DM168

FOCUS ON HOMELESSNESS

The skarrel is real: How the homeless are forced to eke out a living on Cape Town’s streets

The skarrel is real: How the homeless are forced to eke out a living on Cape Town’s streets
Louise Africa (62) on 22 November 2021 has been on the streets for more than 30 years. She said skarreling is dangerous after being hit by a car while pushing a trolley filled with recyclables. (Photo: Brenton Geach)

Skarreling, as Carlos Mesquita from the Rehoming Collective explains, is 'whatever activity a homeless person decides upon to earn his or her keep'.

Outside MK Recycling in the Cape Town suburb of Retreat, a long line of waste pickers has gathered, pushing trolleys laden with recyclables from their daily skarrel.

Among them is 62-year-old Louise Africa, who began collecting items at 5.30am. Her only source of income is the plastic bottles, tin cans and other scrap materials she brings to the yard to exchange for cash.

Each day, she walks to a different suburb to collect her wares. On this day, her search takes her to nearby Grassy Park.

Getting there was extra laborious for the elderly woman, who was the victim of a minor hit-and-run when she was pushing her trolley across a busy road last month. She says these are some of the risks of being a skarreler, but the R105 she can earn on a profitable day is worth her troubles.

“I must be clean, I must eat and I must smoke my cigarettes,” Africa says.

Anything she collects, she delivers to the recycling depot on the same day. “I never stop, I’m always working,” she says. “Only holidays and Christmas I rest.”

Skarreling, as Carlos Mesquita from the Rehoming Collective explains, is “whatever activity a homeless person decides upon to earn his or her keep”. This includes waste-picking (skarreling from bins), washing and guarding cars, doing handy work, and other odd jobs.

A report by the Inkathalo Conversations, a public participation process commissioned by the City of Cape Town to explore the problem of homelessness in the metro, found that the skarreling economy can place as much as R1-million a week in the hands of homeless people in the larger metro.

On a good day, Mario Philander makes upwards of R300 from waste-picking. “Sometimes you get a little, sometimes you get a lot,” he tells DM168. Every morning, he wakes up at 4am to skarrel in different parts of the city.

“We skarrel until 11 o’clock until we go to sleep at night time,” he says. “Sometimes we must work through the night.”

Inkathalo estimates that waste-picking generates about R2.2-million a month for the Cape Town’s skarreling community. On average, that’s R1,100 per waste picker a month (at R50 a day for 22 working days).

Waste-picking has also proven beneficial for the recycling industry.

Nationally, the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (Unido) estimates that South Africa has about 60,000 waste pickers from both the formal and informal sectors who are responsible for up to 90% of the country’s recycling output. Without them, the industry would likely collapse.

The CSIR estimated that, in 2014, waste pickers saved municipalities R749-million in landfill space.

Skarrelers are often viewed as a nuisance, dirty, drug addicted and often associated with criminal activity.

Mesquita, who lived and skarreled on the streets of Sea Point for five years, admits that a portion of the money he earned from selling repaired electronic items in the CBD went towards feeding his drug habit.

“I would do the drugs, which is what would keep me going through the night so that I would go and skarrel some more,” he tells DM168.

For Mesquita, skarreling helped him maintain his dignity when he was living on the streets. “I never had to beg, never had to steal and I never had to borrow because I always had money from trading in the bin business.”

Sharlene George (35) on 22 November 2021 says cold mornings and pushing heavy trolleys makes skarreling tough, but the effort is worth it as it helps her care for her eight children. (Photo: Brenton Geach)

Formalising picking

Twenty-five-year-old Shane Jacobs says skarreling keeps him “out of trouble” and helps him provide for his family.

“This keeps you safe from gangsterism, the gunshots and knife stabbings,” he says.

Wilma Piek, the social development manager for the Voortrekker Road Corridor Improvement District (VRCID), says law-enforcement officers complain that waste pickers often have stolen goods in their possession or steal trolleys to use for skarreling.

Piek says that, although criminals do infiltrate the waste picker community at times, the narrative that “they are all criminals” is not true.

“Of course, they are also victims of the criminals because they will recycle stuff and also get robbed,” she says.

The VRCID has introduced two initiatives to formalise skarreling activities in Bellville. The first is a car-guarding project at a local shopping centre where they limit the number of street dwellers who can operate there. Each person is provided with a bib, on to which their photo is printed. Car guards are required to have an ID (they assist those without to apply for documents) and to undergo a criminal background check.

The second initiative is a trolley and recycling project in Bellville, which is now managed by the Greater Tygerberg Project.

After complaints from business owners that waste pickers were stealing their trolleys, the project provided some homeless people with their own, which were donated by Petco.

Businesses are also encouraged to keep all their recyclables for the waste pickers. Between July and October this year, more than 11 tonnes of waste were recycled through the project and waste pickers earned R14,217.

Skarrelers often knock heads with law-enforcement officers who confiscate their goods in an attempt to enforce the city’s by-laws or if they suspect the goods are stolen.

During the Inkathalo dialogues, it was alleged that valuable stock was taken during raids by law-enforcement officers.

A trading permit is required to sell goods through a stall or booth. Obtaining one is often a challenge for people living on the street, who are hindered by red tape and by not having documents.

Inkathalo found that law enforcement confiscated homeless people’s goods if they were trading without a permit or that the officers would destroy their stalls.

Where street dwellers are able to obtain permits, storing their goods is an additional challenge. The City of Cape Town does not provide storage for informal traders and goods are often stored at other business premises at high premiums.

Business owners and homeowners were another obstacle. Inkathalo found, in some instances, that homeowners would deliberately hide dangerous items – such as broken glass – in their bins to injure skarrelers.

In Sea Point, there were alleged incidents of homeowners commanding their dogs to attack skarrelers, or private-security companies blocking off access to suburban roads.

“You’re up against residents who don’t want you to be in their bins and so they basically lock their bins, but there are those that do decide to put out their bins to lure you and then they throw bottles at you from their verandahs two storeys up,” says Mesquita.

People outside the homeless community have realised that skarreling can be lucrative. Mesquita notes that employees on waste removal trucks will sometimes block skarrelers from scratching in bins that they suspect may contain valuable items.

Caretakers and security guards at building complexes sometimes also go through bins to claim high-value items before they place the bins out on the street.

“There is so much competition at the moment,” Mesquita says.

For Sharlene George, who struggles with back pain, skarreling leaves her feeling exhausted. But waste-picking is still worthwhile as it helps her to feed her eight children and put them through school.

“Even when it’s cold or there’s rain I wake up at 4am,” she says. DM168

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper which is available for R25 at Pick n Pay, Exclusive Books and airport bookstores. For your nearest stockist, please click here.

Gallery

Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Brandon VE says:

    Refuse is property. The fact it is a bin does not mean it is now up for grabs to whomever wants to take it. There is a contractual agreement between residents and COCT to handle the transfer of refuse in a healthy and biologically safe manner.
    When this relationship is interrupted it is theft.

  • Skrik Wakker says:

    In reply, I wish to point out that there is another side to this matter & the ‘feel sorry’ for the homeless is quickly diminishing in some areas.
    As much as many residents feel for the plight of these folk the majority residents resent many of them due to their attitude and behaviour and feel that ‘The Bad Guys are Winning’ & that there is ‘no accountability’!
    We expose their misdeeds!
    Just take a drive around some suburbs – eg the Southern Suburbs on ‘bin days’ & have a look at what is left behind after the lorry has left.
    The mess is absolutely disgusting & unforgivable – complaints about CT being a dirty city are spot on thanks to many of these homeless ‘skarrelers’
    Do some further observations on ‘bin day’ & see what they do – very often it looks like they are deliberately vindictive as they spew rubbish from each bin on to the road & just leave it there.
    They seldom close the lid of the bin, & the wind does the rest!
    They curse residents who have ‘bin locks’ & those who pile garden matter on the top of their rubbish to try and deter ‘bin digging’. Despite that, I agree leaving broken glass unpackaged is extreme.
    “she was pushing her trolley across…” – to me it looks like a trolley owned by a well know supermarket – it is not “her trolley” & just remember the losses of trolleys are costed into the price we pay for good on the shelves, same as our insurance premiums rise because of general accident rates on the roads.
    The laden trolley still belongs to the supermarket!

Please peer review 3 community comments before your comment can be posted

X

This article is free to read.

Sign up for free or sign in to continue reading.

Unlike our competitors, we don’t force you to pay to read the news but we do need your email address to make your experience better.


Nearly there! Create a password to finish signing up with us:

Please enter your password or get a sign in link if you’ve forgotten

Open Sesame! Thanks for signing up.

home delivery

Say hello to DM168 home delivery

Get your favourite newspaper delivered to your doorstep every weekend.

Delivery is available in Gauteng, the Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Eastern Cape.

Get DM168 delivered to your door

Subscribe to DM168 home delivery and get your favourite newspaper delivered every weekend.

Delivery is available in Gauteng, the Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Eastern Cape.

Subscribe Now→

We would like our readers to start paying for Daily Maverick...

…but we are not going to force you to. Over 10 million users come to us each month for the news. We have not put it behind a paywall because the truth should not be a luxury.

Instead we ask our readers who can afford to contribute, even a small amount each month, to do so.

If you appreciate it and want to see us keep going then please consider contributing whatever you can.

Support Daily Maverick→
Payment options

Become a Maverick Insider

This could have been a paywall

On another site this would have been a paywall. Maverick Insider keeps our content free for all.

Become an Insider

Every seed of hope will one day sprout.

South African citizens throughout the country are standing up for our human rights. Stay informed, connected and inspired by our weekly FREE Maverick Citizen newsletter.