November 18, 2025
With illegal dumping summonses up more than 20 percent in the last fiscal year, the Department of Sanitation reminds New Yorkers they can receive a significant bounty for helping the Department catch criminals who dump on our neighborhoods.
"Too often, crooked contractors steal our public space by dumping materials in streets, lots and sidewalks that they perceive to be out of the way," said Acting New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY) Commissioner Javier Lojan. "We are catching more and more of these criminals with in-person surveillance and an expanded network of hidden cameras — and we also welcome assistance from the everyday New Yorkers who know these neighborhoods best. Provide us valuable information to catch these criminals, and you could be eligible for half the $4,000 fine."
DSNY has two bounty programs that provide awards to people who witness and report illegal dumping:
Note that illegal dumping is distinct from littering, as it refers specifically to dumping from a vehicle. If you witness illegal dumping, a video of the dumping taking place is most helpful to the Department, with a clear picture of the license plate. Do not approach or engage with the dumpers.
Those caught dumping materials on our neighborhoods have their vehicles impounded, and face summonses that begin at $4,000, plus the cost of cleaning.
In the last three years, DSNY deployed a network of more than 300 hidden cameras to catch illegal dumpers. In Fiscal Year 2025, the Department issued 21 percent more summonses for illegal dumping than the previous fiscal year, for a total of 872, and impounded 417 illegal dumping vehicles, a 46 percent increase over Fiscal Year 2024.
The Department has cleaned at least one million pounds of material left by illegal dumpers in the last year – and the total may be two to three times that. We need YOUR help to stop this criminal theft of public space.
The Department of Sanitation (DSNY) keeps New York City clean, safe, and healthy by collecting, recycling, and disposing of waste, cleaning streets, attacking the scourge of illegal dumping, and clearing snow and ice. The Department operates 59 district garages and manages a fleet of more than 2,000 rear-loading collection trucks, 450 mechanical brooms, 705 salt spreaders, and several dozen bike lane operations machines. Under the Adams Administration, the Department is aggressively cleaning more parts of the City than ever before, including over 1,000 long-ignored areas spread across every neighborhood. With the highest wintertime uniformed headcount in 20 years, DSNY is more equipped than ever to remove snow and ice from the approximately 19,000 lane-miles of City streets.
Press Release #25-34