I pop in time to time just to make sure I haven't transcended into a alternate reality or anything... All the scrappers in my area have just vanished. Never see loaded down trucks or even trucks crawling around on trash night anymore. The local yards are empty, used to there would be a hour or more wait to weigh in and unload on saturdays, not anymore. I couldn't tell you the last time I saw anything scrap related on the curb, even the local city waste trucks that do "large item / bulk pickup" that normally have tons of tv's and appliances in the back now rarely have anything besides furniture.
It's almost like no one throws out anything anymore and it didn't happen over time, just all at once. I drive a lot with my job and even the back woods areas that throw things over the hillside are clean (not complaining about that though, that's a good thing). The only things I get anymore are the occasional lead acid battery from power chairs at work, and random items through people at work, church and the like. I mainly stop in just to study and see others post about current endeavors to make sure the years I've spent scrapping were not just a weird dream I had
.
I have a feeling since West Virginia leads the nation on drug overdose rates, and with the media coverage of junkies destroying ac units, electric lines and abandoned houses to scrap things, scrapping now more than ever, has a bad veneer to it. The actions of a few have affected everyone. People have returned from vacation to find flooded basements where people broke in and cut the copper pipes out and ripped the walls apart for the wiring! It's crazy.
I've seen people throw my
business cards away and mumble about "get a real job" under their breath, I just smile and keep it moving. I work 60+ hours a week delivering and setting up medical equipment (hospital beds, oxygen systems, power chairs, etc) for a living. It seems if your under 50 years old in my area scrapping, you are a "druggy". No matter if you work full time plus some, own your own 2004 f150 truck that isn't beat up or rusty and 95% of the time very clean, speak clearly and warmly, wearing a "I <3 my church" wristband from a church fundraiser and a wedding ring (will be married three years this august). All of that is just a clever disguise I suppose.
I'm only 29, so I'm just a "no good punk looking for a fix" as one person told me. Yet these same people wonder why young people stay in so much trouble and conflict anymore... You guys give me hope that one day, recycling and scrapping will have a positive view in my area, since WV tends to move years behind in social norms and trends. Kudos to the people who adapt and overcome adverse conditions in this market, you help give me the motivation to keep on truckin'!
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