- New York City Department of Sanitation
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New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY) Agency overview Jurisdiction New York City Headquarters 125 Worth Street New York, New York Employees 6800 uniformed sanitation workers and supervisors
2,041 civilian employeesAgency executive John J. Doherty, Commissioner Parent agency New York City Website http://www.nyc.gov/sanitation The New York City Department of Sanitation, or DSNY, is a uniformed force of unionized sanitation workers (Local 831 USA of the teamsters) in New York City. Their responsibilities include garbage collection, recycling collection, street cleaning, and snow removal. Like the rest of New York's uniformed forces, they have a nickname: "New York's Strongest." The section of Worth Street between Centre and Baxter Streets in Manhattan is named "Avenue of the Strongest" in their honor. The New York City Department of Sanitation is the largest sanitation department in the world, with 7,899 uniformed sanitation workers and supervisors, 2,041 civilian workers, 2,230 collection trucks, 275 specialized collection trucks, 450 street sweepers, 365 salt and sand spreaders, 298 front end loaders, 2,360 support vehicles, and handles over 12,000 tons of residential and institutional refuse and recyclables a day.[1] Under Commissioner John J. Doherty, New York City's streets are reportedly the cleanest that they have been in over 30 years.[1]
Contents
History
DSNY was founded in 1881 as the Department of Street Cleaning. One of the Department's first Commissioners, Colonel George E. Waring, Jr., pioneered such current practices as recycling, street sweeping, and a dedicated uniformed cleaning and collection force.[2]
Law enforcement
DSNY has its own police force, which is composed of four specialized units: The Uniformed Sanitation Police Force, The illegal dumping task force, the Permit and Inspection Unit and the Environmental Enforcement Unit, composed of uniformed and undercover officers who handle sanitation related emergency calls, and enforce sanitation related laws in addition to state and city traffic and criminal laws in the 5 boroughs of New York City. DSNY officers are NYS peace officer certified by the NYS Municipal Police Training Council. Officers can carry and use firearms, carry and use handcuffs, make warrantless arrests, issue summonses, and use physical and deadly force. The police force uses marked and unmarked police cars. [3]
References
- ^ a b About DSNY
- ^ Trying to Clean Up New York, Gotham Gazette, Aug. 16, 2004
- ^ DSNY Police Cars
External links
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- 1881 establishments in the United States
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