Fran Yeoman, Political Reporter
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List of councils running fortnightly collections
Sharon Lock, 36, has three bags of rubbish in her cluttered garage. They have accumulated there in the three days since her husband spent his Sunday morning driving to the tip seven miles away. Since February, when East Cambridgeshire District Council introduced fortnightly black-bag collections in Bottisham, he has been making the journey twice a week.
“It’s a real pain in the butt, to be honest with you”, the mother of one said. “My son, Drew, is 2 and we can’t have dirty nappies and food sitting in the garage for a fortnight. The smell is horrendous.”
Lucy Baynes, who gave birth to her first child Zac only five weeks ago, tells a similar story. Two days before the fortnightly collection in leafy Bottisham, there is already a pile of black bags stacked against a post outside her garden, one of the communal collection points for the village.
“Initially I thought the scheme was a good idea, but the stacks of rubbish are disgusting. That pile will be humming in the summer, and there will be more foxes and cats.”
The council halved black bag collections in Bottisham only weeks ago, having already done so last summer in the village of Witchford.
The pilot schemes are a response to the Government’s controversial drive to push councils into cutting down on landfill and boost recycling, which Ben Bradshaw, the Environment Minister, said has resulted in 144 councils already experimenting with fortnightly collections.
Voters in many of these local authorities, including East Cambridgeshire, will be taking part in local elections next week. If sitting councillors are going to suffer as a result of their decisions to cut back on the dustmen, you would expect it to be at the hands of people such as Mrs Lock and Ms Baynes.
Yet neither of these women will be voicing their frustration over refuse at the polls next week, because neither of them will be voting at all. Both cite their young children as a reason why they have not engaged with the election campaign, and both seem decidedly uninterested in whether the 17 Liberal Democrat councillors, 16 Conservatives and 6 independents will hold their seats on May 3.
Among those in the village who will vote, post office closures and council tax were both mentioned as reasons to back one party over the other, but not one person told The Times that the backlog of binbags would influence their decision.
Which is perhaps why Colin McLean, the village’s Conservative councillor, is relatively relaxed about the issue: “People have not been shaking hands over it on the doorstep,” he said, “but nor have they been shaking fists.”
Back in Bottisham, where the residents have had less time to adjust to the changes, John Humphreys expresses the mood of many people: “It is a diminution of the service which they tell us is an improvement, which gets up people’s noses, and its an imposition, but compared with the big issues like the NHS it is not important.”
The retired teacher is less than thrilled about having to store nonrecyclable rubbish for two weeks before it is taken off his hands. But he will not be swayed by the battle of the binbag when he goes to vote. “We are the compliant people of England, and life’s too short,” he said. “It’s not worth going to the barricades over.”
Foreign matter
Italy Daily collections from communal roadside bins. There are separate bins for glass, plastic and paper, but it is not enforced
Spain Wheelie bins emptied daily during the night. Recycling bins every few blocks
Brussels Households can dispose of rubbish only in official white bin bags, which they have to buy from shops. Bags for recycling, such as blue for plastics and bottles, are cheaper
France Several councils have started charging residents according to the weight of their rubbish
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There's a lot of wooly and misleading thinking here. First, to quote government fines as a reason for increasing recycling is nonsense. The govt could change that tomorrow. it needs to be done for tip capacity reasons. Landfill tax is just GB up to the usual thing... Second, councils have to charge much more for all their services because of soaring costs (salaries, working hours, PENSIONS). They won't be mentioning that. Third, many people are lazy and undisciplined about rubbish. Fourth, councils have not thought through the details of charging. There will be a lot of cheating and annoyance between neighbours. Fifth, why do councils allow access to tips? If capacity is a problem, how does it help to have people bypassing the system? It will take a while to change attitudes. Councils need to educate and lead, not push from the rear and use recycling as an excuse to cover huge salary costs.
colin, Shrewsbury, UK
Why is it that they can't organise a piss up in a brewery. Ah but the power! Nothing like being a council Nazi!
Encourage people and get organised! One bin for food waste (and nappies!) collected weekly (twice weekly), a bin for recycle stuff, fortnightly and garden waste fortnightly as well and encourage to compost. Hey its not rocket science!
Having come from a warm climate the fortnightly collection council residents are going to have a nice surprise in store for them this summer.
Richard, London,
I live in France, which has superb recycling, within walking distance of my house there are 3 recycling stations and it is the same for the majority of people. They empty my rubbish once a week and my habitation tax is a third of what my council tax was in England.If you are only emptying rubbish once every two weeks or punishing people for having too much rubbish then you have to provide them with alternative means of disposal, which means recycling stations close to where they live so that everyone is able to follow the program easily and there are no excuses.
Ed Chalkley, Corseul, Brittany France
All these moves are hiding from the public the real issue. Treating waste is going to cost the Public considerably more [up to four times as much as now] and Councils are hiding this from the Public until after the Local Elections when they will have free reign to do what they will. Reducing waste [fortnightly collectiions, recycling, fining public, pay as you throw, etc.] will have little if any effect in reducing the costs to the Public, it does the opposite. The Residual Waste Treatment programme is the only area where benefit can be gained. The push by the main Parties for Incineration in Energy from Waste EfW plants is the worst option: it is the most expensive and requires subsidising from the Public. It is environmentally unacceptable and causes angst with the Public. We can convert this Waste to Ethanol fuel at a quarter of the cost of EfW plants and produce an income which can be used to reduce the Council Taxes in 4 years. Raise the issue in this Election get the answers.
Sim Hurrell, High Wycombe, UK
Rotting garbage, rats, bubonic plague. Way to go, Tony. Now we're talking legacy.
Andrew Milner, Yokohama, Japan
I would not mind paying by weight to have my bin emtied.
This would be a fair way.Refuse collection is a service like any other,as with most services i can think of the more you use it the more you pay.If you have three pints off the milkman you pay more than someone who has two.
Those who have more waste and do no bother to recyle are most likely better off
If we had "pay as you throw" people would think more about their waste and that would be better for the the environment.
Ive heard people say "oh well there'll be more fly tipping".
Well if people do that they should be fined thousands.
I live in a rural area and see it all the time.
I would only agree with charging if my council tax was reduced,but i think that is unlikely.
ken mills, shrewsbury, shropshire
spain has communal big wheelie bins ,which as you say are emptied during the night. this means that you have to carry your rubbish to the wheelie bin every day.
if thsi were proposed here there would be another uproar.
never mind I suppose it all helps to fan the flames of dicontent being orchestrated by this comic
rod sharp, ponteland,