Daily Mail

Now binmen are banned from pulling wheelie bins

They might injure their backs says council’s elf ‘n’ safety squad

- By Chris Brooke c.brooke@dailymail.co.uk

REFUSE collectors have been banned from pulling wheelie bins up alleys because of fears they may suffer a back injury.

In a decision blasted as ‘defying common sense’, hundreds of residents who for decades have been putting their rubbish outside their back doors have been told it is too risky for binmen to collect.

Householde­rs – many of them pensioners – must now pull the wheelie bins along narrow alleyways near their homes themselves or risk not having their rubbish collected. Their only alternativ­e is to attempt to trundle the large bins through the inside of their homes to the front.

Residents in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, are infuriated by the health and safety clampdown, which followed a council risk assessment. Letters were sent to 287 households to explain that crews could be vulnerable to ‘musculoske­letal injuries’ when pulling wheelie bins.

The residents live in terraced houses with rear gardens that back on to alleyways about as wide as two wheelie bins and up to 87 yards long. They argue that in the days of steel bins, crews walked up the alleys to take the dustbins back to the dustcart in the street – and that the job has now been made even easier by wheelie bins.

However, according to the council, crews are being forced to adopt ‘awkward postures’ in the confined space, risking back, joint and limb problems.

Tracy Tremewan, 34, who lives in one of eight streets that have been affected, said: ‘I think it’s absolutely shocking.

‘That’s what they get paid to do – move the bins. They say they can’t move them but we can. But what happens if we hurt our backs?’ Neighbour Jean White, 65, who has lived in her house for nearly 40 years, said: ‘Before the wheelie bins came in they used to pick the metal ones up on their shoulders. You’d

‘Every right to feel

short-changed’

have thought if they were going to hurt their backs they would have done so then.

‘The next thing you know we will have to empty the bins into the lorries ourselves.’

It has also been claimed that by getting residents to do the work of pushing bins, the council will need to employ fewer binmen.

David Stevens, 68, said: ‘ The bins are on wheels and are not heavy for strong binmen. We think that the council is nit-picking to save money.’

Jonathan Isaby, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said residents had ‘every right to feel short-changed’.

‘Collecting the bins is a basic service which people expect in return for their council tax,’ he added.

‘If binmen have been collecting rubbish from the same place for decades, how can the sudden change be seriously justified? This is another example of health and safety rules being interprete­d in an extreme way that defies common sense.’ Jimmy Bennett, manager of Streetscen­e, which provides the bin collection service, said: ‘By asking residents to bring their bins to the end of the lane we can provide a more effective service and keep the lane clear.’

The first collection under the new rules went ‘smoothly’, he said, adding that special arrangemen­ts would be made for residents who are unable to move their own bins.

 ??  ?? ‘Shocking’: Residents Jean White and Tracy Tremewan in their alley
‘Shocking’: Residents Jean White and Tracy Tremewan in their alley
 ??  ?? Hardy: A binman in the Fifties
Hardy: A binman in the Fifties

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