TwistedSifter

Waste Collection Workers Claim Homeowner’s Yard Waste Pile Exceeds The Size Limits, So He Makes The Pile Even Bigger

Man in orange sweater working in his yard

Pexels/Reddit

Sometimes being clever really pays off!

Imagine having a lot of yard waste that you need picked up by your local trash collection company.

If you knew the pile was within the size limits, but the company claimed otherwise, what would you do?

This guy shares how his yard waste company tried to fine him because of the size of his yard waste pile, but he beat them at their own game!

Check out the full story.

Working in the yard…

I did some yard work over the course of a couple of weekends last summer, cutting some limbs, trimming some shrubbery, and cutting down a dead tree in my backyard.

Knowing what the rules are for how much yard waste, limbs, leaves, and such can be put out, I bagged everything that was supposed to be bagged, filling up three of them.

Things like leaves and small clippings, weeds, and such.

This is where it gets tricky…

The paper bags for yard waste from the big‒box home improvement stores are what they require, so I use those.

I just fill them halfway up so as to not make them too heavy for the waste collectors, even though there are no written weight restrictions.

However, if a bag is “too full” they will knock it over to spill out the contents so they then don’t have to pick it up.

He made a lot of effort to get it done!

I cut the larger limbs down to under four feet in length, or they wouldn’t be picked up. Anything at all they can do to get out of picking something up, they will do.

And they almost always leave a horrendous mess behind when they do pick things up.

The pile put out for collection is not allowed to be any wider than ten feet, nor any deeper or higher than five feet, nor may it contain any piece longer than four feet.

All bags must be placed in a row, no more than three feet away from the limb pile. My pile was maybe four inches longer than the ten feet, and only because of the tiny ends of the limbs (smaller than a toothpick) hanging out of the pile.

UH OH…

The pile was no higher than three feet, and no deeper than four feet.

In other words, it fell within the size limits, except for a few twigs with leaves. I also had the three bags, each about half full of clippings and leaves, all lined up exactly as required, and about two feet away from the main pile.

They were scheduled to come on a Tuesday, but when I got home from work that afternoon, it was all still there.

There was a pre‒printed notice on my door that my pickup exceeded the proscribed size limits, and the note said that I would be required to either pay a $250 oversize load fee, or “reduce the size of the pile by half” to make it fit into the limit.

He knew he had to do something about it!

This is where the malicious compliance comes in.

I had the next two days off, so the next morning, bright and early, I got out the hedge trimmers. I trimmed the ends of the pile back to exactly nine feet in length.

After carefully laying those trimmed bits on top of the pile. I went to the backyard, where the limbs I had not trimmed up the week before were stacked for the following week’s pile, and found four long, fairly straight limbs.

I removed all the smaller limbs and leaves from these limbs, ending up with four moderately straight poles, each about seven feet long.

That’s INSANE!

I marked one foot intervals on each pole in fluorescent orange paint, and stuck them in the ground, (out at the curb in the front yard) at the corners of a rectangle exactly five feet wide and ten feet long.

Got out the surveyor’s tape (bright pink plastic tape used to mark property corners) and tied it onto and around the stakes at the height of five feet. This established a visual outline of the volume I was required to stay within.

I made absolutely sure that everything in the pile was completely inside the poles and below five feet in height.

This required adding almost two‒thirds of the remaining pile in the back yard to the stack out front, to bring it up to four feet six inches in width, four feet six inches in depth, and nine feet six inches in length. And no pieces longer than 46 inches.

This is a really big pile!

The pile was almost twice as much material as before. This included some small logs, up to 4” in diameter, also each 46” long. (The limit is 5” diameter) All within the limits of 5’ x 5’ x 10’ the waste company mandates.

I carried each of the three bags of clippings to the back yard, and filled each of them up as much as possible, while still being able to fold over the tops and staple shut each bag. I also included small, 8” to 10” sections of the ends of larger limbs, for added weight.

The bags were now completely filled, and weighed more than twice what they had before.

I had to use the hand truck to get them out to the curb, they were so heavy.

All done!

Oh, and all the extra clippings I had generated, filled up two more bags, so the total was now five bags. The company limit.

I then went inside, called the company, and very nicely asked that they come to pick up my yard waste, since they had not done so on Tuesday.

He was having the time of his life here!

They agreed to send out a truck and crew, and told me I would have to pay the fee. “Come on then,” I told them. They soon arrived, and happened to be the same crew that normally comes to my neighborhood.

I pulled a 25‒foot Stanley tape measure from my pocket, and asked them to measure the poles, to confirm that the space was within the required limits.

They did so, and agreed the pile was not oversized, and proceeded to spend the next two hours manually loading it all onto their truck.

Things finally got better!

Oh, and it took both of them to manhandle each of those bags into the back of the truck too.

I told them, very nicely and with a smile, that I knew what ten feet was, pointed to the fence where it was marked with orange electrical tape, and thanked them for coming to pick up my yard waste.

The two tired, sweaty waste disposal guys just groaned, got in their truck, and drove off. There was no extra fee added to my bill for that month.

Never has been since.

And the cherry on top!

Now, I know they got paid for their time, and I know that I had to do a lot of extra work on my day off, but since last July, I have not once ever had them leave so much as a single leaf on the ground in front of my house.

They had to actually do some hard work, with me standing there in shorts, smiling and drinking cold Gatorade while they were sweating.

YIKES! That sounds fun!

He was determined to get everything picked up, and it worked!

Let’s find out what folks on Reddit think about this one.

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His hard work really paid off!

If you liked that post, check out this post about a woman who tracked down a contractor who tried to vanish without a trace.

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