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Walker My Hauler? • Staff
Walker Garbage Service
from The Cedar Mill News, May 2003
Like many other businesses in our area,
Walker Garbage Service has grown and expanded with the growth in population.
In the early days of Cedar Mill, people took care of their own garbage.
In a lot of cases, this meant dumping it over the nearest ridge. Of course,
back then there was less packaging, and folks re-used and recycled from
necessity. It was common to burn your trash in big barrels all winter,
and then dump all the ashes in a big pile in the spring. That’s
when you’d call the hauler. “Shoveling those piles of wet
ashes was really hard work,” recalls John Walker III (known as Buz),
who started working in his father’s business in the mid-50’s
after getting out of the army.
In
1948 John Walker, Jr., who was already running a service in Portland,
and his partner Al Miller bought the original garbage hauling business,
which had been started in 1941. Using an open-bed truck, they serviced
approximately two dozen customers in Cedar Mill, for one dollar per month
per can. By 1978, Miller had retired and the business was taken over by
Buz and his son John Jeffrey Walker. Another son, Greg, is also now active
in running the business. Their office on Cornell is located in the building
that used to house the Wolf Creek Water District.
In the late 70’s, area cities and
counties agreed on a system of territories which means that each hauler
has an exclusive service area. They are subject to review by the cities
and counties in which they operate. “It ensures that customers get
fair prices and consistent service. They review all of us every year,” says
Walker.
Most folks might not think garbage hauling
would be a goodcareer, but for some people it’sgreat.“They
like it that they can get their work done early in the day, and they like
working outside,” says Greg Walker. “But it’s important
that they be the kind of person who can get up early and go to work no
matter what the weather. It’s not bad in the summer, but when it’s
cold and raining or snowing, you have to be able to just get out there
over and over and do it.”
“Back in the early 60’s we
had a lot more snow. One time there were drifts higher than our trucks
up by the big bend on Saltzman (near what’s now Bauer Oaks). Over
here off Cornell the grader that was clearing the road hadn’t lowered
his scraper enough, and it just left a big hole full of snow in the road.
A VW beetle came along behind and got stuck -- it was completely buried!
There were some people up in the Dogwood area that got stuck for 2 1/2
weeks during that storm,” Buz remembers.
They're out early to collect garbage from
customers on Cornell and Saltzman, Greg mentions. “People wouldn’t
appreciate having to follow our trucks on these two-lane roads during
rush hour,” he says. “So we get done there before folks are
out.”
Recycling
Recycling seems like such a normal part
of life, and garbage collection, that it’s surprising to note that
the first recycling service of any kind in the area was when Carl Miller
began picking up newspaper in the early ’80s. “There was some
thievery going on back then, because there was a market for newspaper.
People would leave it out on their curb, but someone else would collect
it,” recalls Buz.
The Walkers had the first truck in Washington
County that was purpose-built for recycling (see photo). “We just
wanted to get it as efficiently as possible,” says Buz. He notes
that it’s much easier since commingling began,. “The product
is less salable, but more people participate, so it is better in the long
run.” Far West Fiber has a huge facility where the commingled recyclables
are sorted -- mostly by machine but some of it by hand.
Other Services
For drop boxes, Walker refers customers
to Washington County Drop Box Service, a cooperative company that was
co-founded by Walker and several other haulers. Contractors used to landfill
construction waste, but now companies pick up and recycle most of it.
For customers who suddenly find themselves
with a lot of cardboard on hand, perhaps after a move, just call and they’ll
send out a special truck on Mondays or Thursdays at no additional charge.
And they’ll work with your business to set up or improve your recycling
system. Just call Greg at 503-531-6330. |