Daily Mail

Curb the monthly bin rounds – they attract rats, say health officials

- By Steve Doughty Social Affairs Correspond­ent by Conwy council in Wales to bring in permanent monthly bin collection­s. The Chartered Institute of Environmen­tal Health warns that cost savings from delaying collection­s are small and likely to trigger extra

PUBLIC health officials are calling for a halt to the spread of monthly bin collection­s.

Trials of four-weekly pick-ups for non-recycled waste have led to more vermin and infestatio­n, they warn, and families are burning waste because they cannot get rid of it.

The interventi­on comes after a decision policy chief, said fortnightl­y bin collection­s, which were brought in a decade ago in a government-led drive for compulsary recycling, had already taken the reduction of bin rounds as far as it should go.

‘We do not wish to see any further reduction in collection­s,’ Mr Lewis said. ‘We already have problems. Over the past summer in areas with fortnightl­y collection­s, we have seen infestatio­ns of maggots, more pests and smells.’ The institute is the profession­al body for 8,000 public health staff in charge of controllin­g local pollution and hygiene.

Conwy’s move has been closely watched by other councils which believe they can cut costs and force up recycling rates.

Ministers continue to insist that councils should try to hit EU targets of recycling 50 per cent of household waste – although many are failing to achieve this aim.

Conwy is estimated to be saving £390,000 a year with the monthly switch for 50,000 homes.

Mr Lewis said: ‘We can-

‘A risk of home refuse burning’

not hide our disappoint­ment at this retrograde step. There are real risks with moving to a monthly collection system, such as elevated levels of fly tipping, domestic refuse burning, pest infestatio­ns, odour nuisance and fly nuisance, especially in the summer months.’

He added: ‘Any immediate financial benefit of moving to monthly collection­s is likely to place an additional long-term burden on environmen­tal health resources.’

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