Garbage scow explained

A garbage scow is a large watercraft used to transport refuse and waste/garbage across waterways. It is often in the form of a barge which is towed or otherwise moved by means of tugboats; however, many are also self-propelled. They are most common in large, coastal cities, such as New York City,[1] which may transport collected trash to neighboring ports for disposal or, occasionally, even illegally dump the payload at sea.[2] [3]

The garbage scow Mobro 4000, which was given the nickname the "Gar-Barge", became notorious in 1987 for travelling between New York City and Belize trying unsuccessfully to get rid of a load of rubbish, ultimately incinerated in New York.

Garbage scows have been used to covertly transport illegal substances in the US. In 1948, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported a major bust of narcotics smugglers by United States customs guards and NYC police, with city sanitation workers searching through 20 tons of garbage on a scow in New York Harbor for over US$1 million in drugs concealed there.[1]

In another case, during the 1920–1933 era of US prohibition of alcoholic beverages, a garbage scow in New York was used to smuggle 1,000 cases of liquor from New York's "rum row".[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Hunt for Narcotics Worth $1,500,000 on Garbage Scow. June 26, 1948. Milwaukee Journal. 2 December 2010.
  2. STATES & CITIES: Garbage. https://web.archive.org/web/20081215031148/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,752853,00.html. dead. December 15, 2008. June 1, 1931. Time. 4 April 2011.
  3. News: New Concern Raised By Waste-Dumping In Atlantic Off L.I.. Peterson. Iver. August 31, 1987. New York Times. 4 April 2011.
  4. News: Garbage Scow Carries Booze. July 30, 1930. San Jose Evening News. 2 December 2010.