BY COREY JOHNSON | Nearly every day, I see garbage cans overflowing throughout my district in neighborhoods like Greenwich Village, Chelsea or Hell’s Kitchen. Just as often, I hear from frustrated constituents who express a growing sense that our city is failing in its duty to simply keep the streets clean. On weekends, these problems only seem to grow worse.
When we cannot keep our public spaces clean, it instills a sense that our city is “in over its head” when it comes to performing basic functions. Sanitation is one of those crucial municipal issues that affects both quality of life and public health. In the greatest city in the world, we have to do better.
The Third City Council District — which spans Manhattan’s West Side from roughly Canal St. to Columbus Circle — is in a unique position when it comes to sanitation. While our residential population is about 170,000 people, we have a daytime population that often exceeds 1.3 million people. As home to Times Square, the High Line, the Whitney Museum, the Theater District, the Garment District and so much more, we have a lot of pedestrians on our streets every day.
That means a lot of waste to clean up — roughly 210 tons per year, to be specific.
The men and women of the Department of Sanitation of New York perform difficult work every day with finite resources, and they do an outstanding job. But with burgeoning tourism, a rising population and countless weekday office workers, the sanitation demands of my district are too great for D.S.N.Y. to handle alone.
Since taking office in 2014, I’ve been diligently seeking new ways to improve our garbage-collection services. I’ve funded the installation of 90 new large wastebaskets around the district, with 22 more on the way. And each year, I’ve allocated significant funding to D.S.N.Y. for additional garbage collection.
But more has to be done.
That’s why this year, we’ll be taking a bold new approach in the district. I’ve allocated funding from the 2017 budget to hire the Association of Community Employment Programs for the Homeless (ACE), a nonprofit organization, to provide comprehensive cleaning services to our neighborhoods.
ACE is a truly inspirational organization, with a mission to help homeless New Yorkers get back on their feet through employment training and job opportunities. To date, ACE has helped more than 2,500 homeless New Yorkers find full-time jobs and start new lives.
What’s more, ACE knows how to get the job done. We’ve already seen them do an outstanding job at several parks and corridors in our district, and that’s why I’m confident that they will handle this expanded role with diligence and excellence.
As of Thurs., Nov. 3, we have three full-time ACE employees on our streets 40 hours per week, all 52 weeks of the year. They’ll be emptying and bagging full garbage baskets, sweeping sidewalks, and doing so much of the tough work that it takes to keep our streets clean.
While they’re starting off on particularly high-volume corridors like Christopher St. in the Village, and Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Aves. in Chelsea and Hell’s Kitchen, they’ve offered to be flexible to meet our greatest needs on any given week.
Individual business owners and building managers can also get involved by joining the Adopt-a-Basket program, in which D.S.N.Y. gives residents and businesses the tools they need to supervise the wastebasket on their corner and ensure that it remains tidy. Call 311 or my office if you’d like to join this vital community program — it’s a great way to be part of the solution.
Of course, nothing can replace the amazing employees of D.S.N.Y., who will continue to service our neighborhoods, as well. To further support their efforts, I have allocated $20,000 for additional mechanical-broom service (street-sweeper trucks) and $20,000 for Manual Litter Patrol, a D.S.N.Y. initiative that focuses extra attention to high-volume areas in need of greater services.
At the end of the day, results are all that matter. I expect these solutions to make a major improvement on our streets. But I always want to hear from you, the people who live and work in the district, to make sure that our city is living up to the highest standards of services.
If you see a sanitation issue that needs to be resolved promptly, please let me know. You can contact my office by calling 212-564-7757 or by e-mail at District3@council.nyc.gov.
See you around the neighborhood!
Johnson is city councilmember, Third District