There is no question that the pandemic exacerbated all of these trends. With more people locked in their homes due to COVID-19 restrictions, residential trash collection started piling up. By 2020, city sanitation workers were reporting nearly 25% more tonnage than the year prior.
That all added up to delays –– citywide, crews hit their scheduled pickups 82% of the time on average before the pandemic. By 2021, they were missing scheduled trash pickup times 47% of the time.
“On-time trash collection declined sharply in the early months of pandemic and remained below the Streets Department’s target goal for nearly every month since,” reads the report.
Reporting by WHYY News also found that grueling work conditions and cases of COVID-19 hitting sanitation crews had led to severe staff turnover and absenteeism, worsening delays.
But again, despite the cause of service outages, the loss was not felt evenly. While most of the city’s sanitation districts saw delays about half the time, in Center City crews averaged just one late one pickup a month. Meanwhile, in the area that saw the steepest drop off in service during the pandemic –– Lower Northeast Philly –– they were late nearly three out of every four weeks.
There were some exceptions. Other areas, sanitation districts encompassing parts of North Philadelphia, Kensington, Fishtown and Northern Liberties, only saw slight declines in service.
It is not precisely clear from the Controller’s findings why different districts varied so heavily.
What is clear, according to Rhynhart, is that not so long ago, the city was able to collect trash with on time rates close to 95%. While the city says it has already taken steps to hire more workers and improve collection rates, Rhynhart called on the Mayor to develop a broader plan to get sanitation back on track –– and make it more equitable.
“One point is clear: trash collection, one of the core services of City government, is not equal in Philadelphia,” the report concludes.