Working -- Beach comber
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Bryce Alderton
HE IS:
Keeping the sand spiffy.
JUST LIKE FAMILY:
Alex Candelario doesn’t mind coming to work at midnight four or five
days a week to begin raking the sand and picking up trash at Huntington
City Beach because he knows who he will see when he gets there.
Fellow equipment operator Mark Wennecamp and supervisors Tim Turner
and Tim Dugan make the time at the beach that much more enjoyable for
Candelario, a 34-year-old Huntington Beach resident.
“My co-workers are like family,” Candelario said. “We’ll never be in
trouble. There’s not one time working there that I’ve ever been in
trouble with somebody.”
Candelario has been a full-time equipment operator at City Beach for
two years after eight years of picking up trash for the city as a
part-time maintenance worker.
Now he drives the tractors that rake the sand each night or early
morning, the machines that sweep the parking lots and service roads in
and around the beach and the machines that pick up and empty the trash
cans on the beach.
Before a rain storm he also opens the gates on storm drains in and
around the beach parking lot.
“I do too many things,” Candelario said, laughing. “I love my job.”
PULL UP A CHAIR, OR A COUCH
In addition to the bottles, cans and plastic cups Candelario sees
strewn on the sand and asphalt most nights, he has also seen couches and
chairs sitting on the beach.
“People leave them there and we throw them away,” he said.
Trash piles up most often after a holiday like the Fourth of July,
Candelario said, but he added that there isn’t one specific day that
historically has been worse for trash.
“People don’t put [trash] in containers so there’s more work to do,”
Candelario said.
Summer is busier than the winter for Candelario. He said in the
winter, two or three people each drive a sweeper and rake the sand
compared to 15 or 20 in the summer.
“We hire more people in the summer,” Candelario said. “It’s my second
home, I love the job.”
His other home has wife Maria, and 6-year-old Monica.
Candelario spends half of his nine-and-a-half hour shift sweeping the
parking lots and service roads and the other half grating the sand and
emptying the trash cans.
“My favorite is the sweeper machine,” Candelario said. “I like keeping
the service roads clean.”
He also likes the atmosphere he finds in the wee hours of the morning.
“It’s good, there’s not too many people around,” Candelario said.
“It’s peaceful at that time.”
* BRYCE ALDERTON is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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