CEO of $90 billion Waste Management hauled trash and went to 1 a.m. safety briefingsāāItās not always just dollars and centsā
- - CEO of $90 billion Waste Management hauled trash and went to 1 a.m. safety briefingsāāItās not always just dollars and centsā
Amanda Gerut January 3, 2026 at 2:12 AM
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Waste Management CEO Jim Fish wakes up in the middle of the night for safety meetings. (Courtesy of Waste Management)
For a night owl like Waste Management CEO Jim Fish, waking up for 1 a.m. safety briefings could make for a brutally long day. But Fish did it because his late father-in-law, a union pipefitter, told him if he showed up to those meetingsānot just once, but regularlyāhe would learn a lot and build a rapport with line workers.
Fishās father-in-law hit the nail on the head.
āIt was so valuable to me in terms of learning the business and learning the people,ā Fish told Fortune. āPart of what I learnedāI was always a finance guyāwas that itās not always just dollars and cents.ā
Waste Management has named safety as a cornerstone of the companyās operations and has set a goal to reduce its total recordable injury rate (TRIR) by 3% annually with a TRIR target of 2.0 by 2030. If the company hits the target, that means workers would have suffered two recordable injuries per 100 employees per year or per 200,000 hours worked. Last year, the company reduced overall injuries by 5.8%, according to its sustainability report, and lost-time injuries by 2.4%.
āYou make investments in safety or investments in people and they donāt necessarily show up on the bottom lineāat least not immediately,ā Fish said. āSafety tends to show up in longer terms, and if you do have a safe organization, that will eventually show up on your income statementābut it takes a while.ā
Waste Management, with $22 billion in revenue in 2024, is the U.S. and Canadaās largest provider of trash and recycling transfer and disposal services. With a market cap of about $90 billion, the Houston, Tex.-based company counts more than 60,000 employees. Fish, 63, has served as president and CEO since November 2016 but has been with the company for two decades. Prior to taking the top job, Fish held roles including chief financial officer, senior vice president of the eastern group, and area VP for Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Up until halfway through his time as CFO, Fish would go out about every four to six weeks and haul trash with crewsāgenerally about every time he went to a middle-of-the-night safety meeting. Eventually, the board told him they werenāt crazy about the idea of him throwing trash, but he could still ride along in the trucks with workers. Now, Fish said he visits about 20 to 30 sites a year, and takes about five to 10 trips to ride along with drivers. He tells them any subject is fair game, including sports, politics, safety, or pay, but they have to make sure to chat because Fish might fall asleep otherwise.
āMost drivers are a little nervous when I get in the cab but after about 10 minutes they kind of loosen up and tell me what theyāre thinking,ā said Fish.
Thatās why, he said, those early morning meetings were so valuable, and his learnings went far beyond injury stats and safety briefings.
He picked up on why Bostonās productivity plummeted during winter months, said Fish. He couldnāt see why there would be such a difference between winter and summer but then going out in below-zero temperatures where his hands and feet were freezing changed his mind completely, he said. Itās the kind of issue that might only show up as a data fluctuation in a corporate office but becomes clearer and more meaningful after riding through icy routes covered with snow-engulfed trash and recycling cans.
āIt makes a huge difference if thereās ice and snow on the road or if the can is iced in,ā said Fish. āAnd that sounds kind of simple, but it wasnāt something that I really, fully even understood sitting in a corporate office until I actually went out into the field.ā
Another key learning came from witnessing the diversity of Waste Managementās workforce and making small tweaks to make sure employees were clearly informed.
While visiting a district in Rhode Island where about 95% of the drivers in the companyās residential business line were either Puerto Rican or Dominican, Fish attended a 1 a.m. briefing. The safety results in that line of business were pretty āterrible,ā Fish admitted, and he wanted to understand why. He picked up on the fact that most of the workers spoke English but their first language was Spanish. The manager there didnāt speak any Spanish, so he used another driver to translate for him while he delivered safety information.
Fish decided to look into promoting somebody from the district who wanted to be a managerāand who was bilingual. The company made the promotion to a driver.
āMagically, or probably not magically, their safety results turned around immediately,ā said Fish. āThere was something being lost in the translation.ā
The change also addressed an inadvertent signal that was being sent to workers, which was that they might never have an opportunity to move up in the company because they were native Spanish speakers, he said. The inadvertent message was that the managers there would likely always be āa white guy like Jim,ā said Fish, who has also been working regularly on his Spanish.
Explicitly addressing that narrative improved safety results and empowered people to apply for positions they might not have thought they were qualified for previously, he said. The company also hired someone at the site to teach Spanish to other workers so they could become conversant.
āTheir safety results absolutely turned around and I donāt think that was a coincidence at all,ā he said. āNothing was lost in translation anymore and the drivers couldnāt say, āWell, I didnāt understand what my manager was sayingā because the manager was saying it in both English and Spanish.ā
The bilingual manager Waste Management hired at the site became one of the companyās best, said Fish. He unfortunately passed away from a heart attack, said Fish, but he continued up the ladder from driver to route manager, district manager, and then senior district manager. He likely would have continued moving up if he hadnāt tragically passed away. Fish noted the manager was also singled out to go on a trip for the top 200 employees to the Ritz Carlton in Hawaii with his wife.
Ultimately, in Fishās view, the core of the company and where Waste Management differentiates itself from competitors, is at the critical field levelānot the C-suite. Better understanding the workforce and how it can be more productive and efficient could best be gleaned by showing up to the grueling early mornings every month early in his executive career.
āI know my title is important, but Iām not more important than anybody else at this company,ā said Fish. āIām not a better employee or better father⦠we just have different level positions.ā
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Source: āAOL Moneyā