Sanitation
Commissioner John J. Doherty announced today that the Department of Sanitation's
Citywide Illegal Dumping Task Force seized and impounded 28
vehicles
that were involved in incidents of illegal dumping and the theft of
recyclables during the month of December. The DSNY Task Force, composed of
plainclothes Sanitation Police Officers, monitors known dumping locations and
seizes the vehicles of illegal dumpers caught in the act of violating the
law. They also patrol areas where large amounts of curbside recyclables
are being removed unlawfully.
The December 2008 impoundments included eleven in Brooklyn, six in Manhattan,
five in Queens, five in the Bronx and one in Staten Island. When the
Department catches an illegal dumper, Sanitation Police Officers can make
arrests, if warranted, and impound the vehicles used in the illegal dumping
incidents. The owner of the vehicle is subject to severe fines and will be
held responsible for the actions of the operator of the vehicle regardless of
being present during the act. Currently, fines start at $1,500 and range
as high as $20,000 per summons. In addition, the illegal dumper must pay
the city a cleanup cost for the illegally dumped material, generally about $150
per cubic yard.
In October, 2007, Mayor Bloomberg signed Local Law No. 50 of 2007.
Among its provisions, this new law imposes stiff sanctions against persons
operating a motor vehicle who unlawfully remove or transport recyclables placed
out at residential or commercial curbsides, and from premises occupied by city
agencies and institutions that receive Department collection service.
Sanctions include increasing the civil fines from $100 to $2,000 for a first
time offender, and $5,000 for second and repeat offenders within a twelve-month
period. The law also authorizes the Department to impound vehicles used by
persons caught removing recyclables unlawfully.
Commissioner Doherty said, "Illegal dumping is against the law. If you
do it, you will get caught. The Illegal Dumping Task Force is the city's
front line defense against illegal dumpers who shamefully use our streets and
lots as their personal dumping grounds. We also want to stop the unlawful
removal of recyclables from city streets. The Task Force is acting on that
violation, too."
One of Sanitation's critical resources in combating illegal dumping is the
Illegal Dumper Tips Program, which was established to help get residents
involved without placing them at risk from the dumpers. The program's goal
is to reduce and deter illegal dumping in neighborhoods citywide. If an
individual provides information leading to the conviction or a fine for illegal
dumping, they may receive a bounty of up to half the fine imposed.
For more information on the program, residents should call the NYC Citizens
Service Center at 311 or visit the DSNY web site at www.nyc.gov/sanitation.