This is san diego. Can mostly tell by EDCO trucks, the 52 in the background, the fighter jets, but also the uploaders name tells us hes mexican or a fan of their food and that is very common for SoCal.
Why is there a d9 at a landfill that small? We're only permitted to have a d8 and our compactor is a 836K. That 9 looks identical to our 8 inside the cab.
Serious question: Would anbody recognize if there´s a deady body dumped somewhere between? Or a cut body into pieces in plastic bags? Is there any chance for recognition in these mountains of trash?
It's very difficult and rare to find a body at the landfill because of how they work. Everyday the trash is spread, compacted, and buried under layers of "recovered screen material", basically recycled dirt. If the body is in a suitcase I'd imagine it's even more difficult to see unless the machines break it open with their tracks/wheels. I worked as an operator for a long time in the industry, found a lot of crazy stuff, never a human. We did find a dead alligator once tho, decapitated.
How much time before landfill opens is spent removing cover from the evening? Been a question I always want to know. I live in Texas. Waste Management landfill takes in trash from within a huge area. It is a mammoth landfill.
Most of the time we use tarps to cover the trash during the week. At the end of the week it gets capped off with dirt and we move to the next area. Later on we will come back and strip it down to the trash, and re use the dirt.
@@AyCarambaSalsafor how long you be working in the landfill I have a question what is the nastiest things that you see in the landfill just being curious
It depends I work in a landfill running a D8 We use ground up telephone poles to cover the trash at night typically we just skim the woodchips off of the pile and reuse them. Other landfills use tarps that they roll over the trash every night and roll them up the next day. I hope this answers your question.