From Deseret News archives:

A haul new industry

Startup franchisees try to take the hassels out of junk removal

Published: Sunday, Jan. 18, 2004 12:38 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Alex Siegel had both plenty of stuff and plenty of reasons to get rid of it.

"I had a lot of furniture to be thrown away," said the Sandy resident. "I had people living with me over the years, and they left it. You know how you collect stuff."

Ditto for his business, Alex's Auto House, a car repair and service shop.

That's where 1-800-Got-Junk? took over. The local franchise of a Canadian operation came in and took it all away without Siegel lifting a finger, except to dial up the company, of course.

1-800-Got-Junk? and another franchise operation, TurboHaul, are relative newcomers to the Utah market, trying to fill a business niche as quickly as they fill landfills. They can haul away residential or commercial refuse on a spot or ongoing basis, without the need for roll-off containers or confusing contracts, often with same-day service and without forcing the owners to bring the stuff to the curb first.

"We have to break the ice with the local people because it's an up-and-coming trend," said Travis Lyon, general manager of TurboHaul of Salt Lake City, the first TurboHaul franchise west of the Mississippi.

Story continues below
"A lot of people aren't aware there is an option out there. What we're doing is educating people that they have other options for getting rid of their stuff and not have a special truck costing them an arm and leg or having somebody show up drunk, if he shows up at all."

"We're not trying to take the place of city garbage programs, because we realize that's not where our strength is," said Brian Gibson, franchise partner with 1-800-Got-Junk? "We have a service for someone who has junk to get rid of, but doesn't have time to do it or wants it gone right away or doesn't have a truck to do it."

Until the mid-1960s, there was no organized way to dispose of waste from people's homes, according to H. Lanier Hickman Jr., author of "American Alchemy: The History of Solid Waste Management in the United States." Prior to that time, local governments primarily picked up residents' refuse, while thousands of small companies drove to people's homes to collect waste.

Then, in 1965, the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act was established to assist state and local governments develop plans for solid-waste disposal programs. Today, the nation's estimated $39 billion-plus solid waste management industry is highly structured and dominated by a handful of giants that own landfills and remove trash from residential and commercial settings.

Experts within the waste management industry say that services removing the bulky waste from homes are one of the last segments of the industry that remains unstructured — and one with the greatest unmet demand.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Spencer Bytheway and Travis Lyon, who work for TurboHaul, unload scraps of metal at Western Metals, a recycling company in Salt Lake City.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hey Boise Fans. The sad thing is most of the BYU and Utah fans really want...

5A: Miners dig deep, claim crown

Bingham beat you twice and Brighton beat you, How can you be the...

Glenn Beck to enter politics?

You like the sound of that? How about giving it a go as the Elder's...

Hall breaks BYU record with win

These comments on here are wasted cyber-space. A few apples vs apple...

Utes crush Aztecs 38-7

It's on Yewties. We have the momentum going into the big game. It's time...

Machine explores Big Bang

"...beams of protons whizzing through the 17-mile circular tunnel underground...

BYU English Major | 8:26 p.m. Nov. 21, 2009 wrote: "So what if BYU'...

Utes crush Aztecs 38-7

the BYU fans that post acting as Utah fans and say stupid things referring to...

Canada is beginning to look warmer all the time.

Hall breaks BYU record with win

Robert Johnson is still open. lol! I crack myself up.

Advertisements