The day
before last year’s presidential election, a hungry homeless man named Jonathan
Manley stopped at a dumpster outside a warehouse in San Francisco. Unmarked on
the outside, the building was occupied by Amazon.
For
those able to tolerate the grime and the smell, and who have no other choice
but to risk eating expired or rotting food, the large dumpsters stationed there
can be bountiful. Visitors say they have found ice cream, bananas,
strawberries, grapes and frozen pizzas, not to mention cans and packaging that
can be sold for pennies at recycling centers.
The lid
was too high and too heavy for Manley to flip open from the sidewalk, so he
climbed the side, pulled the lid back and dropped into the trash. It was full
of things to eat.
“That’s
when I noticed him,” Manley said.
At the
front, on all fours as if he was struggling to stand up, was a middle-aged man
wearing a T-shirt, pants and boots. He had a graying mustache and beard, his
hands were caked with dirt and there was blood around his nose.
Manley
tried to wake him but could not. He tried to lift him, but the man weighed too
much and was too stiff. Poking his head out of the dumpster, Manley saw two
passersby walking a dog across the street and yelled for them to call 911. When
the paramedics arrived, they determined that the man was beyond resuscitation.
•••
Dumpsters
can be life-sustaining for people surviving on the streets. But a Guardian
investigation has found that they are also implicated in dozens of homeless
deaths.
This
has added resonance in San Francisco, where the economy hinges on the
noncorporeal – algorithms, the cloud and the flows of venture capital – yet
some 4,500 people sleeping outdoors still struggle each night for the basic
physical necessities of existence. They subsist in the interstices of the new
paradigm, or in some cases off its waste.
Just
inside the Amazon warehouse, visitors are confronted by shelves stacked with
food, everything from peanut butter to tabasco sauce, Oreos, teabags and jello.
In
another room, staff hurriedly prepare bags of shopping. When they are ready,
delivery people dispatch this abundance to the inhabitants of San Francisco.
The
garbage receptacles outside are not the first tech dumpsters to have attracted
the attention of homeless locals. A few years ago, they responded with wonder
and bemusement to a dumpster by a nearby Google warehouse.
It “had
every kind of food you can imagine”, said a resident named Michael Mundy. “They
just threw it away, thousands of dollars’ worth.”
But the
warehouse closed down, and people had to look elsewhere. “All of a sudden,”
said a woman who only gave her first name, Renee, “they started talking about
Amazon”.
•••
For
about a week after stumbling on the body, Manley went through the encampments
of south-eastern San Francisco, trying to find somebody who was missing
someone. Thousands of homeless people die in American cities each year to
little fanfare, and the Amazon incident barely made the news. Neither the man’s
name nor the occupant of the warehouse appear to have ever been reported.
At an
encampment underneath a highway, he came across a woman who had strung up dried
flowers around her tent and cultivated succulents. Cheryl Iversen, 49, had
riotous, flaming orange hair, a personality to match and, fittingly, went by
the name of Tygrr, pronounced “Tiger”. Manley told her what he had discovered,
and she felt the burden of not knowing what had happened to Frank Ryan lifted.
“I said
‘thank you’,” she recalled. “He held me when I cried.”
An
abusive childhood had led Iversen to run away at 12, and then to exotic
dancing, a bad marriage and a heroin addiction. She calls herself a “functional
junkie”.
Over a
decade ago she met Ryan, whose own origins are unclear. His friends said he was
the son of a gold-miner. One suggested he had been sexually abused. He had
lived in RVs in the Bay Area since at least the 1990s, making a living by
scavenging scrap metal. On occasion he could earn thousands of dollars per
haul, with which he subsidized meth and marijuana habits. He was never seen
without a jug of milk in his hands and obsessively collected rocks that he
hoped were meteorites.
Iversen
vividly remembers the day they got together. They were wading by a pier in San
Francisco Bay, gathering stones that they could sell and placing them on a
plastic float. As the tide rose, they sat on the float, and had to lie down
when their heads started to bump on the pier above. He brushed her hair from
her cheek and they kissed.
A few
days later, Iversen wrote a poem about it that she still remembers by
heart.
“He had
such a beautiful soul, he was so smart,” she said. “He never once made me feel
stupid for not knowing something.”
Although
they were not monogamous – Iversen described herself dismissively as a
“side-piece” – towards the end Ryan had told her he wanted to settle down with
her in a warehouse squat. When she last saw him he said he was going to look
for ice cream.
•••
For
those so inclined, living out of dumpsters can occasion philosophy. “Almost
everything I have now has already been cast out at least once, proving that
what I own is valueless to someone,” Lars Eighner wrote in his treatise On Dumpster Diving.
Eighner’s
experiences were distinct from those of people who dumpster-dive as a lifestyle
choice – he began when he was struggling to pay rent, and the day-to-day
realities were brutal. “No matter how careful I am I still get dysentery at
least once a month, oftener in warm weather,” he said.
A
Guardian review of news reports from the last decade has found at least 50
cases of dumpster-related homeless deaths and serious injuries. In some
instances, the dumpster is simply the bleak setting. On Christmas Day last year,
a Wichita, Kansas, man was found in a
dumpster outside a bakery, and while a preliminary autopsy suggested he died of
natural causes, his relatives could not fathom what had prompted him to get
inside.
In
other examples, it is the act of trash collection itself that is fatal. A man
in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, was tipped out of a
dumpster and then run over by a garbage truck. In Forth Worth, Texas, a screaming man had a heart attack after the
dumpster he was inside was picked up. More common are situations in which
homeless people, sleeping in dumpsters or sheltering from the elements, are
collected by garbage or recycling trucks and compacted along with the trash.
This is why ruined bodies sometimes end up at the dump.
In
2003, a woman sued a waste-management company for more than $10m after her
brother was suffocated in this way in Portland, Oregon, alleging “reckless and outrageous indifference” to homeless lives.
In an
interview, her lawyer, Greg Kafoury, recalled the testimony of a garbage
worker, who said that after picking up dumpsters with his truck he shook them
in order to wake anyone sleeping inside, and taught his colleagues to do the
same. Kafoury also remembers hypothesizing before the jury that, because six
people had died in similar circumstances over the course of several years in
Oregon, a state with a little over 1% of the US population, as many as 600
could have been killed in the country as a whole.
The
lawsuit “was a chance to save untold numbers of lives”, he said – but he lost.
“Somebody needs to take one of these cases and go the distance with it because
the case can be won.”
On
occasion, though, there are survivors.
In
November 2016, about two weeks after Ryan climbed into the dumpster, Marcus
Baldwin did the same thing in Mount Clemens, just north of Detroit. Alcoholism
had led to the breakdown of his marriage and to homelessness. Finally he found
a job in demolition, but he still had nowhere to stay, and after work on a cold
and wet night a dumpster beckoned. It was filled with cardboard and seemed
clean. He fell asleep.
At
around 5.30am, he awoke to “this beeping noise”, Baldwin said. “The next thing
I knew, I was going up into the air.”
Falling
on his head, he was disoriented and in pain, and he had the sensation of having
been dropped into a sewer. It was greasy and filled with rotten food, old
clothes and construction materials.
He
screamed for the driver to no avail. About 15 minutes after Baldwin was picked
up, the compacting process began. A contraption that reminded him of a snow
shovel began to move along the length of the vehicle and pinned Marcus to an
interior wall. “I could just hear my bones breaking,” Baldwin said. “It was
just going through my legs like a hot knife through butter.”
Both
were shattered. Baldwin thinks he was compacted another five times, every
quarter-hour or so. He tried to protect himself with a shopping cart.
Eventually the driver noticed him and he was rescued, but owing to a bad
infection doctors had to amputate his right leg below the knee.
•••
The
life expectancy of homeless people is only around 50; when he died, Ryan was 55
or so. His autopsy report gave the verdict of a methamphetamine overdose. At
his wake, his friends poured some of his ashes into the bay along with jugs of
milk and some buds of weed. His dog was adopted, and Iversen planted a garden
of succulents and cacti near her tent in his memory.
“I’ve
never felt so right in my life,” she said of her time with Ryan, “and nothing
has been right since. It probably never will be, and what can I expect? Such a
big piece of me is gone.”
In a
statement, Amazon, which recently announced that it would host a homeless
shelter in one of its new buildings in Seattle, called the death a “sad event”.
Surprisingly,
considering that Ryan appears to have dropped off the map long ago, the impact
of his passing has reverberated far beyond a small homeless community in an
obscure part of San Francisco.
In the
vicinity of Spokane, Washington, for instance, there lives a 34-year-old who is
also called Frank Ryan. He is the late Frank Ryan’s long-lost son.
In the
late 1980s, when he was six or seven, he lived with his father, as well as with
his father’s new wife and her daughter from a previous relationship.
The
younger Ryan remembers little of his father beyond a birthday when he was given
a bike and shown how to assemble it. The two Frank Ryans were separated when
the son was, as he describes it, spirited away by his mother. “Even if he was
looking as hard as he could he probably wouldn’t have been able to find me due
to the measures my mother had taken,” Ryan said in an interview recently. “I
never harbored any ill will.”
During
an itinerant period in the western US with his mother, he said he lived in a
van and slept on blankets on the ground and obtained food from churches and
food banks. Now he has a young family and works in security for the federal
government.
Several
months before his father’s death, the older Ryan re-established contact via
Facebook, and they made plans to meet for the first time in three decades.
These plans were interrupted because Ryan Sr accidentally shot himself in the
groin while trying to remove the rust from a discarded handgun, leaving him
hobbling and unable to work or pay for travel. He died before the meeting could
take place.
“The
fact that he was hungry enough to crawl into a dumpster definitely was the
hardest part,” the younger Ryan said. It “stirred up” his own experiences of
homelessness.
When
the younger Ryan was taken away by his mother, he also lost contact with the
little girl who was residing with them. Today Danielle Lent, who goes by the
name Avalon, is 37 and lives in a town an hour north of San Francisco.
Her
memories of her stepsibling are warm, though the relationship between the
adults was anything but harmonious. The older Ryan only seemed to care about
the drugs he was taking. And one night, she said, he entered Lent’s room and
sexually abused her, the first of several occasions.
Lent
remembers herself “just staring at the alarm clock, saying ‘when is this going
to be over?’” Afterwards her mother did not believe her. Indeed, when the older
Ryan became homeless, Lent’s mother took food and money to him. “My mom was so
in love with him and he did all these bad things to both of us. I still have
night terrors over all of this. I’m on anxiety medication.”
The
importance of finding her stepsibling was impressed on Lent by her mother. “On
her deathbed she told me, ‘Danielle Marie, I have three wishes,’ and this is
the last wish that she asked for.” For Lent herself, the relationship seemed
like one of the best things from that time.
At
Lent’s request, and with Ryan’s permission, the Guardian put them in touch with
one another, and on Christmas Day they spoke for the first time since they were
children.
“He
said he’s not stopped looking for me,” Lent told a reporter afterwards. “And I
never stopped looking for him.”
“It
seems more than a coincidence that out of the millions of homeless Americans
that you could do a story on, it would be my father,” said Ryan.
•••
The
Amazon dumpsters continue to provide.
On a
Saturday morning earlier this year, a brown-haired young man wearing a varsity
jacket cycled up and climbed inside in full view of passing cars and
pedestrians.
At that
moment, the gate of the warehouse loading dock rose to reveal a staffer
clutching some white trash bags. He moved to throw the bags into the open
dumpster when he caught sight of the visitor. They locked eyes.
The employee
gently tossed the bags to the dumpster-diver, who opened them. A few minutes
later, the homeless man got on to the bike, balanced a few items on the
handlebars and unsteadily rode off.
*Please excuse highlighted, underlined words. They could not be changed from the original post
*Please excuse highlighted, underlined words. They could not be changed from the original post
Alastair Gee
“The Guardian”
“The Guardian”
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