To: nickcarraway
Hmmm..storage bins for the homeless.
Questions:
1. Is this to keep them fresh? If so, how does one determine that they have gone bad?
2. Are we preserving them? Are we foreseeing a shortage of them in the future?
2 posted on
03/02/2020 9:26:03 PM PST by
The Antiyuppie
(“When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day”)
To: nickcarraway
This was on the local news. Their intentions are good but rarely do things like this go as planned. It’s sort of a secure day locker so the homeless don’t have to pack all their crap into a (stolen) shopping cart. Anyway, we’ll see how it goes.
3 posted on
03/02/2020 9:31:56 PM PST by
SpaceBar
To: nickcarraway
Why not put them up at Nancys place? She can stay in her DC. residence. Seriously, has anyone asked her for the keys?
4 posted on
03/02/2020 9:32:32 PM PST by
TonyM
(Score Event)
To: nickcarraway
The green cans were originally intended to be used for a city compost program, but the program eventually tanked, leaving the city with hundreds of unused cans. The city has no recycling program? That has to be a first.
To: nickcarraway
That’s what I call recycling!
6 posted on
03/02/2020 10:23:12 PM PST by
MoochPooch
(I'm a compassionate cynic.)
To: nickcarraway
To: nickcarraway
Nonprofit repurposes city compost cans as storage bins for homeless It seems to be that that would be awfully cramped.
11 posted on
03/03/2020 4:44:36 AM PST by
grundle
To: nickcarraway
The homeless will be bedding down in them before you know it.
13 posted on
03/03/2020 8:11:18 AM PST by
moovova
To: nickcarraway
Well, they’ve thought of everything and they have big hearts. What could possible go wrong?
14 posted on
03/03/2020 10:29:18 AM PST by
moodyskeptic
(MAGA convert)
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