The next time you fume about your job, your boss
or your desk in cubicle land, remember it could be
worse—you could be a diver for a filtration treatment
plant in a Third World country.
Divers at a sewer treatment plant in Mexico City get
paid just $400 a month to take the fetid plunge into the
“pond”, down to 30 meters deep.
Mexico City’s nine million people produces a staggering
9,250 gallons of waste water every second. The
divers’ mission is to keep the flow on the go, pulling
out whatever gets stuck in the grates, which has included
human corpses, dead animals, entire cars, and plenty
of abandoned armchairs. In 1991, one former diver,
struggling to unclog a grate finally managed to pull out
a car tire, only to get sucked into the sewer system by
water pressure and died.
It is so dark down there that the divers have to
feel their way along the tunnel walls. “You cannot see
a thing, you really only have your hands to see with,”
43-year-old diver Luis Covarrubias told Agence France Press. “When you start, you are just asking for everything
to come out OK.”
The equipment is low-tech—the crew works in plastic
suits and wears gloves they hitch onto the suit with
tape. Top that with more than 20 pounds of headgear,
and a set of rustic tubes for breathing and talking to
the surface. At the end of every shift, divers scrub their
wetsuits with detergent to remove the stink of urine and
rotten waste. The disinfection process: A few buckets of
tap water tossed over their heads.
Constant breathing of the fumes and contact with
the sludge can be toxic, but some of the crew are convinced
they have earned some immunity. “This is just a
job like any other,” said Covarrubias. “It just has some
risks that we know how to handle.
Many divers are former swimming champs and dive
instructors. Julio Cesar Cu, one of 10 brothers from a
poor family, was an instructor who didn’t have enough
money to study oceanography, so he took the sewer-diving
job and has been immersed in the brown stuff ever
since. But, as he told Reuters, he doesn’t mind it. “I like
diving as a sport. As a job I like it even more. I do a job
that benefits a lot of people.”