The Scotsman

Roadside litter problem just keeps on growing

Time to think about fines for drivers and passengers, says Derek Robertson

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Scotland has a litter problem, and it’s getting worse. 90 per cent of Scotland’s roadsides are tarnished by accumulate­d litter discarded by road users and others. A simple and clear fact that sums up the everyday experience of millions of people who live, work and travel through our great country. It’s a view that is shared by visitors, with real and tangible consequenc­es for our economy and internatio­nal reputation.

The time for casual acceptance of this appalling situation is over and will form the focus of Keep Scotland Beautiful’s week of action on roadside litter this week.

From 12-20 May we will highlight the scale of the problem, the fact that it is continuing to get worse and that every mile of road is blighted by our casual approach to waste – particular­ly food and drink packaging and containers. Our national roadside litter campaign ‘Give Your Litter A Lift’ has some high-profile supporters, including food, drink and packaging manufactur­ers, councils and road operating companies. Our joint objective is clear – to make a meaningful impact.

We can’t always blame others – the litterers, the producers, industry – and we all have a part to play in achieving the solution. We all need to establish a new norm that casual discarding of litter is unacceptab­le. In recent years, as the level of litter has increased across Scotland, there have been some encouragin­g early signs that levels of dog fouling are improving – no doubt because society is now much clearer in establishi­ng its common revulsion at those who don’t pick up after their dog. We now need to do the same for litter, including litter discarded from vehicles.

It takes a particular type of callous irresponsi­bility to keep your own vehicle clean by throwing litter out the window and blighting the roadside for everyone else. Yet that is the behaviour seen every hour of every day on Scotland’s roads, and the results are clearer than ever as litter piles up on our verges.

Councils and road operating companies continuall­y struggle to keep pace with the growing daily requiremen­t to clear up it up. And, providing bins and signage, and investing in education and behaviour change campaigns can only go so far. Now, we need to look at enforcemen­t. We need to remove the barriers which enforcemen­t agencies face in issuing fines to those chucking litter out of vehicles.

South of the Border, the Westminste­r government has introduced a change to the legislatio­n on littering to allow authoritie­s to fine drivers even if it is a passenger who throws litter from their vehicle. This change supports enforcemen­t agencies that have, for years, been dealing with the difficult task of proving who threw the litter from a vehicle. Our week of action will call on the Scottish Government to provide the same powers for enforcemen­t officers in Scotland for litter offences.

And in support of this much needed change, we have establishe­d that an astonishin­g 88 per cent of the people in Scotland agree that the owner of a vehicle should face a fine of at least £80 when litter is seen being thrown from their vehicle, by them or someone else.

That’s a reflection of their belief that the problem needs tackled head on and that further decline in environmen­tal standards simply cannot be accepted. Additional­ly, 65 per cent of people have said they would be prepared to report vehicle registrati­on details to the authoritie­s, so we know there is an appetite for change and that investment in enforcemen­t would be welcomed.

If we, as a nation, can combine the introducti­on of practical new measures to better enforce our litter laws, with a new national set of standards which we expect to live by, and others to adhere to, we may at last be able to turn the tide on declining environmen­tal standards across the country, not just on our roadsides.

That change is long overdue, and as our Week of Action this week will highlight, now more than ever we need industry, government, local authoritie­s, roads management companies and the general public to come together and call time on the litter shame on Scotland’s roads. Derek Robertson is Chief Executive of environmen­tal charity Keep Scotland Beautiful

 ??  ?? 0 Casual attitude to trash means the issue of littering grows more urgent
0 Casual attitude to trash means the issue of littering grows more urgent
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