Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser

It’s time to clean up our act

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Rubbish strewn across streets, carpets of detritus left behind in city centres, discarded packaging dumped in parks for someone else to deal with.

These are all scenes that have become too familiar during the easing of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in the UK but which have their root in a much more long-term problem — the UK’s litter epidemic.

Today we are standing up to it, and urging you to do the same, with our new campaign Don’t Trash Our Future.

The Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser, together with local community and informatio­n platform InYourArea.co.uk and our nationwide network of sister newspapers and websites, have teamed up with Clean Up Britain to push for changes we believe will leave no choice but for both irresponsi­ble litter louts and the authoritie­s who have the power to enforce the law but so often don’t to take long-lasting action.

Our campaign has two aims:

To increase the maximum punishment for littering to a £1,000 fine or 100 hours of supervised community litter picking To make it compulsory for local authoritie­s to enforce the law on littering We are urging you to sign our petition (inyourarea.co.uk/DTOF) to see it – with the aim of reaching 100,000 signatures so we can lobby the Government to change the legislatio­n and shed the country of its long-held reputation as a litter-plagued nation.

We’re also calling on councils to flex their muscles in the fight against rubbish and make far better use of the powers they already have available.

A Freedom of Informatio­n request sent by Clean Up Britain to 169 councils in England and Wales found the majority (56 per cent) were issuing less than one fine per week for littering and more than two dozen (16 per cent) don’t issue fines at all.

In a recent survey conducted by InYourArea. co. uk, more than 7500 respondent­s overwhelmi­ngly said littering has a negative effect on them and their neighbourh­oods and classed it as a big problem.

wwwwwwwww.wwininyour­area.ninnco.uk/dtof Support has come from television host Gabby Logan and her husband Kenny, a former Scotland internatio­nal rugby player turned broadcaste­r.

Together they said: “We’re urging everyone to get behind the ‘ Don’t Trash Our Future’ national anti-litter campaign, and show how much we care about our naturally beautiful country. Littering is senseless, selfish and costly to us all.

It’s only a minority of people who do it, but it negatively affects the quality of life for absolutely everyone.

“To use the sporting analogy... it’s a self-inflicted, needless, own goal. It doesn’t cost a penny to do the sociallyre­sponsible right thing, and put your litter in a bin. Just do it! Please.

John Read, founder of Clean Up Britain, said: “Clean Up Britain is very excited to be running the Don’t Trash Our Future campaign with InYourArea. co.uk

“We know from the countless people who contact us that there is a huge desire – from people all over the country – to try and solve the litter epidemic.

“We are all so fortunate to live in a beautiful country, but equally, it’s so depressing to see so many people littering it.

“This has to stop, as it shames Britain. “There has to be zero tolerance towards littering.

“Littering is symptomati­c of a lack of pride in our local communitie­s, and a lack of respect for other people and the environmen­t generally.

“This campaign is about challengin­g and reversing these negative sentiments, and saying enough is enough.

“Let’s be grateful for what we have, take care of our country and, above all, ‘Don’t Trash Our Future’.”

Mr Read added: “The Government needs to start getting serious about confrontin­g people who litter.

“It’s a criminal offence to litter and it needs to be treated that way.

“Fines need to be increased to a level which shows the Government – and society generally – will no longer tolerate this antisocial and selfish behaviour.

“In addition, we also need to ensure fines are a credible deterrent, by making it compulsory for councils to enforce the law, which currently it’s not.”

Journalist and television presenter Jeremy Paxman is Clean Up Britain’s patron. He said: “There is only one sustainabl­e and effective solution to littering: changing the behaviour of people who do it. Nothing else will work.

“It pollutes the environmen­t. It’s dangerous to humans and animals.

“It depresses people because mucky surroundin­gs make them feel worthless. It’s expensive – councils across the UK spend over a billion pounds a year trying to clean it up.”

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 ??  ?? Depressing
Fly- tipping — like this rubbish dumped in Monklands – is unfortunat­ely an all too familiar sight
Depressing Fly- tipping — like this rubbish dumped in Monklands – is unfortunat­ely an all too familiar sight
 ??  ?? Support Gabby and Kenny Logan
Support Gabby and Kenny Logan

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