who think people can survive on exposure or gift cards or a minimum wage that cannot afford 3 healthy meals a day.
"Unskilled Labour" is a lie told by business people to swindle money from hardworking people. Most of the rich people on the planet are scoundrels.
You should be more angry at the throwaway society we've become to create so much trash, rather than rant at the person who might be the sole employee until someone else comes in to do the regular morning cleanup duties.
So you think some full trash cans cause people to head out to the interstate and only then throw shit out their window? Guess they're making a statement or something...
Many times you can compact that stuff down with minimal effort. Just use the bag or whatever you're throwing away so that you aren't touching the other garbage with your hand.
Unless you want hepatitis C, that's probably not the best idea. Nothing short of medieval plate armor would eliminate the risk of accidentally stabbing yourself on something.