The boy who waits for the blue-bin truck
2026. 6. 26. · 07:37

The boy who waits for the blue-bin truck

In St. Johns County, Florida, a recycling driver turned a weekly pickup into a small ritual of care for a three-year-old who waits for his truck every Monday.

The small ceremony of a Monday morning

Three-year-old Colton Simonian has a Monday appointment that does not look like much from the street. He hears the recycling truck, runs outside with his family, and waits for FCC Environmental Services driver Ben Smith to come down the route in St. Johns County, Florida 1.
I like this story because nobody had to turn it into a program. No ribbon cutting. No gala. Just a worker with a route, a child who noticed him, and a few minutes repeated often enough to become part of a family's week.
St. Johns County published the story on June 25, along with a video from its Office of Public Affairs about the friendship between Smith and Colton 1. The county says Colton waits for the recycling truck each week, and his mother, Nicole Simonian, put it plainly: "Every morning it is the first thing that he says when he wakes up" 1.
Ben Smith and Colton Simonian beside the recycling truck
Ben Smith and Colton Simonian stand beside the truck that turned a weekly pickup into a neighborhood ritual 1.

What Ben did was small enough to miss

The county account says Smith stops, waves, and talks with Colton while completing his route 1. Those are small gestures, almost embarrassingly ordinary when you write them down. That is the point.
For Colton, they were large enough to organize a week around. His parents told the county that one of his first phrases was "Hi Ben!" and that he keeps toy recycling and garbage trucks around the house 1. He even dressed as a recycling truck for Halloween 1.
That is not a miracle. It is attention. A child saw a person doing an everyday job and decided that person mattered. The adult did not brush it off. He made room for the moment.
Smith explained it without making himself the hero. "It's all about putting a smile on their face," he said. "It's about making somebody else's day joyful. It gives me a little joy as well that I get to carry with me the rest of the day" 1.
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The letter that made the route visible

The Simonian family eventually wrote a letter recognizing Smith's service and the effect he had on their son 1. In the letter, the family said Smith's "kindness, patience, and genuine care" showed the best of customer service and created a memory their family would cherish for years 1.
I do not think every kind thing needs public recognition. Some of the best ones are better left quiet. But recognition can do something useful here. It names a standard that usually goes unnamed.
Most people notice waste collection only when it fails. A missed bin, a late pickup, a blocked driveway. This story asks us to notice the opposite: the ordinary competence and extra humanity that keep a place functioning without asking much applause.
Ashley Mickler, customer service manager for the St. Johns County Public Works Department's Solid Waste Division, said the family's letter was "about much more than waste and recycling collection" and showed how a simple act of kindness can matter in someone's life 1. She also said Smith's willingness to take a few moments with Colton reflected the service and community spirit the county wants to provide 1.

A public service story, not just a cute one

The practical backdrop matters. St. Johns County says waste and recycling professionals collect garbage, recycling, and yard waste from about 1.5 million residential homes each month 1. That number is doing some work in the story. It reminds us that Smith's small stop happened inside a job built on repetition, timing, weather, traffic, and physical labor.
That is why the warmth lands. The kindness did not come from spare time. It came from someone doing the job in front of him with a little more patience than required.
A lot of community repair is less dramatic than we want it to be. It is the neighbor who learns the crossing guard's name. The clerk who remembers which customer needs help with the heavy bag. The route driver who waves until a child believes Monday is worth waiting for.
The truck will come again next week. Colton will probably listen for it. And somewhere in that ordinary exchange is a useful instruction for the rest of us: if your work brings you past the same people again and again, you are already holding a small piece of their day.

참고 출처

  1. 1St. Johns County

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