logo
Sanitation Foundation Launches Don't Do New York City Dirty Anti-Littering Campaign

Sanitation Foundation Launches Don't Do New York City Dirty Anti-Littering Campaign

Yahoo15-05-2025

New Movement Calls on New Yorkers to Show City Pride by Properly Disposing of Trash
Foundation Invites New Yorkers to Interactive Activation at Cooper Square for Campaign Kick-Off
PRESS KIT HERE(Visual Assets, Fact Sheet, Report, Leadership Bios, Credit Sheet)
NEW YORK, May 15, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, the Sanitation Foundation – the official nonprofit partner of the NYC Department of Sanitation (DSNY) – launched Don't Do New York City Dirty, a campaign aimed at turning New Yorkers' pride into action against littering.
New research conducted by the Foundation revealed that while 83% of New Yorkers express pride in their city, nearly 40% admit to littering – a gap the campaign seeks to close by empowering everyone to keep their city clean.
"The 'Trash Revolution' must include all New Yorkers, and that's what this campaign from the New York City Sanitation Foundation is all about — taking pride in our city and ending a culture where some people think it's ok to litter," said New York City Mayor Eric Adams. "We're proud to amplify this campaign to make sure that people in all five boroughs know we're not going to stand for littering, not now, not ever."
"10,000 of New York's Strongest clean thousands of miles of City streets and handle 24 million pounds of trash each day, and we do it with pride. But in a city this size, we need all New Yorkers to do their part. This campaign supports our work by reminding every resident of their role in the cleanliness of the City, and that littering isn't just illegal, it's also true loser behavior," said Javier Lojan, Acting Commissioner of the New York City Department of Sanitation.
The Don't Do New York City Dirty campaign, created by Arnold NY, is rolling out across the city's landscape – from TV and radio spots to movie theaters through National CineMedia (NCM), double-decker buses, signage on the sides of sanitation trucks, and more. The campaign's simple yet powerful message aims to become part of New York's cultural vocabulary, creating a lasting phrase that resonates with New Yorkers for years to come. The message extends across major social media platforms with targeted content designed to reach New Yorkers of all ages, with special emphasis on engaging younger generations through the channels they use most.
In addition to private funding from the Sanitation Foundation, the City of New York will provide additional advertising placements for this campaign, beginning with millions of impressions on LinkNYC kiosks and posters on the sides of thousands of New York City Department of Sanitation collection trucks. Throughout the summer, the City will assess opportunities to provide additional space on Taxi TV, bus shelters, and beyond, in line with Mayor Adams' commitment to a clean, safe, livable City.
The campaign comes to life through compelling videos directed by Nicholas Heller, a.k.a. New York Nico, forming the heart of this citywide initiative. These videos feature authentic and diverse New Yorkers, including the self-proclaimed "Mayor of Coney Island" and legendary rapper Nems and the Green Lady (Elizabeth Sweetheart), sharing their deep connection to the city and why keeping it clean matters. New York-based photographer Jeremy Cohen captured all of the campaign's print and out-of-home imagery.
"Don't Do New York City Dirty marks a turning point in how we care for the greatest city in the world. This isn't just a campaign – it's the foundation of a decades-long commitment to creating a culture of cleanliness in New York," said Caryl Englander, Sanitation Foundation Board Chair. "We're building a movement where Don't Do New York City Dirty becomes as fundamentally New York as the skyline itself. The Sanitation Foundation is proud to lead this enduring effort that will transform how generations of New Yorkers relate to their City."
"I may love a little trash talk, but I'd never trash this city," said iconic TV producer and long-time Sanitation Foundation supporter Andy Cohen. "As a dad raising two kids here, I want them to grow up proud of New York – and that means clean streets and respect for where we live."
The campaign kicks off Thursday, May 15, at noon in Cooper Square with "The Dirty Truth," a free, one-of-a-kind public experience conceived and produced by Team Epiphany – a global, full-service marketing agency that takes a culture-first approach to engineering impactful campaigns. This immersive installation transforms everyday litter like takeout containers and coffee cups into provocative, larger-than-life sculptures that challenge perceptions and inspire action. Open through Saturday, May 17, the experience includes both educational elements highlighting the impact of littering and interactive components that demonstrate how "trashing your trash" creates visible change in our shared spaces.
The Don't Do New York City Dirty movement is bolstered by a milestone study released today by the Sanitation Foundation in partnership with Dreyfus Advisors. The report captures the first comprehensive research examining New Yorkers' attitudes toward and behaviors around littering. Key findings from the Foundation's landmark study on littering behavior include:
83% of New Yorkers are proud of their city
8 in 10 New Yorkers think littering is a problem, yet nearly 40% admit to littering
Only 29% of New Yorkers say they have never littered
Amid the activation, The Sanitation Foundation will host a community cleanup on Friday, May 16 at Cooper Square to pick up litter in the surrounding East Village. New Yorkers can also join the movement through year-round Sanitation Foundation programs such as the Sports Cleanup Series, Community Stewards, and Adopt Your Spot NYC - an initiative empowering residents to care for specific locations especially dear to them.
For more information on how to get involved, visit www.sanitationfoundation.org.
About the Sanitation FoundationThe Sanitation Foundation is the official non-profit partner of the NYC Department of Sanitation (DSNY). We support the work of DSNY to clean up the city and reduce the amount of waste that ends up in landfills. Our work is designed to create ways for individuals, corporate partners, institutions, and community groups to participate in creating a cleaner, healthier and more sustainable NYC. For more information, visit www.sanitationfoundation.org.
About the New York City Department of SanitationThe Department of Sanitation (DSNY) keeps New York City clean, safe, and healthy by collecting, recycling, and disposing of waste, cleaning streets, attacking the scourge of illegal dumping, and clearing snow and ice. The Department operates 59 district garages and manages a fleet of more than 2,000 rear-loading collection trucks, 450 mechanical brooms, 705 salt spreaders, and several dozen bike lane operations machines. Under the Adams Administration, the Department is aggressively cleaning more parts of the City than ever before, including over 1,000 long-ignored areas spread across every neighborhood, as well as cleaning the highways and managing graffiti removal.
CONTACT: sanitationfoundation@berlinrosen.com
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sanitation-foundation-launches-dont-do-new-york-city-dirty-anti-littering-campaign-302456940.html
SOURCE Sanitation Foundation

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In a world without people, how fast would NYC fall apart? Here's the timeline.
In a world without people, how fast would NYC fall apart? Here's the timeline.

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

In a world without people, how fast would NYC fall apart? Here's the timeline.

Imagine the ceaseless cacophony of New York City suddenly stopped. No sirens wailed. No cars zoomed. No subways rumbled beneath sidewalks. All eight million New Yorkers disappeared overnight. Now, imagine what would happen next. If no one's around to sweep the sidewalks, weed Central Park, or turn the power grid on, nature would move in—and quick. Dandelions would spring up in asphalt cracks. Raccoons would move into abandoned apartments. Sidewalk trees would outgrow their planters. But just how swiftly would the city disappear beneath a curtain of green? We talked to architects and urban ecologists to map out a potential timeline. With no one to maintain the power grid, the Big Apple would go dark within a few days. The Milky Way would illuminate Midtown as light pollution disappears overnight. Without air conditioning and heat, 'you start getting weird temperatures inside the building. Mold starts to form on the walls,' says architect Jana Horvat of the University of Zagreb, who studies building decay. Some green energy projects in the city might stay lit for longer, such as the solar and wind-powered Ricoh Americas billboard in Times Square. Eventually, though, even the Ricoh billboard would go dark; not because the billboard would lose power, but because there would be no one to replace its LED lightbulbs. Without power, the pump rooms that clear out 13 million gallons of water daily from the subway would be useless, and the train tunnels would begin to flood. 'Probably this water would result in [the subway] being, you know, occupied by new species,' says Horvat. 'Some plants would start growing, some animals' would move in. Likely, species that already thrive in the subway—rats, cockroaches, pigeons, opossums—would be the first ones to take advantage of the human-free passages. Within the first month, the manicured lawns of Central and Prospect Park would grow wild and unkept. 'When you stop mowing a lawn, you get a meadow,' says botanist Peter Del Tredici, a senior research scientist emeritus at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, who wrote a book on urban plant life. Within a month, dandelions, ragweed, and yellow nutsedge would start popping up in the now knee-high grasses of New York's iconic parks. 'First, it's herbaceous plants, but then, you know, you get trees and shrubs and vines,' says Tredici. In a year without people, many of New York's buildings would start to deteriorate. 'The glass facades would be the first to go,' says Horvat. The single-pane glass on brownstones and family homes would be the most vulnerable, but in a decade, even the heat-strengthened glass on skyscrapers would start to wear down and crack. And once windows break, water gets in. 'Then you'll have plants start growing in there,' says Tredici. Apartments would transform into humid hothouses, the perfect habitat for mosquitoes, water snakes, fungus, and rushes. 'It's like a wetland on the second floor.' Without maintenance, the asphalt streets and parking lots in New York would quickly degrade. Freeze-thaw cycles would create cracks. 'Water settles in that crack, and then that's all the plants need,' says Tredici. First, mosses would grow. Within a decade, young trees may even sprout. The London planetree, the most common street tree in New York, is particularly known for its resilience and fast growth rate, and any of its offspring could quickly find a toehold in a deteriorating asphalt parking lot. Within a decade, the Statue of Liberty would also start to deteriorate. The statue's copper plating would start to split, allowing sea spray to break down its interior steel skeleton. Steel 'is a very durable material, but it is very prone to corroding if it comes in contact with damp conditions,' says Horvat: That's bad news for New York, a city made from steel. In the decades since humans abandoned New York, a 'novel ecosystem' would emerge, says Tredici. 'It's not going to look like anything that's ever existed anywhere in the world.' Tredici points to Detroit as a case study. Today, crabapple trees—tough ornamentals native to the Central Asian mountains—blanket Detroit. 'They actually will spread all over,' says Tredici, and after 50 years without humans, Central and Riverside Park's crabapple trees would grow among a young forest full of London planetrees, honeylocusts, pin oaks, and Norway maples (the last three being common New York street trees). Nightshade vines and poison ivy would creep up buildings, and mosses and resilient weeds would cover the higher reaches of exposed windy skyscrapers. Among the greenery, more and more animals would call Manhattan home. Deer, rabbits, groundhogs, and wild turkeys would move in. Larger predators—coyotes, bobcats, black bears, and copperhead snakes—would follow. Peregrine falcons, bald eagles, red-tailed hawks, and great horned owls would nest in hollowed-out buildings, while feral cats prowl the abandoned upper floors of apartment buildings, feasting on mice and birds. Despite their futuristic look, the city's newest spires, such as 10 Hudson Yards and 111 West 57th Street, would be the first to fall. These buildings rely on slender, reinforced steel skeletons encased in reinforced concrete. But when the power shuts off and water seeps in through these buildings' glass curtain walls, these high-rises would rot from the inside out. The Empire State Building and Chrysler Building would likely outlast their younger rivals. Built to support much more weight than necessary (a safety precaution in the early days of skyscrapers), these giants' steel frames are bolstered by thick masonry and interior walls. Ten Hudson Yards might last a century. The Empire State Building might last 50 years longer, but eventually even these historic titans would collapse. After a century, New York City would 'become a forest,' says Tredici. A canopy of mature trees over a 100-feet-tall would replace the city's skyscrapers. Soil would regenerate. Concrete, one of the world's 'strongest' construction materials, says Horvat, would dissolve. New York's carefully manicured river parks, such as the Hudson River and East River Park, would transform into wetlands teeming with eels, egrets, turtles, beavers, and muskrats. But even as skyscrapers fell and forests grew, parts of New York would 'survive for centuries in this ruinous state,' says Horvat. Cracked marble lions would stalk the forest floor. Soil and underbrush would obscure once-gleaming granite fountains. Rusted steel beams would jut out from dense root systems. Even without humans, pieces of New York would endure—a fragile legacy for the future to either uncover or forget. This story is part of Popular Science's Ask Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something you've always wanted to know? Ask us.

New trash bins across West Harlem keep away rats, but take up precious parking spots, some say
New trash bins across West Harlem keep away rats, but take up precious parking spots, some say

CBS News

timea day ago

  • CBS News

New trash bins across West Harlem keep away rats, but take up precious parking spots, some say

Large ratproof trash bins installed across NYC as part of pilot program Large ratproof trash bins installed across NYC as part of pilot program Large ratproof trash bins installed across NYC as part of pilot program Bins meant to hold dozens of large trash bags are part of New York City's latest defense against rats. Some residents are already seeing an improvement, but others say it's not worth the amount of parking spots the trash receptacles have been taking up. About 1,100 "Empire" bins have already been installed across West Harlem as part of a pilot program announced on Monday. "First time in North America we're using automated side-loading trucks to service our Empire bins," Mayor Eric Adams said. This comes as the city reports six straight months of a decline in 311 calls about rat sightings. Bins help keep buildings, streets clean, residents say Building supervisor Cesar Jimenez says one Empire bin is enough to hold trash for his 36-unit apartment building in Morningside Heights, and he can't sing its praises enough. "In the past, we have to bring the garbage at night. With this thing, we can bring it out anytime and keep the building inside clean," Jimenez said. Only those responsible for a building's waste management can have a keycard to access the bins. Deval Camming, who has noticed less of a trash smell on hot days, says the timing's just right. "I usually don't wear sandals in New York 'cause of the rats," she said. But she says now, she feels comfortable wearing them. Parking spots already hard to find, drivers say Not everyone is as pleased with the bins, however. "They're gonna be really broken up and filthy soon," Morningside Heights resident Jean Anthony said. The bins sit on streets along curbs, and some feel the space would be better left as parking spots, which are already hard to find for many. "They take up parking places. We don't own a car, but we do rent them, and it's really, really tight now," Anthony said. Some drivers opt to park in the street next to the bins, making the streets even narrower. Some New Yorkers say the city's new Empire trash bins are taking up precious parking spots. CBS News New York "Now I have to go too far to find parking," Morningside Heights resident Issa Gadiaga said. "And that takes me 30 minutes sometimes." Others are waiting and seeing. "I think it's not really the solution, but I'm not sure what the solution is," Anthony said. "I guess time will tell." Whether or not the pilot program expands will be based on its results over the coming weeks and months.

In a world without people, how fast would NYC fall apart? Here's the timeline.
In a world without people, how fast would NYC fall apart? Here's the timeline.

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

In a world without people, how fast would NYC fall apart? Here's the timeline.

Imagine the ceaseless cacophony of New York City suddenly stopped. No sirens wailed. No cars zoomed. No subways rumbled beneath sidewalks. All eight million New Yorkers disappeared overnight. Now, imagine what would happen next. If no one's around to sweep the sidewalks, weed Central Park, or turn the power grid on, nature would move in—and quick. Dandelions would spring up in asphalt cracks. Raccoons would move into abandoned apartments. Sidewalk trees would outgrow their planters. But just how swiftly would the city disappear beneath a curtain of green? We talked to architects and urban ecologists to map out a potential timeline. With no one to maintain the power grid, the Big Apple would go dark within a few days. The Milky Way would illuminate Midtown as light pollution disappears overnight. Without air conditioning and heat, 'you start getting weird temperatures inside the building. Mold starts to form on the walls,' says architect Jana Horvat of the University of Zagreb, who studies building decay. Some green energy projects in the city might stay lit for longer, such as the solar and wind-powered Ricoh Americas billboard in Times Square. Eventually, though, even the Ricoh billboard would go dark; not because the billboard would lose power, but because there would be no one to replace its LED lightbulbs. Without power, the pump rooms that clear out 13 million gallons of water daily from the subway would be useless, and the train tunnels would begin to flood. 'Probably this water would result in [the subway] being, you know, occupied by new species,' says Horvat. 'Some plants would start growing, some animals' would move in. Likely, species that already thrive in the subway—rats, cockroaches, pigeons, opossums—would be the first ones to take advantage of the human-free passages. Within the first month, the manicured lawns of Central and Prospect Park would grow wild and unkept. 'When you stop mowing a lawn, you get a meadow,' says botanist Peter Del Tredici, a senior research scientist emeritus at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, who wrote a book on urban plant life. Within a month, dandelions, ragweed, and yellow nutsedge would start popping up in the now knee-high grasses of New York's iconic parks. 'First, it's herbaceous plants, but then, you know, you get trees and shrubs and vines,' says Tredici. In a year without people, many of New York's buildings would start to deteriorate. 'The glass facades would be the first to go,' says Horvat. The single-pane glass on brownstones and family homes would be the most vulnerable, but in a decade, even the heat-strengthened glass on skyscrapers would start to wear down and crack. And once windows break, water gets in. 'Then you'll have plants start growing in there,' says Tredici. Apartments would transform into humid hothouses, the perfect habitat for mosquitoes, water snakes, fungus, and rushes. 'It's like a wetland on the second floor.' Without maintenance, the asphalt streets and parking lots in New York would quickly degrade. Freeze-thaw cycles would create cracks. 'Water settles in that crack, and then that's all the plants need,' says Tredici. First, mosses would grow. Within a decade, young trees may even sprout. The London planetree, the most common street tree in New York, is particularly known for its resilience and fast growth rate, and any of its offspring could quickly find a toehold in a deteriorating asphalt parking lot. Within a decade, the Statue of Liberty would also start to deteriorate. The statue's copper plating would start to split, allowing sea spray to break down its interior steel skeleton. Steel 'is a very durable material, but it is very prone to corroding if it comes in contact with damp conditions,' says Horvat: That's bad news for New York, a city made from steel. In the decades since humans abandoned New York, a 'novel ecosystem' would emerge, says Tredici. 'It's not going to look like anything that's ever existed anywhere in the world.' Tredici points to Detroit as a case study. Today, crabapple trees—tough ornamentals native to the Central Asian mountains—blanket Detroit. 'They actually will spread all over,' says Tredici, and after 50 years without humans, Central and Riverside Park's crabapple trees would grow among a young forest full of London planetrees, honeylocusts, pin oaks, and Norway maples (the last three being common New York street trees). Nightshade vines and poison ivy would creep up buildings, and mosses and resilient weeds would cover the higher reaches of exposed windy skyscrapers. Among the greenery, more and more animals would call Manhattan home. Deer, rabbits, groundhogs, and wild turkeys would move in. Larger predators—coyotes, bobcats, black bears, and copperhead snakes—would follow. Peregrine falcons, bald eagles, red-tailed hawks, and great horned owls would nest in hollowed-out buildings, while feral cats prowl the abandoned upper floors of apartment buildings, feasting on mice and birds. Despite their futuristic look, the city's newest spires, such as 10 Hudson Yards and 111 West 57th Street, would be the first to fall. These buildings rely on slender, reinforced steel skeletons encased in reinforced concrete. But when the power shuts off and water seeps in through these buildings' glass curtain walls, these high-rises would rot from the inside out. The Empire State Building and Chrysler Building would likely outlast their younger rivals. Built to support much more weight than necessary (a safety precaution in the early days of skyscrapers), these giants' steel frames are bolstered by thick masonry and interior walls. Ten Hudson Yards might last a century. The Empire State Building might last 50 years longer, but eventually even these historic titans would collapse. After a century, New York City would 'become a forest,' says Tredici. A canopy of mature trees over a 100-feet-tall would replace the city's skyscrapers. Soil would regenerate. Concrete, one of the world's 'strongest' construction materials, says Horvat, would dissolve. New York's carefully manicured river parks, such as the Hudson River and East River Park, would transform into wetlands teeming with eels, egrets, turtles, beavers, and muskrats. But even as skyscrapers fell and forests grew, parts of New York would 'survive for centuries in this ruinous state,' says Horvat. Cracked marble lions would stalk the forest floor. Soil and underbrush would obscure once-gleaming granite fountains. Rusted steel beams would jut out from dense root systems. Even without humans, pieces of New York would endure—a fragile legacy for the future to either uncover or forget. This story is part of Popular Science's Ask Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something you've always wanted to know? Ask us.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store