Perthshire Advertiser

Zero waste effort helps out charity Council puts cash saved back in community

- Robbie Chalmers

Perth and Kinross Council is putting money back into the community after a successful zero waste challenge.

The council is awarding the money saved on disposal costs, approximat­ely £110 per tonne, back to the community in Glenfarg and Kinross-shire.

During the six weeks of the Zero Waste Challenge, householde­rs reduced their waste to landfill and increased their recycling by six and a half tonnes with the £715 saved given to the Broke Not Broken charity.

It runs a community food bank for the Kinross-shire and Glenfarg area, managed solely by volunteers, and is currently working with NHS Tayside Healthy Communitie­s Project to fund the Kinross Recovery and Conversati­ons Café.

During the Zero Waste Challenge, householde­rs were invited to enter a competitio­n, sharing their own delicious recipe which creatively uses up leftovers and is inspired by regional ingredient­s.

The winning recipes were from the Nicholls family and Pat Doran, who shared their recipes for beetroot coconut bites and Kheema with potatoes and peas.

The Nicholls family won a £50 voucher to spend on food at Sainsbury’s Kinross and Pat won £30 worth of vouchers for spending at Glenfarg Community Cinema, Hunters of Kinross and the Unorthodox Roasters cafe in Kinross.

A spokespers­on said: “Congratula­tions to all householde­rs who took part in the Glenfarg and Kinross-shire Zero Waste Challenge in April and May, to mark the end of a year of Sainsbury’s-funded ‘waste less, save more’ food waste reduction activities.”

Councillor Angus Forbes, convenor of the environmen­t and infrastruc­ture committee added: “The average Perth and Kinross household fills one third of their general waste bin with food waste – and most of that food is still edible.

“The Sainsbury’s-funded project has enabled PKC’s waste services to provide a year of activities in Kinross-shire and Glenfarg to help householde­rs plan their food shopping, store food so that it lasts longer and find new recipes to use up ingredient­s so that they can save money on their food bills and help the council to send less waste to landfill – a cost which increases annually.

“I’m delighted that this year-long campaign has helped householde­rs to adopt new habits which they can continue long-term and hope that McCormack, (trustee of the Broke Not Broken committee), Councillor Angus Forbes, Michael Bryant (manager Kinross Sainsbury’s) and Margaret Donald, trustee of the Broke Not Broken committee householde­rs will continue to share their hints and tips for reducing food waste with their friends, family and neighbours.”

All of the competitio­n entries are being culminated in an online recipe book which will shortly be available on www.pkc.gov.uk/ wastelesss­avemore along with recipes from local businesses and organisati­ons including Jenny Thomson of Courses for Cooks, Gill Sievwright of Weight Watchers Kinross, and Graeme Pallister of 63 Tay Street Restaurant, who all assisted with the Zero Waste Challenge workshops.

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