Waste collector
A waste collector is a person employed by a public or private enterprise to collect and remove refuse and recyclables from residential, commercial, industrial or other collection site for further processing and disposal. Specialised waste collection vehicles featuring an array of automated functions are often deployed to assist waste collectors in reducing collection and transport time and for protection from exposure.
Hazards
Waste collectors are exposed to many on-the-job hazards, such as chemical burns, disposable needles, broken glass, falling objects from overloaded containers, diseases that may accompany solid waste, asbestos, dog attacks, pests (ants, flies, cockroaches, rodents), dust, inclement weather, traffic, and foul odors.
Regional colloquialisms
Australia
- Garbage collector
- Garbageman
- Garbo
- Garbologist (jocular)
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British Isles
- Dustbin man
- Bin man
- Dustman[1]
- Refuse collector
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North America
- Garbageman
- Garbage collector
- Trash collector
- Recycling Tech
- Toter Tipper
- Sanman (Sanitation Man)
- Sanitation Engineer (Political correctness)
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Notable waste collectors
Former waste collectors
Fictional waste collectors
- Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a common dustman, My Fair Lady from the stage play, Broadway, 1956; London, 1958; Warner Bros. motion picture, 1964.
- Barney Gorman (Tony Danza) from the 1998 television film The Garbage Picking Field Goal Kicking Philadelphia Phenomenon
- Carl (Charlie Sheen) and James (Emilio Estevez) from the 1990 film Men at Work
- Howard Moon of The Mighty Boosh has worked twice as a Bin man, once prior to the show and lastly in The Strange Tale of the Crack Fox.
- Louie Wilson (Scatman Crothers) of Chico and the Man
- Mike Droese - Professional wrestler
- Garbageman - From Dilbert
- Muckman - From Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
- Nicodemus (Noddy) Boffin, aka the Golden Dustman, in Charles Dickens' Our Mutual Friend, probably based on Henry Dodd, a ploughboy who made his fortune removing London's rubbish.
- The 1960s popular song "My Old Man's a Dustman" by Lonnie Donegan
- Bob and Doug McKenzie, on their 2009 animated series
- The films Blood Feast, Scanners III: The Takeover and Child's Play 3 all feature minor characters being murdered with refuse trucks.[3]
- Roger Wilco - From the Space Quest computer game series by Sierra Entertainment
See also
Notes
References