Sure We Can

Published: Feb. 2, 2009, 7:38 p.m.

b'This episode was produced by our guest contributors, Michael Premo and Rachel Falcone.\\xa0 If you have a story, click here for more information on contributing it to the Idealist.org Podcast.

In 1983 New York State implemented the Returnable Container Act requiring a 5 Cent deposit on carbonated beverages sold in glass, metal and plastic containers. Commonly known as a \\u201cBottle Bill,\\u201d the act is intended to reduce litter, ease the burden on solid waste facilities and encourage recycling activity.\\xa0 To date, 11 US states and at least 14 countries have enacted similar legislation.

In addition to its intended environmental impact, the Bottle Bill has unwittingly created a necessary and important source of income for homeless and impoverished people. In New York City, people who collect and redeem containers for a living refer to their vocation as Canning. They can be seen around the city reclaiming bottles and cans from commercial and residential waste, contributing to the amount of recyclable materials diverted from the waste stream. They stack what they find in carts they call \\u201cwagons.\\u201d A popular wagon is a grocery store shopping cart, known to canners as a \\u201c$60 wagon\\u201d because of the average value of the amount of containers it can hold.

This is an audio portrait of a "canner" named Eugene \\u201cThe King of Can\\u2019s\\u201d Gadsden and the work that he and his friends and colleagues Ana Martinez De Luco and Drew Swope are doing to improve the conditions of their community.

This audio portrait takes its name from the not-for-profit organization founded in 2007 by Eugene Gadsden and Ana Martinez De Luco. For more information or to contact Sure We Can, email Drew Swope at drew.swope (at) gmail.com.

For more information about the producers and other stories, visit michaelpremo.com.

\\nPhotography by Michael Premo

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