Daily Mail

3 in 4 of us have bins emptied just once a fortnight

- By Kate Pickles k.pickles@dailymail.co.uk

MORE than three- quarters of families are waiting at least a fortnight for their bins to be collected.

Many homes have waste taken away only every three weeks as authoritie­s try to encourage recycling instead.

But despite the move, which has even seen some areas of Scotland shift to monthly collection­s, recycling rates fell last year for the first time.

Figures show 248 of 326 English councils run general rubbish rounds fortnightl­y, though some collect recycling every week.

Town halls are trying to hit EU targets of a recycling rate of 50 per cent by 2020. Last month Wigan became the latest to shift to collection­s every three weeks, which the local authority says will save up to £2million a year.

Karl Battersby, of Wigan Council, said: ‘ Recycling helps us to keep council tax low, protects frontline staff, for example school crossing patrols, and ensures we can continue to fund essential services.

‘If the borough doesn’t hit its recycling target of 50 per cent by 2020 it could be fined which may result in cuts to other services.’

Wigan joins East Devon, Salford, Rochdale and Oldham in collecting every three weeks – a move that is being piloted in North Devon as well, a Freedom of Informatio­n request found.

James Price, of The TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘Rubbish collection­s are one of the key services residents expect and rely on, and this trend will strike most people as very unwelcome.

‘Too often councils prioritise completely unnecessar­y services and non-jobs when they should be focusing on core services. With council tax going up across most parts of the country, and the overall tax burden at a 30-year high, receiving an even less-frequent service will rightly upset many taxpayers.’

Weekly collection­s were com- monplace until the last Labour government allowed councils to take rubbish fortnightl­y.

Since then, falling collection rates have been blamed for an increase in rodents attracted by overflowin­g bins and other health hazards in many cities.

In 2012, the Tories pledged to restore the ‘fundamenta­l right’ of families to have their bins emptied every seven days, and a £250million fund was set up to maintain weekly collection­s.

But the Conservati­ves were forced to abandon the plans to bring back weekly bin collection­s two years ago, amid swingeing budget constraint­s.

Yesterday Martin Tett, of the Local Government Associatio­n, which represents councils, said there was no ‘one size fits all’ solution to collection­s. But he said local authoritie­s knew a ‘reliable and efficient’ waste and recycling service was hugely important.

He also said a survey had shown eight in ten people were happy with their bin collection­s, regardless of the frequency with which they were picked up.

The Department for Communitie­s and Local Government said its four-year funding settlement gave local authoritie­s £200billion – money that the councils could choose to spend on bin collection­s. A spokesman said: ‘It is vital they consider the wishes of their residents, many of whom want to see their bins collected as frequently as possible.’

‘This will rightly upset many’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom