So I go to the dumpster today to deposit my trash only to discover it wasn't there, hauled off to be dumped.
And I got to wondering, why doesn't the truck just bring the empty one with it? It comes to the complex empty, picks up the full dumpster, hauls it 20-some miles North to the dump (I know exactly where it is), dumps it, then hauls it back and re-installs it. Probably a good, solid, 45-minutes to an hour must pass between when it picks up the dumpster and when it brings it back, time and gas wasted. So why not just bring an empty one with it? It brings the empty one, stashes it somehwere, pulls out the full one, parks it somewhere, hooks up the empty one, picks the full one back up and then goes to dump off the full one. Now, sure, this would involve a lot of time when iit comes to shuffling the bins around -a better idea would be a truck that could manange two of the dumpsters at the location. But seems to me there'd at least be less fuel waste.
And I got to wondering, why doesn't the truck just bring the empty one with it? It comes to the complex empty, picks up the full dumpster, hauls it 20-some miles North to the dump (I know exactly where it is), dumps it, then hauls it back and re-installs it. Probably a good, solid, 45-minutes to an hour must pass between when it picks up the dumpster and when it brings it back, time and gas wasted. So why not just bring an empty one with it? It brings the empty one, stashes it somehwere, pulls out the full one, parks it somewhere, hooks up the empty one, picks the full one back up and then goes to dump off the full one. Now, sure, this would involve a lot of time when iit comes to shuffling the bins around -a better idea would be a truck that could manange two of the dumpsters at the location. But seems to me there'd at least be less fuel waste.