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Child Labor
David Paul Morris

In Quezon City just on the outskirts of Manila, Philippines there is a local landfill called Payatas. The Payatas dumpsite is the main terminal for the solid waste collected in the city.

About 10,000 families live and work there. Children, working alongside adults, scavenge through the refuge looking for anything that might yield them money on the recycled market. Normally the whole family is involved in the scavenging with different members of the family working in shifts.

When a dump truck enters the site, only a few minutes are allowed to scavenge the load before a bulldozer comes in to cover the load to make space for another truck to dump. Copper, tin and aluminum are the most common items they look for.

An active scavenger can sell recyclables for around 150--300 pesos a day. For a family of five that means around 1,000 pesos a day, which is equivalent to about twenty-one US dollars.