The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Anger grows as grit bins removed from Fife streets

Council will no longer provide bins on priority routes

- Craig smiTh csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Communitie­s hoping to help themselves fight the big freeze have been left furious by the removal of grit bins across Fife as winter begins to bite, it has emerged.

The Courier has learned that hundreds of grit bins have been taken away from streets throughout the region as part of a cost-cutting review. They will not be redeployed elsewhere.

Fife Council’s policy is now to provide grit bins on minor housing estate roads and footpaths not on the primary gritting network, with bins on the priority routes being removed since they are already receiving the highest level of road gritting service.

However, the move has not gone down well with many residents.

Pointing out that 260 grit bins have been axed in north Fife alone, Lib Dem group leader and Tay Bridgehead Councillor Tim Brett urged council chiefs to look again at the issue.

He said: “I’ve had complaints over the last 10 days or so from literally every part of my ward. I’m a great believer in providing people with the tools to do things themselves if they want to.

“While the council can say ‘we’re gritting the roads’, my experience is that the council is very slow to grit the pavements at our end of the kingdom and that’s a major worry for me.”

Cupar Councillor Margaret Kennedy has also questioned the decision, and called for a review of the determinin­g factors behind the new arrangemen­ts.

“It would seem far more sensible to me to have these bins where people will use them and not where Fife Council thinks it would be best,” she said.

Derek Crowe, roads and transporta­tion service manager, explained: “We have a budget saving target to reduce the cost of Fife’s winter service, including grit bins.

“The main cost of the grit bin service is not their provision but the servicing of them and if we just redeploy them we will not achieve the budget saving.

“By comparison, the provision of grit bins is much higher in Fife than neighbouri­ng councils and there are now so many (circa 4,000) that in the event of a severe weather event it is unlikely that sufficient resources could be enabled to meet the policy standard of refills within five days.

“A review of our winter services policy is under way and an informal member/ officer working group has been establishe­d to look at options for the delivery of a sustainabl­e gritting and snow clearing service within a reducing budget envelope.”

Itwould seem far more sensible to me to have these bins where people will use them and not where Fife Council thinks it would be best. COUNCILLOR MARGARET KENNEDY

 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? Councillor Tim Brett has received complaints about the decision.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. Councillor Tim Brett has received complaints about the decision.

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