In San Francisco, Making a Living From Your Billionaire Neighbor's Trash
Three blocks from Mark Zuckerberg's $10 million Tudor home in San Francisco, Jake Orta lives in a small, single-window studio apartment filled with trash.
There's a child's pink bicycle helmet that Mr. Orta dug out from the garbage bin across the street from Mr. Zuckerberg's house. And a vacuum cleaner, a hair dryer, a coffee machine — all in working condition — and a pile of clothes that he carried home in a Whole Foods paper bag retrieved from Mr. Zuckerberg's bin.
A military veteran who fell into homelessness and now lives in government subsidized housing, Mr. Orta is a full-time trash picker, part of an underground economy in San Francisco of people who work the sidewalks in front of multimillion-dollar homes, rummaging for things they can sell.
One Zuck's trash is another man's "like new".
(Score: 0, Troll) by khallow on Sunday April 07 2019, @04:18PM
Compared to what? Everything has its costs and inefficiencies. At that point, it's more efficient than sending the thing to the landfill, right?
Should we take away yet another way for the homeless to get basic human dignity? Why are you so cruel to the homeless people, AC?
Sigh, read the summary
So not homeless who are dumpster diving this time.