Workforce: Page 17


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    Flickr / US Department of the Interior
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    Former Boston Mayor Marty Walsh confirmed as labor secretary

    The leader with union ties emphasized the need for safety standards during his confirmation hearing, calling OSHA "one of the first and top priorities for me."

    By Ryan Golden • Updated March 23, 2021
  • Pete Buttigieg confirmation hearing before Senate Commerce Committee
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    Screenshot via U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation

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    Buttigieg DOT confirmation boosts hope for massive infrastructure investment

    Several officials said the former South Bend, Indiana, mayor's experience in local government will serve him well and have called on him to embrace innovations like autonomous and electric vehicles. 

    By Chris Teale • Feb. 3, 2021
  • CDC publishes vaccination posters, templates for employers with essential workers

    Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention approved plans to put essential workers next in line for vaccines, state rollout plans vary.

    By Ryan Golden • Feb. 1, 2021
  • LA Sanitation and Environment collection workers in spring 2020
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    Permission granted by LA Sanitation and Environment
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    WASTECON: Coronavirus underscores shared challenges and adaptations for city leaders

    Officials from New York, Toronto, Miami-Dade County, Philadelphia and Baltimore highlighted ongoing budget and staffing challenges nearly a year into the pandemic. Now, they're seizing the moment for long-term changes.

    By , Feb. 1, 2021
  • Mack LR Electric model for Republic Services, by Mack Trucks
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    Courtesy of Mack Trucks
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    Deep Dive

    Fleet tech forges ahead, but some bide time on higher-stake EV investments

    The pandemic strained finances for some waste and recycling collectors looking to upgrade their operations. But falling costs and ESG pressures could catalyze EV pilots, routing software adoption and more in 2021.

    By Updated Jan. 27, 2021
  • California facility
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    Cole Rosengren/Waste Dive
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    Deep Dive

    9 questions about the future of waste and recycling in 2021

    As we gear up for another eventful year, Waste Dive will be focusing on trends around ESG, M&A, recycling policy, market development, PFAS, local budgets, collection technology, safety, diversity and much more.

    By , , Jan. 13, 2021
  • Joe Biden
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    Retrieved from Gage Skidmore/Flickr.
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    Biden will ask OSHA to reconsider decision to skip emergency coronavirus standards

    The president-elect also plans to direct the agency to target the worst violators and increase the number of inspectors.

    By Kate Tornone • Jan. 13, 2021
  • Biden taps former union president Walsh for labor secretary

    Boston Mayor Marty Walsh will "usher in a new era of worker power," according to the Biden-Harris team.

    By Katie Clarey • Jan. 8, 2021
  • A volunteer in a clinical trial is dosed with BNT162, an experimental coronavirus vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech
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    Permission granted by BioNTech SE
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    Vaccine rollout boosts medical waste volumes, as workers wait for their shot

    States will determine where waste workers fall in line for the coronavirus vaccine, including those responsible for properly disposing of materials from the mass inoculation.

    By Jan. 7, 2021
  • Recology truck at Pier 96 MRF in San Francisco
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    Permission granted by Recology
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    Recology SF corruption investigation

    Recology names new CEO Coniglio, following retirement of longtime leader

    Sal Coniglio's elevation to the top job comes six months after he became chief operating officer. This move caps off former CEO Mike Sangiacomo's 37-year stint at the major California-based private company.

    By Jan. 5, 2021
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    georgeclerk via Getty Images
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    With volumes down, New York City commercial waste workers struggle to adjust

    New York – hit harder than many markets in the country – has seen numerous workers become ill with the coronavirus, have their hours cut, or get laid off. And hopes for federal hazard pay legislation have not materialized.

    By Amir Khafagy • Dec. 23, 2020
  • Recycling collection truck
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    Yujin Kim / Waste Dive/Waste Dive
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    Deep Dive

    How local waste and recycling leaders are grappling with coronavirus-driven budget pressures

    Lost revenues, rising operating expenses and limited federal aid have left local leaders looking for creative solutions. In some cases, the pandemic has also created opportunities to update their practices.

    By Leslie Nemo • Dec. 22, 2020
  • Collection worker fatalities fell in 2019, rank as 6th deadliest job: BLS

    It's the first time since 2012 refuse and recycling collectors haven't landed in the top five most fatal occupations, as tracked by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Fatal transportation incidents fell dramatically after a 2018 spike.

    By Dec. 17, 2020
  • Activity at a recycling facility
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    Industry Dive/Waste Dive
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    5 takeaways on emerging trends from the National Zero Waste Conference

    Recycled content, plastics policy, climate connections and racial justice are among top priorities heading into 2021. The event also marked the latest sign of a revived National Recycling Coalition. 

    By Dec. 16, 2020
  • What Pete Buttigieg would bring to the Transportation Department

    A $1 trillion infrastructure plan Buttigieg unveiled in January as part of his presidential campaign hints at what could be the agency's future priorities.

    By S.L. Fuller • Dec. 16, 2020
  • Dive Awards

    People of the Year: Waste and recycling workers

    The entire industry has stepped up during a significantly challenging year, but none of it would be possible without the frontline workers who put themselves at risk to keep it all running.

    By Waste Dive Team • Dec. 9, 2020
  • DSNY workers with masks from the Sanitation Foundation
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    Permission granted by New York Department of Sanitation
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    Dive Awards

    Organization of the Year: Sanitation Foundation

    As New York sanitation workers were caught in the initial epicenter of the pandemic, hundreds were infected and multiple died. A city nonprofit played a key role in supporting them and adapting to a very eventful year.

    By Waste Dive Team • Dec. 9, 2020
  • The Waste Dive Awards for 2020
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    Adeline Kon/Waste Dive
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    Dive Awards

    The Waste Dive Awards for 2020

    During a year of crisis and challenge, these are some of the people, groups and initiatives that met the moment.

    By Waste Dive Team • Dec. 9, 2020
  • Dr. David Michaels
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    Permission granted by The George Washington University School of Public Health
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    Biden names workplace safety expert to COVID-19 task force

    The addition of longtime OSHA administrator Dr. David Michaels was applauded by the National Safety Council, which said that businesses need a national pandemic roadmap to keep workers safe.

    By Jennifer Goodman • Dec. 2, 2020
  • Were the diversity promises of the summer for the long haul?

    Executives from Comcast, Morgan Stanley and Robin Hood shared their thoughts on employers' strategic commitments.

    By Sheryl Estrada • Dec. 1, 2020
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    Getty via Getty Images
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    MRF Summit: Despite pandemic setbacks, 2020 shows bright spots for recycling

    Speakers at the event highlighted the booming use of robotics, declining contamination and improved market pricing as positive signs; while international trade policy continues to present complications.

    By Nov. 24, 2020
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    Kendall Davis/Industry Dive/Waste Dive, data from Marc Nozell
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    Column

    The DOT under Biden: Does it really matter who's in charge at the FMCSA?

    Two former agency officials discuss what might occur in the coming months at the highest level of the industry's main bureau.

    By S.L. Fuller • Nov. 20, 2020
  • Carts out for collection in El Paso, Texas
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    The image by Hadley Paul Garland is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
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    Opinion

    How the waste and recycling industry can weather rapid changes in the insurance marketplace

    Nathan Brainard, vice president of the environmental division at Insurance Office of America, outlines why so many insurers have exited the marketplace in recent years and how industry service providers can turn things around.

    By Nathan Brainard • Nov. 19, 2020
  • EPA sets 2030 national recycling goal, stakeholders call for more federal action

    Administrator Andrew Wheeler announced a 50% recycling rate target for 2030, while the latest annual data showed a decline to 32.1% and multiple financial pressures continue for the sector.

    By Nov. 18, 2020
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    Danielle Ternes/Waste Dive
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    Tracking ESG climate targets from US waste and recycling companies

    Republic Services is the latest company to report on its emissions reduction goals, but it opted not to update a specific report as it awaits the outcome of a Securities and Exchange Commission climate disclosure rule.

    By Nami Sumida, , Leslie Nemo • Updated July 27, 2023