Whanganui Chronicle

No one left behind

Kerbside recycling for every household

- Mike Tweed

Whanganui District Council is making sure no one gets left behind when its kerbside recycling service begins in July. Each household will get three crates - for plastic and cans, paper and cardboard, and glass bottles and jars - but carrying them to the kerb could be a problem for the elderly or those with disabiliti­es.

Project manager Trish TaylorPope said council staff would meet with people individual­ly in the leadup to the launch to talk through their needs and options.

“There is an assisted service as part of the contract but it’s a case-by-case basis. We will go out and assess what sort of support they need.”

She told the council’s operations and performanc­e committee the Whanganui Resource Recovery Centre currently ran a recycling pickup service so there was “a little bit of a database to start from”.

“We will be in touch with people who need further assistance,” TaylorPope said.

Council property and open spaces general manager Sarah O’Hagan said the council would know of some people who needed help but there would be others.

“As part of our build-up to the beginning of the service and after the start date, we will let the general community know that they just need to [call] us and we will make those arrangemen­ts.”

Taylor-Pope said the council would bring on additional staff to manage the anticipate­d increase in inquiries.

“We need to make sure we aren’t putting too much strain on the current team.”

She said public meetings on the service had been booked for the end of April to the start of May and there would be a six-week rollout of crates to households from mid-May to the end of June.

All three crates can be filled with the same category of item if required.

“We’ve had really good feedback from people when we’ve gone to public [informatio­n] sessions and that has given us additional informatio­n to go back and speak to the contractor­s with,” Taylor-Pope said. “We’ll be looking to do the [recycling] pick-up the day before general waste pick-up. That will reduce the number of crates or bins at the kerb. It will also allow residents to put whatever contaminat­ed items they might have into general waste, or wash them or fix them.”

Low Cost Bins, which already runs general waste collection services in the city, is the contractor for the kerbside service. Three trucks will be added to its fleet.

Chief operating officer Andrew Sclater said he was enthusiast­ic about the launch and believed his company’s local knowledge would be crucial.

“As one of the few Kiwi-owned waste and recycling companies, and with our founder Colin Cashmore having lived in Whanganui and built longstandi­ng business contributi­ons to the region, Low Cost is in a unique position to deliver this service.”

Sclater said another important element of the service was its potential to stimulate local employment, thanks in part to the adoption of a crate-based recycling system.

“As well as reducing contaminat­ion and improving the quality of recyclable­s, the crate-based system will provide local job opportunit­ies – with materials being collected and sorted by hand in Whanganui - rather than heading to a mechanical sort line in another region.”

All recyclable materials will be

taken to the resource recovery centre to be aggregated, with certain materials being baled.

From there, they will be transporte­d to recycling facilities around the country.

The centre will remain open to the public after the service begins.

It accepts some materials, such as green waste, car seats, car/household batteries and e-waste, that can not be recycled at kerbside.

Taylor-Pope said one thing that helped people recycle in Hastings was a buggy system with clips and platforms so crates could be wheeled to the kerb.

Hastings also uses a three-crate system.

“We are looking at somebody locally who might be able to produce some of those.”

Meanwhile, Taylor-Pope said the council’s food scraps collection trial was going well.

Food scraps are being collected for composting from 400 Whanganui households as part of the 12-week initiative.

Her report to the committee said the amount of contaminat­ed product was below 1 per cent and the weekly diversion of food scraps from landfill was about 550kg.

 ?? Photo/ Bevan Conley ?? WDC staff will meet with people who need assistance with kerbside recycling to options.
Photo/ Bevan Conley WDC staff will meet with people who need assistance with kerbside recycling to options.
 ?? ?? Whanganui will use a three-crate system for kerbside recycling.
Whanganui will use a three-crate system for kerbside recycling.

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