https://www.city-journal.org/seattle-trash-crisis
Over the past few years, Seattle has become a dumping ground for
millions of pounds of garbage, needles, feces, and biohazardous waste,
largely emanating from the hundreds of homeless encampments that
have sprouted across the city. Now, the Emerald City is on the verge of
a full-blown public-health crisis. Last year saw a 400 percent increase
in HIV infections among
mostly homeless addicts and prostitutes in the city’s northern
corridor. Public-health officials are sounding the alarms about the
return of diseases like typhus, tuberculosis, and trench fever. Even the region’s famed mussels and clams have tested positive for opioids.
While anyone who travels through Seattle can see the trash and litter
along the roadside and green spaces, I wanted to understand the scale
of the problem with more quantitative precision. Last month, I requested
from the city all public complaints about trash, needles, tents, feces,
and biohazardous waste from 2018. I then geocoded each complaint to
create a data visualization that I call the Great Seattle Trash Map.
The map documents more than 19,000 citizen complaints, from mundane
reports of abandoned appliances to more serious pleas to clean up
dangerous waste. Each data point on the map demonstrates that homeless
encampments, opioid addiction, and mental illness have created
significant disorder in almost every corner of Seattle.
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