Wishaw Press

Council aims to cut waste depots

Plan aired to reduce numbers by eight in NL

- NEIL MCGRORY

North Lanarkshir­e Council is working to reduce the number of waste depots in the authority from 10 to two.

Head of waste solutions Andrew McPherson presented a report to the council’s Environmen­t and Transporta­tion Committee with an update on this process, which will initially see the number of active depots reduced to five before the final closures are implemente­d.

The changes are a result of a service review which determined the service would be improved by greater centralisa­tion which would also save the council around £60,000 per year in addition to opening the option of selling the sites, with the first to close being Albert Street in Motherwell, Lady Anne Depot in Airdrie, Coshneuk in Stepps, Garrel Road in Kilsyth and New Edinburgh Road in Viewpark.

Some services will be transferre­d to other depots before they too close, leaving facilities in just Bellshill and Cumbernaul­d. All staff will be relocated.

Waste will be removed from Souterouse in Coatbridge, land services will be moved from Bellshill, while Bonkle and Netherton will be retained on a temporary basis only.

Initial plans had been to move the entire service to the Bellshill depot but on further review it was found that collection routes would be more efficient if Wardpark in Cumbernaul­d was used as a base, so six collection vehicles are now based there.

Significan­t water ingress at the Bellshill fleet workshop over the last six months has resulted in the building becoming unsafe so temporary accommodat­ion is being arranged and the workshop will be demolished and replaced by a new building as this will be cheaper than repairing the current one. The new workshop will also be outfitted with charging points to help the council achieve its goal of operating an allelectri­c vehicle fleet.

The council’s land management department previously had a team based in Bellshill but this is no longer the case and instead Fleet and Waste offices have been moved there saving the council around £130,000.

Councillor William Goldie praised the move towards electric vehicles as “a very positive thing” before asking if the reduced number of depots would allow for gritters to be deployed correctly in winter and be moved elsewhere if there was a problem at one of the depots.

Mr McPherson said that as recently as last Friday his team had learned they would have to completely relocate the fleet this had been completed by Monday. Contingenc­y arrangemen­ts would also allow for vehicles to be temporaril­y relocated if needed.

He said: “It could be something as simple as a road accident right outside the entrance making us wonder how to get the vehicles out but we’ve got two accesses at our main Bellshill depot so certainly that is something that has been considered.”

Further money could be raised by selling diesel vehicles and hiring electric ones. The committee agreed to note the report.

 ??  ?? Temporary The Netherton Recycling Centre
Temporary The Netherton Recycling Centre

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