Fats, oils, and grease don't just clog kitchen drains. They clog cities.

When FOG builds up inside a sanitary sewer system, it works like cholesterol in the human body — slowly, silently, until something gives. The result can be a sewer overflow that sends raw sewage into storm drains, rivers, and the communities that depend on them.

In San Jose, Ricardo Fernandez and his team work directly with restaurants — the largest source of grease in any city — to prevent that from happening. The team collectively speaks English, Spanish, and Vietnamese, conducting joint inspections when a business owner needs support in a different language. For small restaurants that can't afford professional grease trap cleaning, inspectors sit with owners and show them how to do it themselves — saving $130 to $140 a month while keeping them compliant and the city's sewer system clear.

When you don't hear about sewer overflows, Ricardo says, it's because people like him are doing their jobs.

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