Waikato Herald

Major waste initiative­s on the table

Waipa¯ District Council has big plans

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The Waipā District Council will float a range of proposals this year to leverage Government incentives aimed at helping communitie­s minimise waste.

In December, councillor­s had their first look at an updated draft plan to minimise and manage waste in Waipā. The plan must be reviewed every six years for the Government’s waste levy to continue.

The levy, worth close to $400,000 this financial year and climbing, funds most of Waipā‘s waste minimisati­on activities. The exceptions are kerbside recycling, emptying litter bins, and enforcemen­t of illegal dumping, which are funded by rates.

Transport manager Bryan Hudson said there had been a massive change in the waste minimisati­on space in the past few years, opening up opportunit­ies for communitie­s prepared to embrace and drive change.

“We’ve seen the near collapse of the internatio­nal recycling commodity market while community expectatio­ns and awareness of waste have increased,” he said. “Waste minimisati­on is no longer about reduce, reuse and recycle; the focus is on a circular economy, making use of all resources as many times as possible. That’s where we need to get to and we can leverage government incentives to help.”

The council’s draft plan will propose actions to reduce contaminat­ion in kerbside recycling, produce a plan for a Waipā-wide resource recovery network, and to help divert and reuse constructi­on and demolition waste.

The plan will also propose two big changes which Hudson predicts will be of huge community interest: a

complete rethink of rubbish collection, plus concrete moves to introduce a kerbside food waste service.

“For more than 20 years, Waipā‘s household rubbish has been collected by private companies using wheelie bins or pre-paid bags.”

Waipā is one of a few councils in New Zealand which doesn’t provide a rates-funded rubbish collection. But early costings suggest it could be a

cheaper and better option for ratepayers so it’s time to look at that again, he said.

A food collection service would also be a focus of the draft strategy noting around 50 per cent of Waipā household “rubbish” was organic.

“We’ll certainly be looking at activities to encourage home composting and community composting. But there may come a time when providing a food waste service will be compulsory in New Zealand because of government commitment­s around reducing methane emissions from landfills.”

“There is a funding package on offer from the Ministry for the Environmen­t to help councils start food waste services... It’s an opportunit­y our community simply must consider.”

 ?? Photo / Waipā District Council ?? Council's waste minimisati­on adviser Sally Fraser (left) and Bethany Rolston with some of the meat — much unopened — thrown out as refuse. Reducing food waste will be one initiative under the spotlight this year.
Photo / Waipā District Council Council's waste minimisati­on adviser Sally Fraser (left) and Bethany Rolston with some of the meat — much unopened — thrown out as refuse. Reducing food waste will be one initiative under the spotlight this year.

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