Breaking News

Can cleaning illegal discharges build a community? Oakland volunteers hope so.

For seven hours on Saturday, dozens of volunteers worked with rakes, shovels and construction equipment to clean an illegal discharge site on East 12th Street. They took seven waste trailers – including thrown mattresses, one moped and two models.

At the center of the effort was Vincent Williams, co-founder of the Urban Compassion Project, a waste cleaning group. Dressed in a white disposable combination, Mr. Williams and 48 volunteers withdrew 25 tonnes of debris and spent $ 6,500 in equipment and transported that day.

Mr. Williams started five years ago with garbage bags in a park in which he played once when he was a child. He has not stopped since, pushed by a conviction that even a single cleaning can be important in a city where illegal dumping has become a routine.

Why we wrote this

A story focused on

An effort to clean Oakland started little: a man trying to make a safe park so that a little boy can play. Today, volunteers say that cleaning is not intended to replace government services, but must remind people the importance of the community.

“You know how many people have said it was impossible? … or” it will never remain clean. You will never have this battery, “he said, looking at the last trailer filling up.” So yes, it’s very fulfilling. “

The illegal spill is not new in Oakland, where waste on the roadside is a common show. While the volunteers release one of its most neglected corridors, the organizers underlined the city’s unequal record on the application. Since 2021, Oakland Public Works has issued nearly 3,000 quotes from illegal discharges totaling approximately $ 1.3 million. But only 11% of this was collected. Residents say that the city is not enough to catch offenders.

One of the volunteers on Saturday was the member of the District 2 Charlene Wang council. Not yet sworn at the time, she did not chop words by rolling up her sleeves.

Troy A. SAMBAJON / The Christian Science Monitor

A volunteer with the urban compassion project discovers a tire tire tread on an illegal discharge site on East 12th Street and 17th Street in Oakland, California, May 3, 2025.

“I’m not going to be diplomatic,” she said, wearing a N95 mask and other protective equipment given to all volunteers. “It stinks and we really need help.”

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button