A unclean purple sofa. An previous pink child stroller. Damaged home equipment. Rusted automobile elements. These are simply among the greatest items of illegally dumped trash noticed this month in a Richmond neighborhood.
Metropolis crews can’t sustain with the work.
“We go to a road and choose up rubbish,” stated Victor Mejia, a Richmond Public Works Division cleanup employee. “Then after 20 minutes, we return to the identical spot and so they dumped it once more.”
To struggle the issue, the division plans to put in cameras at among the greatest downside areas as a pilot this yr, however no particular date has been set, stated Daniel Chavarria, Richmond Public Works director.

The purpose is to catch the unlawful dumpers within the act after which work with police and others to quote or high-quality those that break the legislation, Chavarria stated. The legislation states that anybody caught illegally dumping can resist $1,000 in fines.
“Should you don’t contact their pockets, they aren’t going to care,” he stated. “It’s a message: ‘Don’t come to Richmond to mess right here. Deal with Richmond.’”
Nevertheless, some residents fear that the surveillance cameras are a type of Massive Brother.
“It’s sort of like an invasion of privateness,” stated Arquimides Sanchez, a carpenter who has lived in Richmond for 4 years.

As of August, Mejia and the remainder of the clean-up crew have collected almost 4 million kilos of illegally dumped waste from greater than 1,000 areas all through the town, based on an evaluation of abatement replace shows.
Consequently, the Public Works Division has doubled the variety of cleanup employees to 17, based on Deputy Director Tawfic Halaby. Even so, the workload stays extreme.
“What are you doing at 7 o’clock within the morning on Monday? These guys are out working,” Halaby stated.
Chavarria stated the issue stays extreme as a result of unscrupulous junk elimination corporations are offloading their trash on metropolis streets to economize, as an alternative of taking it to the dump.
West Contra Costa Sanitary Landfill, Richmond’s foremost dump, prices $42 or mattress disposal and $137 for a TV or pc monitor.
Mejia believes that residents are also dumping trash on the road. “They will’t afford the dump,” Mejia stated. “For somebody that doesn’t have that a lot cash, it’s going to be simpler for them simply to dump it outdoors.”

Public Works holds neighborhood dumpster dropoffs for residents to get rid of cumbersome gadgets at no cost, and it offers curbside assortment for seniors and disabled residents. The dropoffs are on Saturdays in spring, summer time and fall. Residents ought to contact their neighborhood councils to seek out out when a dropoff will happen of their space.
Moreover, residents in Richmond, El Cerrito, Hercules, Pinole, San Pablo and the encompassing unincorporated communities might deliver three mattresses per thirty days for gratis to the West Contra Costa County Family Hazardous Waste Assortment Facility, 101 Pittsburg Ave. in Richmond.
Residents can assist curb unlawful dumping by reporting it to the unlawful dumping hotline, 510-965-4905.
Alicia Chiang contributed to this story.