Scraping a Living

November 2, 2021 | Borneo Bulletin

NEW YORK (AFP) – On a Brooklyn street, Laurentino Marin doesn’t stop to admire the Halloween decorations. Like every morning, the Mexican is busy filling a shopping cart with used cans and plastic bottles, which he will exchange for a few dollars.

Marin, who is 80, is one of New York’s estimated 10,000 “canners”, mostly older migrants from Latin America and China who scrape a living sorting and recycling plastics and aluminium.

Frail and stooped over, Marin stops in front of the stairs of a typical brownstone house that dots this neighbourhood, lifts the lids of the trash cans and plunges his gloved hands into them.

He also searches through plastic packaging filled with garbage that sit on the sidewalk, awaiting collection from the city’s sanitation department.

Large see-through bags hang from his trolley, already full to the brim with a multicoloured assortment of soda cans.

“I’m looking for cans to survive,” the wrinkled-faced Marin, originally from Oaxaca, said in Spanish.

‘Canner’ Laurentino Marin looking for cans and bottles to recycle in Brooklyn. PHOTO: AFP

“I don’t receive help, there is no work, so you have to fight,” he added.

Marin does not have an employer. He exchanges his cans and bottles in one of the city’s private recycling centres. For each one he gets a five-cent coin.

On an average day, he makes between USD30 and USD40, enough to supplement his daughter’s income from a laundromat so they can make their USD1,800 monthly rent. The five-cent sum was enshrined in a 1982 New York state law known as the ‘Bottle Bill’ that was passed to encourage consumers to recycle. It hasn’t changed in almost 40 years.

“It had a really good impact of reducing litter across the state, especially in New York City,” said founder Judith Enck of the anti-pollution movement, Beyond Plastics, which campaigned at the time for the law.

Enck now wants to see the amount doubled to 10 cents.

“We didn’t realise that this would become a major source of income for many families, as it has,” she told AFP.

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