
Our local streets are facing a growing suburban headache, and a recent segment on ABC Radio Melbourne put the spotlight right on it. Host Brigitte Duclos sat down with our CEO and founder, Danny Gorog, to dig into why abandoned shopping trolleys have become such a huge problem for communities across Australia.
The conversation highlighted how Snap Send Solve acts as a bridge, ensuring that community-minded residents can help get these assets back to the retailers responsible for cleaning them up.
Trolley clusters can take over a neighbourhood quickly, making walkways messy and inaccessible. ABC caller, Linette, from Clifton Hill phoned in to share how this plays out on her daughter's street in Preston, which frequently looks less like a residential area and more like a loading dock.
"You go to her house... and next door looks like a shopping centre because there are that many trolleys out the front... It does build up, and it's a constant thing like week in, week out."
Whether it’s clusters forming near housing or pest trolleys dumped in creeks and median strips, the segment wrapped up by focusing on how critical it is for asset owners to receive accurate details so they can deploy their patrols.
"Our job is to get the report to the right place... overall, the response we get from the retailers is pretty good, and it's a pretty well-known problem, and they are trying to solve it."