Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The Phenomenon

I was lying on the couch with my eyes glued to the window. Half listening to the TV and half listening for the clashing sound of aluminum cans, I waited for Colleen. 

It's a phenomenon that is prevalent in college towns across the country. People like Colleen spend Saturday and Sunday mornings collecting empty beer and pop cans from college students' houses. I first learned about this trend on a trip to visit my friend at Ohio State. As we pounded Natty Lights during a game of 80's power hour, my friends kept chucking their empties into their yard off of Summit and East 18th. As an avid litter-hater, I was appalled that it was nothing for them to just throw the trash outside. Before I could scold them, they informed me that the bums come around and collect the empty cans and recycle them for money. Ohh. 

Once I moved off campus into a house on North Congress, I started to notice people who collected cans in my area. And collecting in a college town like Athens makes a lot of sense if one's quest is to find empty (beer) cans. 

However, this practice of collecting recyclable materials is not limited to college towns and certainly not limited to bums. In Shanghai, China one blogger calls these collectors an army of three-wheeled carts attached to bikes. They are professionals--organized and efficient--making a living off of this profession. And a mother living in Minneapolis started collecting cans to save for her son's education. His bank account now grows yearly by about $1,000. Just from the cans his mom collects. 

So this is my quest to learn more about the can collecting phenomenon that happens (literally) in my own backyard. But it turns out that tracking down those people who collect empty aluminum cans is more difficult that one would think. 


2 comments:

Carolin Biebrach said...

What do those people earn per can? Seems like a great work effort, to get a $1000 by collecting cans.

Emily said...

It's interesting that college students are throwing their cans out the window because they know there are people desperate enough to pick them up rather than just recycling themselves. What kind of dynamic do you think that creates between college students and "bums"? Do they students think they are genuinely helping those people or are they just playing into what they think is an eccentric behavior?