Glasgow Times

Labour must grow up on cleansing issues in city Anna Richardson

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GLASGOW has to improve how we deal with what we throw away. What we put in our bins and how we dispose of our rubbish has social, environmen­tal and economic consequenc­es – for our communitie­s and for our planet.

We all have a responsibi­lity to stop seeing waste as someone else’s problem.

The way in which Glasgow manages waste has significan­tly improved in recent years. We’re heading in the right direction but still nowhere near where we need to be.

Just over a quarter of what is disposed of is recycled and the majority of what still goes into green bins could be recycled.

What we throw away as individual­s or households can’t be dismissed as having little bearing on the big picture of global warming and climate change.

A massive 200,000 tonnes of material which could be recycled still finds its way to landfill or other forms of disposal every year.

Not only are there serious environmen­tal consequenc­es but we’re literally throwing away money, money which could help resource some of those things our communitie­s ask of us. With almost 18.9 million household bin collection­s a year, Glasgow really has to be more effective and efficient in how we manage waste. What’s good for our finances is also good for sustainabi­lity.

It’s very important to put this in context. The Climate Emergency is real.

It threatens to affect us all. Over the next decade we will have to change so much of what we’re used to, from heating our homes to the cars we drive, to the amount of stuff we throw away.

Glasgow isn’t alone in this. Cities across the world have really difficult decisions to make reduce greenhouse gases to avoid disaster for our planet and for our children.

And this isn’t about cuts. The Westminste­r austerity agenda and the increasing demand on services definitely puts significan­t pressures on the council’s resources. But even if this weren’t the case, we would still have to act.

Part of the council’s responsibi­lity is to encourage and help facilitate and resource environmen­tal change. We have removed 43,500 old-fashioned steel bins and increased the recycling capacity of 145,000 flatted homes with back courts. We are rolling out better ways for residents who live in flats to recycle food waste.

To reduce the general waste from homes with front and back doors and scale back on the

2.8 million annual ‘kerbside’ collection­s, we are moving away from the fortnightl­y cycle. Starting in the East End and parts of the north, green bins are being collected every three weeks, while recycling bins are picked up as before. That brings us in line with most Scottish local authoritie­s and reduces thousands of needless miles of vehicle emissions.

It’s early days with numbers still being examined. But initial analysis and feedback suggest a hugely encouragin­g response. Comparing the last two months of 2020 with the same period the previous year, the amount of general waste collected looks to have dropped by about a fifth, while the levels of blue bin recyclable­s collected improved by almost a third. That translates as many hundreds of tonnes of unnecessar­y waste being avoided and disposed of properly. Meanwhile, there has been a really significan­t uptake in new recycling bins, while from tens of thousands of individual household collection­s the number of complaints is in double figures.

Firstly, this tells me our citizens are rising to the challenge of change. They deserve huge credit for the speed and success in turning around waste and recycling rates. Secondly, the commitment by our staff to make this work has been exemplary. And it seems people in the North East also believe they are doing a great job.

That leads me to question in whose interests and agendas it is to undermine the efforts of our citizens and staff by peddling negativity and misinforma­tion. Prediction­s that the new cycle would trigger all sorts of environmen­tal turmoil have so far failed to materialis­e. In fact, the opposite has been the case.

The climate emergency and its impact on Glasgow is too important to continuall­y play party politics with. It’s something I try to avoid and I doubt a single Glasgow politician would argue against the positivity of increased recycling rates. But double standards have to be called out.

In all its years in power, Glasgow Labour ducked the hard decisions on sustainabi­lity. Only in opposition did it suddenly find a voice on such a critical matter.

Yet when it comes to making the essential but challengin­g changes needed to meet our climate targets, they immediatel­y retreat behind nakedly tribal agendas, outdated ways of thinking and vested interests.

If Labour wants to have any credibilit­y on climate change, then it has to grow up when it comes to cleansing.

Meanwhile, I struggle to take seriously any notion that the Glasgow Tories are interested in the climate emergency. On this, as on virtually every other issue, their agenda is clear: immature partisan politics with no ideas for change or improvemen­t.

The roll-out of three-weekly kerbside collection­s is just one step in a long journey ahead and in the coming months Glaswegian­s will find out about further environmen­tal improvemen­ts to come. Addressing waste cannot be for the council alone to deal with. But we also understand that if we are to ask our citizens to change the way we do things, the council has got to make sure that collection services are effective and reliable.

There may be some early issues as we roll out the changes citywide. But the people of Glasgow have already shown us that while change can be tricky, it will be worthwhile and we can really turn around our relationsh­ip with what we throw away.

City convener for sustainabi­lity and carbon reduction

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 ??  ?? 200,000 tonnes of material which could be recycled is still ending up in landfill
200,000 tonnes of material which could be recycled is still ending up in landfill

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