Glasgow Times

UNION IN RECYCLING CENTRE WARNING

- BY MAXINE MCARTHUR

CITY recycling centres are being put under pressure by the new threeweekl­y bin collection, a union has warned.

Members of the GMB union insist the Easter Queenslie Recycling Centre has seen an influx in deposits since the new refuse pick up schedule was introduced.

Chris Mitchell, the convenor for branch 40, maintains

the new rotation puts additional strain on staff who are trying to cope with large piles of rubbish which has accumulate­d in the area.

As previously reported, the branch launched its Streets of Shame campaign earlier this month in a bid to tackle an alleged increase in the piles of litter found on Glasgow’s streets.

Chris said: “If your bin is full, you’re taking the excess waste to the centre – because the household bins are only being collected every three weeks – this is making the centres much busier than normal.

“We have seen a queue which caused problems with refuse trucks getting into the centre because of the traffic.

“The piles of rubbish are just getting bigger and bigger, meaning more rubbish on the streets.”

It is hoped the three-weekly bin collection will encourage more use of the other household bins available, thus encouragin­g more recycling.

Glasgow City Council insists while recycling centres are busier than normal, it is business as usual at the Easter Queenslie Road site.

Staff have managed two queues in recent months, including one in the lead up to Christmas and the other on January 7, which was caused by a temporary equipment failure.

The local authority’s website directs householde­rs with excess waste to travel to recycling centres in between

collection­s to avoid a buildup of rubbish in gardens and streets.

However, Councillor Paul Carey has warned a citywide three-weekly collection calendar will increase waiting times for depots.

He said: “A number of constituen­ts have complained to me that they have had to take their refuse to the cleansing depot as a direct result of the three weekly collection­s that have been introduced.

“Some people are waiting up to an hour to dump their refuse. This is clearly a direct result of the three-weekly collection­s and, once this three-weekly collection is introduced to the whole of the city, this will only compound this problem across all of the depots.”

As previously reported, the move to introduce three-weekly collection­s across Glasgow was met with anger by opposition councillor­s who blasted the decision as a “cost cutting exercise”.

Main door properties in the north east of the city began the reduced pick-up schedule in October, last year.

Council chiefs insist it is designed to increase recycling rates, which currently see Glasgow further behind than other Scottish cities.

A spokesman for the council said: “It’s disappoint­ing that the GMB appears to be misreprese­nting the facts for the sake of its own agenda. There were queues at Queenslie for a handful of days either side of Christmas

as people responded to lockdown announceme­nts and undertook home clear outs.

“All of our waste centres remain well used and continue to operate with appropriat­e Covid-restrictio­ns in place that sometimes means visitors can be required to wait for a short time.

“However, there is zero evidence to suggest that the situation at Queenslie is in any way connected to the introducti­on of three-weekly collection­s in north-east Glasgow.”

He added: “The amount of general household waste currently being received at Queenslie is fully in line with previous years.

“And there is growing evidence that the change to three-weekly kerbside collection­s in the north east Glasgow is working as was always intended with recycling rates already improving.

“Three weekly collection­s for general waste bins have been effective in other local authority areas and there is no reason why that success can’t be repeated in Glasgow.

“Feedback given directly by frontline staff also indicates they welcome the new arrangemen­ts as it provides a more efficient and streamline­d working environmen­t for staff. The change to three-weekly kerbside collection is part of a wide-range of measures aimed at encouragin­g more recycling in Glasgow and taking us closer to the national target of 70% of waste recycled by 2025.”

 ??  ?? Chris Mitchell said additional strain is being placed on workers
Chris Mitchell said additional strain is being placed on workers

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