Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Back-to-school 2026/27: Apple vs. Google

    Back-to-school 2026/27: Apple vs. Google

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 11, 2026

    May pricing bullish for most bales

    May pricing bullish for most bales

    PP most likely plastic to shift in 2026

    PP most likely plastic to shift in 2026

    CompuCycle brings e-plastic recycling upgrade online

    Quantum expands e-plastics recovery

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 4, 2026

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
      • All Topics
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Back-to-school 2026/27: Apple vs. Google

    Back-to-school 2026/27: Apple vs. Google

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 11, 2026

    May pricing bullish for most bales

    May pricing bullish for most bales

    PP most likely plastic to shift in 2026

    PP most likely plastic to shift in 2026

    CompuCycle brings e-plastic recycling upgrade online

    Quantum expands e-plastics recovery

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 4, 2026

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
      • All Topics
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Plastics

Experts emphasize safety after ‘disconcerting’ fatalities

Colin StaubbyColin Staub
May 14, 2025
in Plastics

Federal statistics reveal waste and recycling workers face above-average injury rates, with battery-related fires adding new risks. | Sirisak Baokaew/Shutterstock

The safety-focused summit came after the latest federal data showed a backslide in waste and recycling industry safety. | Sirisak baokaew/Shutterstock

As recycling companies seek to improve workplace safety amid an industry-wide increase in on-the-job fatalities, experts at a recent industry summit advised managers to focus their attention on — and for top executives, even to attend — the regular pre-shift safety meetings.

That was one takeaway from the Waste Advantage Safety Summit, held in March, which was convened after a troubling rise in solid waste and recycling industry fatalities. The Bureau of Labor Statistics late last year reported an increase in materials recovery facility worker deaths in 2023, finding that solid waste collection rose from seventh to fourth on its list of most dangerous jobs.

That’s the highest it’s been in the government’s 20-year span of reporting such numbers, said David Biderman, a consultant and past leader of the Solid Waste Association of North America, SWANA, and he called it “very disconcerting.”

“There’s no single reason for the 70% increase in collection worker fatalities or the record number of MRF worker fatalities in 2023,” he said during the summit. Additionally, he suggested it may be an undercount, as temporary workers are not counted in those BLS figures.

There are societal-wide factors at play. Collection workers are constantly in contact with drivers on the road, and “post-COVID, driving habits changed,” Biderman said. “There are more distracted drivers than ever.” The locations people are driving have also changed, with work from home producing more traffic in suburbs rather than in office-heavy urban areas.

Worker turnover has also increased post-COVID-19, with wages rising in other driving careers like Amazon or FedEx delivery, Biderman noted. With turnover comes challenges in instilling the importance of safety.

Causes aside, the summit brought together stakeholders highlighting various areas of safety concern and how to reduce dangers on the job. Those range from very specific on-the-job behavior change to employer-level culture shifts. For example, “while some employers tell their frontline workers that safety is really important, they also impose productivity requirements that are higher and higher,” Biderman said.

Company culture from the top down is key, he said.

“It means showing up at that safety meeting that starts at 4:30 in the morning before the drivers roll out,” Biderman said, noting he has conducted early-morning safety meetings both with and without company executives present. “When do the drivers and helpers pay more attention? When the owner of the company is in the room. So the owner of companies needs to be at these safety meetings; it sends a signal to the front line that safety matters.”

Updated, relevant safety materials are key

Biderman advised safety managers to make it personal when they talk about safety with workers. Highlight how safe behaviors directly connect with going home to one’s family after a shift, for example, or use specific visual examples of poor safety behavior to capture worker attention during safety meetings. 

For the latter, Biderman provided photos of a New York City municipal collection truck that flipped onto a highway near the Lincoln Tunnel on a Friday afternoon, and of a collection worker riding in a truck’s hopper on a Long Island highway.

Nathan Brainard, division president at Insurance Office of America, added it can be helpful to change up the format of information being shared: Use photographs once, an in-person presenter the next time and a video clip the next.

“If you change up the medium in which the data is being presented, you have a much higher likelihood that people are going to be receptive to it and remember it,” he said.

And it’s vital to update safety materials frequently, added Paul Zambrotta, director of safety at New York-based Boro-Wide.

“The best are the ones you make yourself,” he said. “We used to use safety video and training that you bought the CD, you popped it in and, you know, you put people to sleep.”

Using safety materials with relevant, current hazards collection workers face — like cell phones, e-bikes and scooters — is far more engaging, he said, and all it takes is hanging around the truck gas pump in the morning to hear the latest war stories of what drivers are facing.

It’s up to company or agency leadership to make sure those meetings are yielding that type of engagement, added Dave Bennett, public works solid waste director for the city of Scottsdale, Arizona.

“You, as leaders in your industry, should be down there every once in a while monitoring and seeing what they’re presenting,” he said. “You’ve got to keep on top of that, that they’re just not reading something off, that they’re giving visual examples of, ‘Hey, Bob just had an incident last week, here’s how we can learn from it.'”

Tackling fire danger has multiple prongs

No recycling industry safety discussion would be complete without mention of the ever-increasing occurrence of fires in facilities and trucks alike.

While the hazards — primarily lithium-ion batteries but other improperly recycled flammable items as well — are different from those posed by distracted drivers or workers cutting corners, a similarity is that safety training is also part of a proactive approach to fire dangers. It’s especially important to remember that when training new hires, said Chris Ball, vice president of environmental health and safety at WM.

“Drivers in particular really need to know their equipment, what fire suppression is available to them, their routes, what are the right protocols to handle, is there a safe location for that driver to dump a load if that’s ultimately what’s needed to deal with that,” Ball said. “Really look at that training aspect out there as you move forward.”

Once a fire is started, it’s important to have a plan in place for how a facility will fight it, to determine who is on the front line for fire control, said Ryan Fogelman, a partner at fire suppression system supplier Fire Rover.

“The reality is that your front line can be your fire department at 2 in the morning, or your front line can be a Fire Rover system that actually fires and shoots and does everything that we need to do, and really the fire department is backup to that,” he said.

In the space between worker training and full-blown fire suppression, emerging equipment is making advances at identifying batteries as they enter recycling facilities, before they have a chance to go into thermal runaway, the industry term for heating up and potentially sparking a fire.

One example is Visia, an equipment supplier that provides X-ray and camera systems targeted for MRFs and e-scrap facilities and designed to be placed at presort conveyors, inbound lines, tip floors, anywhere material comes into the facility, said Raghav Mecheri, company CEO. The vision systems look for battery-containing devices and other flammables or general hazards, using a laser to indicate the object’s position on the moving sort line and allow a manual sorter to pull the object off.

“The goal is to identify it and alert people on-site to actually get that out of the material stream,” he said.

As one example, Mecheri said MRF operator Rumpke uses Visia on presort lines at a MRF, where it detects and assists with removing 20-40 batteries a day. Altogether, the system is installed in about 25 sites, including MRFs and e-scrap companies.

A version of this story appeared in Resource Recycling News on May 13.

Tags: CollectionIndustry Groups
TweetShare
Colin Staub

Colin Staub

Colin Staub was a reporter and associate editor at Resource Recycling until August 2025.

Related Posts

Surveys examine gaps in consumer recycling education

Study finds lack of proper battery disposal

byPaul Lane
May 13, 2026

The “Michigan 2025 Battery Gap Analysis” finds state residents are mismanaging discarded batteries.

Industry descends on DC to fight for PET

Industry descends on DC to fight for PET

byAntoinette Smith
May 13, 2026

Amid numerous recent hits to the common packaging plastic, a stakeholder coalition is engaging with policy makers to encourage policy...

SWANA hires new executive director

APR, RecyClass wrap up third year of collaboration

byAntoinette Smith
May 12, 2026

The North American and EU organizations are working together to harmonize global recyclability standards.

Canadian city walks back fee on paper coffee cups

Recycling access for paper cups hits 20% of US

byPaul Lane
May 11, 2026

This figure represents a quadrupling in the past decade, spurred by significant investment and action.

Orange County landfill fees to spike 53%

Orange County landfill fees to spike 53%

byBrian Clark Howard
May 11, 2026

The rate increase goes into effect July 1 and is the result of a convergence of factors.

APR, industry groups testify on overcapacity

APR, industry groups testify on overcapacity

byAntoinette Smith
May 8, 2026

Steve Alexander, CEO of APR, pointed to China as driving global oversupply despite fluctuating PET imports to the US and...

Load More
Next Post
Citing markets, Trex to delay Arkansas campus completion

Trex, Mohawk, Indorama report Q1 earnings

More Posts

Extruder pushes out natural HDPE pellets at KW Plastics in Troy, Alabama.

Rare look inside the world’s largest plastics recycler

May 13, 2026
Lawsuits hover days after SB 54 approval

Lawsuits hover days after SB 54 approval

May 6, 2026
Industry descends on DC to fight for PET

Industry descends on DC to fight for PET

May 13, 2026
Orange County landfill fees to spike 53%

Orange County landfill fees to spike 53%

May 11, 2026

PP bales rise, paper grades edge higher

May 11, 2026
APR, industry groups testify on overcapacity

APR, industry groups testify on overcapacity

May 8, 2026
Canadian city walks back fee on paper coffee cups

Recycling access for paper cups hits 20% of US

May 11, 2026
PP most likely plastic to shift in 2026

PP most likely plastic to shift in 2026

May 8, 2026
New version of California EPR regulations released

CalRecycle approves SB 54 regulations

May 2, 2026
May pricing bullish for most bales

May pricing bullish for most bales

May 11, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.