Daily Mail

Town where your Xmas rubbish bins are STILL being emptied

- By Liz Hull and James Tozer

THE decoration­s were taken down almost a fortnight ago and the Christmas festivitie­s are a distant memory.

But some poor souls are having to put up with the aftermath well into January – because their bins, overflowin­g with rubbish, still haven’t been emptied.

Households in Conwy, North Wales, which introduced monthly collection­s for 50,000 homes in September, have had to wait more than three weeks after Christmas for the bin trucks to appear.

Many had their previous waste collection on December 20.

The council was criticised after it became the first in the country to cut its collection­s back to once every four weeks.

Residents were furious and the Chartered Institute of Environmen­tal Health said collection­s should take place at least fortnightl­y.

Families in the borough complained yesterday that they were struggling to cope, having been left with piles of stinking rubbish that wouldn’t fit in their bins, neighbourh­oods blighted by fly-tipping and a growing infestatio­n of rats.

Some have resorted to desperate measures by taking rubbish to work or dumping it in public litter bins, while others have had to climb into wheelie bins to crush their bags – or have simply burnt their waste.

One mother of three, who asked not to be named, is expecting her bin to be emptied today – 28 days after it was last done.

The 33-year-old, from Colwyn Bay, said she had been forced to take waste to the tip, adding: ‘This collection scheme is rubbish. The bin is overflowin­g and I have two black bags full of rubbish in the garage as well – they won’t take those.’

She said some residents had forked out for private waste firms, such as Binzilla, to do the council’s job. Last month it emerged that some families were paying £450 a year for firms to collect waste.

Andy Lowe, 54, lives down a lane in Llanfair Talhaiarn. He must take his rubbish to the end of the lane, where communal bins service several homes. But they’ve been overflowin­g for weeks after people began driving over to dump waste into them. They were emptied on Tuesday – weeks after the binmen’s last visit just before Christmas.

Mr Lowe, a father- of- one, said: ‘There’s nappies spilling out. I burn most of our cardboard. It’s easier than relying on the council. I’ve seen rats running around bins.’

In Rhos-on-Sea, Rachael Evans, 37, said monthly collection­s were ‘atrocious’. Following their introducti­on, her family caught a rat that was attracted by the mess.

Fly-tipping rose by 16 per cent in Conwy after monthly collection­s came in, but the council says the change will save £400,000 a year.

‘I’ve seen rats running around’

 ?? ?? Festive fly-tipping: A plastic tree and other Christmas waste in Colwyn Bay yesterday
Festive fly-tipping: A plastic tree and other Christmas waste in Colwyn Bay yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom