Teen crew takes on beach cleanup

By Margaret Taylor
Posted 7/12/18

By MARGARET TAYLOR -- Each morning, the bright yellow safety vests come out, and a teenaged trash crew head out from the City Garage to clean three city beaches.

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

E-mail
Password
Log in

Teen crew takes on beach cleanup

Posted

Each morning, the bright yellow safety vests come out, and a teenaged trash crew head out from the City Garage to clean three city beaches.

The program began about 20 years ago, initially as a state-funded program that employed area teenagers to pick up trash. While successful, the funding ended, and the program was inherited by the Department of Public Works.

Rick Crenca, the director of Public Works for Warwick, said the program has been successful in providing minimum wage jobs for young teenagers and in creating cleaner beaches and play areas for Warwick residents. The minimum wage in Rhode Island was changed to $10.10 per hour in January 1st of this year, making the pay for the morning job very appealing to this young group of teenagers.

Dave Barber Jr. is the full time city employee in charge of overseeing the program. He’s in charge of moving the workers from place to place, usually via a retro fitted bus belonging to the fire department.

He said “they’re all good kids,” and his focus is making sure they’re hydrated and ready to go throughout the morning, as the temperatures heat up.

The job is seasonal, with the date of employment starting and ending based on the public school schedule. Each morning the crew moves between City Park, Oakland Beach and Conimicut Point, seeing plenty of fish, crabs, and interesting trash as they go.

Nick Badway, a student at Toll Gate High School has seen it all in his first week of trash picking, from dead fluke to used diapers to more cigarette butts then he can count. He said Oakland Beach is the dirtiest on most days.

Beach patron Janice Simonelle of Cranston approves of the crew. She arrives at City Park promptly at 10 a.m., seven days a week, enjoying the beach and the work of the trash pickers.

“It’s the cleanest, nicest beach in the area,” she says, “My children grew up here, and it’s such a great place to be.”

Simonelle also expressed her gratefulness in the doing away with the “beach fee” system to have been implemented this summer. In early May, Mayor Joe Solomon announced he would suspend the beach fees approved by the City Council and former Mayor Scott Avedisian. Solomon pledged to keep the beaches clean this summer, and Simonelle feels that through this trash pick up crew, he is accomplishing that goal.

She does, however, agree with Badway, saying Oakland Beach remains the worst of all, but that is the fault of the beachgoers there, not the trash crew.

Regardless of the amount of trash, the job is still sought after.

It’s the hours and the locations that really draw people, explains Toll Gate student Alex Gaspar. Gaspar says by working from 7 to 11 a.m., he still has plenty of time to do other activities with his afternoon. Additionally, he says, “I didn’t really know anyone coming in, but everyone is relatively friendly, and it’s easy to get to know people.”

All of the workers agree it’s not a bad way to spend the morning.

Mattie Fontaine, also a Toll Gate student, said that although she’s happy to clean up the beach, she questions why others can’t seem to do it themselves.

“It’s so easy to want to come here and keep it clean. It’s even better to clean up and get paid a bit for it as well,” she said. Serena Cook, also a member of the crew, agrees. She says the hours are great, she has weekends off, and, as a consistent visitor at Oakland Beach, she is more than willing to do the job. She said, “I’m basically getting paid to walk around and do what every person has moral obligation to do, clean up after themselves while visiting the beach.”

Comments

2 comments on this item Please log in to comment by clicking here

  • Scal1024

    I noticed there is no comment from "The Tax Delinquents Mayor" Rick Corrente. Its important to note the reasoning for this: Rick Corrente wants to RAISE BEACH FEES on EVERY DRIVING RESIDENT to pay for beach cleanup. He has attacked Mayor Solomon for delaying the fees and looking at alternatives that will not cost taxpayers additional money. These part time employees cleaning our beaches cost taxpayers very little to maintain the beach, they also ensure the beach gets cleaned without RAISING FEES. Will Rick Corrente give credit to Joe Solomon for delaying the beach fees, while also finding ways to keep our beaches clean WITHOUT THE FEES.

    This again speaks to Rick Correntes laziness as a candidate. Rather than come up with a full comprehensive plan to keep our beaches clean, he preferred to just RAISE FEES. How many other campaign issues will Rick Corrente look to solve by RAISING TAXES AND FEES?

    By his own admission he wants to:

    -Cut checks to retirees to forego their pensions (new spending or even worse borrowing)

    -Cut checks to new homebuyers (new spending)

    -Freeze permit fees for 2 years (slashing revenue)

    Where does the money come from? All of these ideas are gutting money coming into the city. How will that money be made up? Will Rick Corrente again be looking to raise fees and take the easy way out? He hasn't suggested ONE area of spending he will cut in almost 4 years of running. So how does the city make up for all of this lost money? The remaining choices are to increase taxes or slash city services. As we've seen with beach fees "The Tax Delinquents Mayor" takes the easy way out (RAISING FEES) how many other issues will he take the easy way out on?

    Tuesday, July 17, 2018 Report this

  • CrickeeRaven

    Scal, I was wondering, too, why the make-believe mayor wouldn't try to defend his support of a new tax on drivers. Perhaps he's hoping that people would forget how vocally he attacked Mayor Solomon for delaying the beach parking fees -- and thanks to your comment, that plan has failed.

    I'm sure this will represent one of the only times that he did not make uninformed and taxpayer-unfriendly comments on an article -- although I am equally certain that he will continue to humiliate himself in his future comments.

    Tuesday, July 17, 2018 Report this