The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Viral ‘Don’t Be A Tosser’ litter campaign may appear at Perth beauty spots.

Council urged to take a bold approach as issue escalates around Perth

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

Head-turning posters that label litter louts “tossers” could start appearing in Perth after a surge in complaints about dropped rubbish at local beauty spots.

Signs that tell residents “Don’t be a Tosser” have proved effective for local authoritie­s south of the border, while images of notices in York city centre recently went viral on social media.

Perth councillor Peter Barrett, leader of the local Liberal Democrat group, has now asked officers to consider a comparable poster campaign for the Fair City area, where litterbugs cost taxpayers about £2 million a year.

It follows complaints about alarming amounts of litter – including burned-out barbecue trays and empty beer bottles – left behind by sun-seekers at the city’s North Inch.

Mr Barrett believes the bold phrasing would help drive the message home.

The signs were inspired by a similar clean-up campaign in New Zealand, he said.

“Residents drew my attention to signs used by City of York Council which were successful­ly deployed to protect the amenity of their own green spaces.

“There is a definite streak of antipodean directness and humour to the signs. They are blunt but they get to the heart of the selfishnes­s of people who toss their rubbish away. I think they would work really well here.”

The York signs ask the multiple-choice question: “Why are you tossing litter around here?” The tick-box answers are: “I’m lazy”, “I don’t care about the community” and thirdly “I think other people should pay to clean up after me”.

Mr Barrett said: “The key message of the signs is ‘Don’t be a tosser. You brought your rubbish here please take it home with you’.

“I think it captures the community’s frustratio­n and anger at litter louts and exposes the thoughtles­sness of such behaviour. I’ve written to the council’s green spaces team and I think we should give them a go.”

Perth and Kinross Council has not committed itself to such direct and to-the-point signage but a spokesman did confirm new measures were being looked at to stem a rising tide in rubbish at local parks.

“Littering is anti-social behaviour and costs the council around £2m a year to clean up,” the spokesman said.

“It is always disappoint­ing when people fail to dispose of their waste properly and we would urge people to bin their rubbish, or to take it home with them if no bin is available.

“We will continue to look at ways to drive this message home and are always happy consider ideas from the public about how we can address this issue.”

 ??  ?? Complaints have been made about the amount of rubbish being left behind at the North Inch in Perth.
Complaints have been made about the amount of rubbish being left behind at the North Inch in Perth.

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