The Mail on Sunday

Gove: I’ll make councils pick up food waste EVERY week

- By Harry Cole DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

TOWN hall chiefs will be forced to reintroduc­e weekly food waste collection­s as the Tories begin their defence of thousands of council seats.

Firing the starting gun on campaignin­g for local elections in England, Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove is taking aim at the hated fortnightl­y collection­s that lead to flies and maggots infesting household bins.

Voters in more than 250 English local authority areas go to the polls on May 2 and 5,000 seats are up for grabs.

In a package of voter-friendly measures to be unveiled this week, Mr Gove will demand that all English councils collect food waste weekly. He would also require all councils in England to provide a free green waste collection for households with gardens.

At present, almost two- thirds of councils charge for the discretion­ary service, and Mr Gove’s measure could save householde­rs more than £100 million every year.

In a bid to embarrass Labour and the SNP, which run garbage collection services in Wales and Scotland respective­ly, Mr Gove is to outlaw three and four-weekly bin collection­s, which the devolved administra­tions have allowed. And in another attempt to woo voters, he will demand uniformity over colours for rubbish and recycling bins.

Mr Gove said: ‘People want to recycle and it is our responsibi­lity to make it as simple as possible for them to do the right thing.’

He added: ‘ We are committed to going further and faster to reduce, reuse, recycle and cut waste.’

A Tory source said the proposed reforms will deliver on a pledge by former Local Government Minister Eric Pickles before the 2010 General Election that stated: ‘It’s a basic right for every English man and woman to be able to put the remnants of their chicken tikka masala in their bin without having to wait a fortnight for it to be collected.’

Meanwhile, Chancellor Philip Hammond is to launch a consultati­on this week on new taxes on plastics as the Tories bid to burnish their green credential­s further.

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