Successful Efforts To Eradicate Corruption And Promote Ethical Business
The changes sweeping the waste hauling and disposal industry are a testament to the successful combination of structural reforms and aggressive law enforcement. For decades, the industry was dominated by an organized crime cartel that inflated carting costs by as much as forty percent, forcing costs in the City to a level more than triple that in Los Angeles. In 1995 and 1996, the Manhattan District Attorney criminally and civilly prosecuted many of the City’s carters, carting companies and trade associations. In 1996, legislation sponsored by the Mayor and the Public Advocate to regulate and restructure the industry was implemented, requiring licensing of carters, the creation of “competition zones” in which an exclusive right to collect garbage would be competitively bid with independent monitoring of carters in appropriate circumstances. Together, these forces have generated a strongly competitive climate in which Browning Ferris Industries and other national waste-hauling concerns have substantially underbid the old carters. Carting costs have declined sharply, for some customers by as much as 50%. The World Trade Center’s annual bill reportedly has gone from $2.7 million to $675,000. The Trade Waste Commission, set up by the new legislation, broke the corrupt cartel by giving customers the right to cancel existing carting contracts and to freely negotiate deals with others. Lawsuits by carters attacking the constitutionality of the new law, which requires background checks of licensees, oversight of contracts and two-year limits on them, have been singularly unsuccessful. “Clearly,” wrote Judge Pollack in one suit, the law “was essential, overdue and carefully tailored to protect the public interest with measured consideration of the interests and welfare of those who strive only for fair business conditions.” Sanitation and Recycling Industry, Inc. v. City of New York, 928 F.Supp. 407, 424 (S.D.N.Y. 1996); see also Universal Sanitation Corp. v. Trade Waste Commission of the City of New York, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15313 (S.D.N.Y. 10/16/96)
Other endeavors in New York City in recent years to eradicate corruption by fundamentally changing the business environment in which it thrives have produced comparable economic benefits. Thus the court-ordered removal of a mob-dominated cartel from the garment center trucking industry in 1992 has, under the scrutiny of a court-appointed monitor, resulted in a 20% reduction in shipping costs in the center and the return of free market competition to the industry. For years, the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center was plagued by preferential hiring practices favoring mob-sponsored members of the carpenters union, extortionate prices, bribery, union shakedowns and other mob-related activities. In the two years since 1994, new management at the Center and a monitor appointed by the court to oversee the carpenter’s union have achieved an end to corrupt practices through administrative and regulatory means. After years of losing money, the Center is fully booked and is turning a profit, and exhibitor’s costs have dropped by at least 10%.
The proposed law to regulate Hunts Point and other public markets seeks to apply the experience of these prior efforts reducing mob infiltration of legitimate industry. Wholesale dealers in the affected markets supply most of the unpackaged fruit, vegetables and meat sold to retail stores and restaurants in the City and generate around two and a half billion dollars in sales annually. The proposed law will provide significant economic benefits to consumers by eliminating the “mob tax” arising from the payment of extortion and kickbacks and by reinstating free and open competition. It will prevent exploitation of workers who have been denied union wages, pensions and benefits through the mob’s stranglehold on the market’s economy. It will generate revenues for the City by ending sales and income tax avoidance. It will create an environment that is free of violence, the threat of violence and the taint of corruption.