Te Awamutu Courier

Contaminat­ed recycling big issue

Council cancels collection for repeat offenders

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Recycling that is contaminat­ed is costing Waipā ratepayers thousands of dollars a month, and some residents have had their recycling suspended for repeat offending.

District Council waste minimisati­on team leader Sarabjeet Singh said a sharp increase in the number of contaminat­ed bins has been identified during recent bin audits, resulting in repeat offenders now facing a three-month suspension of their recycling collection.

The problem was costing ratepayers up to $20,000 a month in disposal fees.

Singh said items being discovered in bins included food waste, nappies, animal carcasses, and medical waste.

“It is essential that there are consequenc­es for abusing the service and if we don’t suspend the offenders then it is going to keep costing the ratepayers who do comply.

“Contaminat­ed materials that get mixed in with the good recycling can compromise the whole truckload,” Singh said.

In the Waipā District, only glass, paper, cardboard, plastics 1, 2 and 5, and cans/tins, which must be clean and dry, can be recycled.

It is an offence under Waipā District Council’s solid waste management and minimisati­on bylaw 2018 to place noncomplia­nt waste in kerbside recycling bins.

If a recycling bin contains contaminat­ed items, the bin will be stickered and an informatio­n flyer will be left in the letterbox. Residents must remove the contaminan­t and dispose of it in their general rubbish, then the recycling bin can then be placed kerbside at the next collection date.

The council said 22 letters went out this week advising residents they had been suspended from recycling collection. When a collection is suspended, offenders need to work with council staff to have their collection­s restarted after the three-month period by calling 0800 WAIPA DC (924 723).

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 ?? ?? Example of contaminat­ed recycling put out for collection this week which included raw meat, garden waste and flammable liquids.
Example of contaminat­ed recycling put out for collection this week which included raw meat, garden waste and flammable liquids.

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