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New York City Sanitation Department

Department of Sanitation
DSNY.svg
New York City Department of Sanitation flag.png
Department overview
Jurisdiction New York City
Headquarters 125 Worth Street
New York, NY
Motto New York's Strongest
Employees 7,200 uniformed sanitation workers and supervisors
2,041 civilian employees
Department executive
  • Kathryn Garcia, Commissioner of Sanitation
Key document
Website www.nyc.gov/sanitation

The New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY) is the department of the government of New York City responsible for garbage collection, recycling collection, street cleaning, and snow removal.

The New York City Department of Sanitation is the largest sanitation department in the world, with 7,201 uniformed sanitation workers and supervisors, 2,041 civilian workers, 2,230 general collection trucks, 275 specialized collection trucks, 450 street sweepers, 365 salt and sand spreaders, 298 front end loaders, and 2,360 support vehicles. It handles over 12,000 tons of residential and institutional refuse and recyclables a day. It has a uniformed force of unionized sanitation workers (Local 831 USA of the Teamsters). Its regulations are compiled in Title 16 of the New York City Rules.

There are nine uniformed titles in the New York City Department of Sanitation.

From highest to lowest, the uniformed titles are:

The New York City Department of Sanitation has its own Law Enforcement force that is currently composed of four specialized units:

Sanitation Law Enforcement Officers handle sanitation-related calls and enforce sanitation-related crimes in the 5 boroughs of New York City. DSNY Peace Officers are New York State peace officers with limited authority and are certified by the New York State Municipal Training Council. Sanitation Peace Officers carry a firearm after receiving a handgun permit by the New York City Police Department, carry and use handcuffs, make warrantless arrests, issue summonses, and use physical and even deadly force. The sanitation law enforcement force uses both marked and unmarked vehicles.

BCC: Bureau of Cleaning and Collection


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