Home
Classified Ads Useful Info Services Entertain. Travel Sport Forum
São Paulo, September 2, 2010

 


Search News Archives

Receive Our Free Newsletter

Brazil´s Human Scavengers Finally Get a Break

By John Fitzpatrick
January 14, 2008

For the fifth successive Christmas, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva visited an association of rubbish collectors, many of whom live in the streets. If you walk or drive around Brazil´s larger cities you will be familiar with these "catadores", as they are known, filling plastic bags or pulling rickety wooden carts packed with rubbish, mainly paper and scrap metal. There are reckoned to be around 300,000 of these human scavengers nationwide. There is nothing new about poor people combing through rubbish in search of something they can salvage but, as society is starting to realize the importance of recycling, they are now beginning to gain a higher status. In recognition of this, parts of the private sector in Brazil are now joining the public authorities to help bring the catadores into the formal economy. This is laudable not only because it will encourage recycling in Brazil, which is scandalously behind other countries in this area, but also create a sustainable income for these people. A signs of progress is the fact that catadores are now being offered loans, an idea which would have been unthinkable only a few years ago.

It should be stated immediately that catadores are not idealists or urban greens interested in protecting the environment. Some are vagrants who spend the proceeds on drink and can be seen sprawled out under their carts sleeping off the effects. Others are the breadwinners for their families who spend 10 or 12 hours a day pulling a cart through dense traffic, dragging it uphill and being dragged downhill by it, often in dangerous situations, sorting through other people´s trash by hand in search of empty cans or plastic bottles. People do not undertake gruelling work like this to save the planet.

It would be impossible to offer loans to such people since they have no collateral and are unreliable. However, in recent years cooperatives and associations of catadores have been formed and made great breakthroughs. There is a national movement which models itself on the landless peasant movement, the MST, and has a strong political agenda. The National Movement of Catadores (MDC) has a flag which resembles the MST, a site showing pictures of leftist heroes like Che Guevara and a Declaration of Principles full of references to "class solidarity" and "direct action". This movement has held regular meetings with Lula and members of his government and was one of the organizers of the Christmas visit. Despite its militant language, the MDC has cooperated with private companies and NGOs.

There are an estimated 84 cooperatives in São Paulo state and they handle around 700 tons of scrap a month. A big paper manufacturer, a private bank and two NGOs have set up a fund with seed money of R$360,000 (about US$170,000) to provide resources for five cooperatives in the Greater São Paulo region. The money will be used to buy equipment, such as metal presses, weighing machines and shredders, and as working capital.

One of the cooperatives, Cooper Viva Bem in the Vila Leopoldina district of the city, is using its share of the fund - R$39,000 - to buy two presses to compact the 120 tons of refuse it receives every month. These presses are essential in boosting the catadores´ income because they receive a higher price if they can deliver the recyclable metal in a compact form rather handing over than millions of individual cans. As part of its social responsibility operations, one of Brazil´s largest brewers has donated presses to cooperatives in Rio de Janeiro. Lula was shown a model of an electrically-powered cart, complete with brakes and lights. He was told that although the cost, R$3,800, was prohibitive for individuals it could be reduced to R$2,000 by gains of scale.

The chairman of the Cooper Viva Bem cooperative, Tereza Montenegro, said it had 63 members who had an average monthly income of R$620. This might not seem a lot but it is well above the minimum wage of R$380. I spoke to two catadores (both women incidentally) and they told me they also gained much more than the minimum wage. One sold her cans for R$2.30 a kilo (around 60 cans) and the other for R$2.50. Paper collectors only receive around seven centavos per kilo and need a cart to store their bulky produce. The chairman of the association said many of the members were prisoners who were at conditional liberty while others were vagrants who had no chance of finding employment elsewhere.

It should be pointed out that these resources are not donations but bona-fide loans and need to be repaid over 24 months. The cooperatives are not being charged commercial interest rates but the money has to be paid back with restatement i.e. plus the rate of inflation for the loan period. The repaid loans will, in turn, be recycled and loaned out to other cooperatives. The public sector has also helped through lines of credit from the state development bank, the BNDES, and the Banco do Brasil Foundation. Government programs have also been created to train the catadores and create leaders.

As always, Lula could not resist using the occasion to make a speech and show the catadores that, although he wears the presidential sash, deep down he is one of them. Not only did he say that he used to collect scrap metal when he was a boy and sell it to buy cinema tickets but he had a predicable go at those he does not like. "There are people who think they are better than you but they are the ones who throw litter in the street and don´t recycle properly. If there were no litter louts like them around, there would be no need for catadores," he said.

Nice words but I also cannot resist making a cheap jibe and saying they could have been directed at many of the catadores themselves who, although they dispose of other people´s rubbish, are pretty good at creating their own. For proof of this, check out the mess they make of places where they congregate like the Montserrat church area in Pinheiros in São Paulo.

Notes: More on the National Movement of Catadores can be found at http://www.movimentodoscatadores.org.br.

© John Fitzpatrick 2007

John Fitzpatrick is a Scottish writer and consultant with long experience of Brazil. He is based in São Paulo and runs his own company Celtic Comunicações. This article originally appeared on his site http://www.brazilpoliticalcomment.com.br. He can be contacted at jf@celt.com.br.


Previous articles by John Fitzpatrick on gringoes.com:


Cops and Robbers Brazilian Style
Brazil: Oscar Freire - São Paulo´s Street of Dreams
Brazil: Lula Called to Account on Tax
Will Lula Leave Brazil in Safe or Unsafe Hands?
Senate Spits in the Face of the Brazilian People
The Lord Mayor Goes Zapping the NYSE in Brazil
Brazil: Economic Boom - Political Gloom
Around Brazil: Natal - Sun, Sand Dunes and Solitude or Hassle, Hustlers and Hookers
ACM - Brazil Will Never See His Like Again
Brazilians Let Politicians Treat Them as Doormats
Senate Chairman Upholds Tradition of Treating Brazil with Contempt
Brits Turn Their Backs on Brazil
Look Out for the New BBC - the Brazilian Broadcasting Corporation
Navel Gazing in Brasilia - Largesse in São Paulo
Brazil‘s Politicians Share the Spoils
Cida - A Brazilian Entrepreneur
Ten Top Brazilian Songs to Download on Your iPod
Lula Lets Brazilians Down by Failing to Exercise His Authority
Brazil: Laid Back Lula Finally Gets His Team (Almost) Together
The George W. Bush PR Show Comes to Brazil
Briefing Bush on Brazil the CIA Way
US Authorities Tackle Brazil´s White Collar Criminals
Brazil´s Opposition Parties Try to End Disarray
Lula Faces Arm-Wrestling Contest with New Congress
Brazil Waits for Lula to Return from Holiday
Around Brazil: Santana de Parnaiba
Brazilians Start to Stand Up for Their Rights
Darfur - Brazil´s African Side Show
Economics and Politics in Brazil - a Tangled Web
Brazil´s Strange Idea of Democracy
Brazil: John Pizzarelli - the Boy from Ipanema
Brazil‘s Stock Market: the Path to Riches or Rags?
Brazil: Lula Unlikely to Change Course after His Massive Victory
Brazil: Privatization - Lula and Alckmin Defend the Indefensible
Brazil: Many Emigrants, Fewer Immigrants Part 2
Brazil: Many Emigrants, Fewer Immigrants Part 1
Brazil: Alckmin Hits Lula but Lands No Killer Blow
Brazil: Lula Pays the Penalty for Complacency
Brazil: Does Lula Deserve to Win?
Brazil: Cardoso Writes a Poison Pen Letter
Monte Verde - Brazil's Green Mountain
Brazil‘s Gross Disappointing Product
Brazil‘s Election - Alckmin Hands Lula Victory on a Plate
Lula Hits Back at Congress
Brazil‘s Presidential Election May Not be a Walkover for Lula
Pity the Brazilian Voter
Brazil's Fainthearts Let the Nation Down
Now is the Winter of Brazil´s Discontent
World Cup brings Out the Best and Worst in Brazil
Brazil‘s Big Spender
Brazil: The Dogs of War are Unleashed in São Paulo
Brazil: Self-Righteous Indignation Marks Bolivian Nationalization
Brazil: Lula Still Vulnerable
Brazil: The PSDB Takes the Hard Road
Fooling Around with Brazilian Politics and History Part 3
Fooling Around with Brazilian Politics and History Part 2
Fooling Around with Brazilian Politics and History Part 1
Brazil: Alckmin the Hare Takes on Serra the Tortoise
Patronizing Brazilians the Politically Correct Way
Brazil: Election Gives Voters Chance to Clean Up Congress
Brazil: João Pessoa - a Victim of its Own Success
No Consistency in Brazil´s Foreign Policy
Brazil: Sitting in the Shadow of Sarney and Magalhães
Brazil: Gentrification Creeps Up On São Paulo
Dirt Flies as Brazilian Parties Aim for Presidency
Brazilians Vote for Guns and Death Not Peace and Love
Brazil‘s Gun Lobby Launches Hysterical Campaign Against Arms Ban
Jews and Arabs Find Success in Brazil
Brazil´s Politicians Start Looking Ahead to Next Year
Brazil: Lula Down but Certainly Not Out
Brazil's Congress Struggles to Cope with Ongoing Crisis
Brazil: Scandal Threatens Presidential Mandate System
Brazil: If Lula is to Survive He Needs to Change His Tactics
Brazil: Many Parties - Few Ideas
Brazil Through Foreign Eyes
Helping the Helpless in Brazil
Pinheiros - São Paulo´s Best District
Growing Old (Dis)gracefully in Brazil
Canudos, Still With Us 100 Years Later
The Rise of the Brazilian Empire
Brazil and Portugal - The Samba and the Fado
Brazil - Just A State Of Mind
Brazil: For Lula, is Ignorance Bliss?
Brazil: Pay Day - or Pay Dirt?

1/14/2008


Send a Comment  |  Submit an Article | Forward this Article

Classified Ads |  Useful Info |  Services |  Entertainment |  Travel |  Sport |  Business |  Forum
about us advertise contact us
Copyright © 2001-2009 All Rights Reserved gringoes.com