East Bay Yesterday

“We let everybody throw it away”: How garbage worked before corporations took over

Aug 13, 2025
Robert Biasotti, a third-generation garbage man and former partner at Oakland Scavenger Company, discusses the fascinating history of waste management in Oakland, shaped by immigrant families. He shares anecdotes reflecting the camaraderie and community spirit among garbage collectors, including their innovative recycling methods. Biasotti contrasts the past’s worker-owned ethos with today’s corporate landscape, illustrating how cultural identity and economic mobility intertwined through garbage. The conversation also addresses modern challenges of illegal dumping and the loss of personal connections in waste management.
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ANECDOTE

Leaving Corporate Life For The Family Trade

  • Robert Biasotti left a corporate sales job to join his family's worker-owned Oakland Scavenger in 1974 and bought a partner share.
  • He valued community, ownership, and the stability the trade offered over corporate life.
ANECDOTE

Work Camaraderie On The Route

  • Dino Muzio recalled the camaraderie of crews running yards and helping each other across blocks as a highlight of the job.
  • He remembered jokes, teamwork, and enjoying being out with your best buddies on route.
INSIGHT

Flexible Pickup Kept Streets Cleaner

  • The scavengers often accepted large items freely and split bulk pickups across days to avoid filling trucks.
  • That informal generosity kept streets clean because collectors handled residents' needs beyond strict schedules.
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