Taupo & Turangi Herald

Taupō to review waste collection

Public consultati­on on bin collection changes planned

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Taupō District’s residents will be invited to talk rubbish as options for bin collection­s will go to public consultati­on. Taupō District Council confirmed in a meeting last week the options it will present to residents for feedback as part of its Long-term Plan.

One option that will be presented is a continuati­on of the status quo, which sees residents buy ‘pay as you throw’ stickers or pre-paid rubbish bags to put kerbside for collection, as well as rates-funded recycling crate collection­s for some types of plastics, metal, cardboard and paper.

Advantages of this system include lower demands on rates and more flexibilit­y about the amount of waste households can throw away, but there are significan­t drawbacks.

Amongst these, said council’s acting manager general operations and delivery, Tony Hale, was that it was increasing­ly difficult to find contractor­s to provide waste collection for bin bags due to the higher level of injury risk for personnel as compared to crews working with automatic wheelie bin lifting equipment.

There was also an increasing incentive from central government for all councils to use the same methods.

“Many communitie­s across New Zealand are now moving to a change in level of service, and for example, some of them are moving toward wheelie bins.

“Certainly, the Government has

indicated that they want to move to a standardis­ation across New Zealand as well.”

Councillor Anna Park said the existing bag system was a common source of concern among residents due to the potential for bags to become ripped open, or for recycling to blow out of crates.

“Most of the feedback I get from people who are interested in how clean our streets are is the flyaway rubbish on rubbish day.”

Councillor Yvonne Westerman echoed those concerns from personal experience.

“I was driving to work on Monday

morning up Acacia Bay Rd, I counted 10 bags that people had put out overnight that were scattered across the road first thing Monday morning and it was just an absolute mess, so someone - either the house owner or the rubbish guys - someone was going to have to deal with that.”

The alternativ­e to bin bags to be put forward is a rates-funded wheelie bin collection, which is also council’s preferred option.

This would see households in the district given a ‘suite’ comprising a rubbish bin, a large recycling bin, up to two glass crates and a food waste bin.

Homes would have weekly food waste collection, with rubbish and recycling to be collected fortnightl­y outside of summer, moving to weekly in the town’s busiest months.

Options would be explored around free assistance for residents who are medically unable to put their bins back by themselves.

One of the advantages of the new suite, said Hale, was the ability to divert more waste from landfill.

“Forty per cent of our current waste is going to landfill and this could be recycled at the kerbside.

“On average 27 per cent of bag contents are organics.”

Organics, or food waste, are currently sent to landfill, where conditions mean it cannot decompose.

A dedicated food waste bin would mean organic waste could be dealt with separately.

Kiwi homes throw away about 80,000 tonnes of food every year, from uneaten vegetables to peelings, bones and other kitchen scraps.

Current options being explored were sending it to Auckland to be used in biogas production, or to local worm farm MyNoke.

The new bin option was slated to cost $3 million upfront to purchase the full suite for all residents, which would be debtfunded.

There would be additional costs around educating residents on the bins’ correct use, and enforcemen­t of a ‘three strikes’ system similar to those used by other councils to discourage the contaminat­ion of recycling bins with non-recyclable items. Contaminat­ion of bins with items like dirty nappies has been an issue across other districts and can cause large amounts of waste that could be recycled to be sent to landfill, with some councils looking to implement fines for noncomplia­nce.

The two options for bins in Taupō will go to public consultati­on for inclusion in the Long-term plan in June. If adopted, the council would aim to implement the new bin system in the 2025-2026 rates year.

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 ?? ?? Taupō 's current waste system involves contractor­s manually lifting bin bags and crates into trucks.
Taupō 's current waste system involves contractor­s manually lifting bin bags and crates into trucks.

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