Lizard News

Rubbish and recycling bins hitting the kerbside

- Article supplied.

The first of Western Bay of Plenty District Council’s 62,000 bins for the new kerbside waste and recycling collection­s will be delivered from Wednesday 5th May.

The new rubbish, recycling, glass and food scraps bins will be delivered to 17,000 eligible households throughout May, ahead of the first collection­s beginning Thursday, 1st July.

The bins will be delivered in weekly stages across the Council’s three Wards, starting in Waihī Beach on Wednesday 5th May and moving down the District. Week two will see Katikati and Kaimai Ward residents receive their bins, and week 3 Te Puke-Maketū.

Council’s Kerbside Services Project Manager, Ken Buckley says households will receive one of two bins sets depending on where they live in the District and how that correlates to the new service.

A full kerbside waste and recycling service will be provided to those located within the ‘Urban’ zone and includes a 140L rubbish bin, 240L recycling bin, 45L glass crate and 23L lockable food scraps bin.

A partial kerbside waste and recycling service will be provided to those located within the ‘Rural’ zone and includes a 140L rubbish bin, 240L recycling bin and 45L glass crate.

For all serviced households there will be a $3.95 per pick-up for general rubbish – a cost only charged when people attach a pre-paid pay-as-youthrow tag to their red lid rubbish bin. This service is available each week. Payas-you-throw tags can be purchased from Council’s library and service centres and other retailers from 1st June 2021.

The cost of the kerbside services will be charged through an annual targeted rate. The full service cost is $149 and households receive mixed recycling, glass and food scraps collection­s. The partial service cost is $98 for recycling and glass collection­s, but no food scraps collection. The $3.95 pay per pick-up for general rubbish is additional.

“Delivering 62,000 bins to 17,000 households is not a small task. We ask for patience and understand­ing as we roll out the bins to households in a service designed to increase the amount of material diverted from landfill by about 60 percent – around 1800 tonnes a year.”

The timeframes given above are estimates, and Council will be providing regular updates on the progress of bin roll out on its Facebook page, the Antenno app and on the Kerbside Collective website.

The new bins will be delivered to the kerbside of your address. Please note, that the rubbish and recycling bins may not arrive on the same day.

“When your new bins are delivered, please check that the property address on the side of the bins is correct and then wheel them inside your property until the new kerbside collection­s begin in July. Please do not use the bins before 1st July.”

If the address is incorrect please contact Council’s customer service team.

An informatio­n brochure along with a 12-month collection calendar will be inside the blue glass crate. Please remove this brochure and keep it in a safe, dry place for future reference. The collection calendar shows households when their first collection for each bin will be in July, as well as timings for all collection­s for the next 12 months.

“We need to adopt a more serious approach to minimising the waste we create. Dealing with our waste and recycling effectivel­y is critical to ensure we can reduce the amount of waste going to landfills,” says Ken.

“A rates-funded recycling system makes it easier for all households to participat­e in waste reduction, resulting in less household waste going to landfill, as proven by other New Zealand councils who have succesfull­y adopted this system.”

For more informatio­n visit www.kerbsideco­llective.co.nz

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