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Friday, 19th March 2010

Hundreds boycott wheelie bin fee

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Published Date:
05 February 2010
Hundreds of householders have rubbished the £25 wheelie bin charge and refused to pay.
More than 300 homes across Preston are currently without a rubbish bin because people have objected to the charge to replace lost and stolen ones.

The £25 fee was introduced last year after Preston Council found it was spending £80,000 a year providing replacement bins. But, despite declaring it a success, Conservative leaders last week pledged to scrap it and charge a £10 delivery fee instead.

Coun Anthony Gornall, cabinet member for environment, revealed that around 300 people had refused to pay the charge, which rises to £28.75 with VAT.

He said: "They are currently being corresponded with by the council."
Of the 1,428 requests to replace lost or stolen bins last year, 688 householders paid the fee.

Some of the rest were paid for by social housing landlords, such as the Community Gateway Association, on tenants' behalf. A further 477 bins were replaced for free when they were damaged during rubbish collection.

Town centre councillor Michael Lavalette queried what householders without bins were doing with their rubbish. Coun Gornall said the charging policy had helped to half the number of requests from 3,500 last year.

He said: "In that respect, the policy has been a success. It has engendered a feeling of responsibility (for bins)."

But Coun Martyn Rawlinson, the Labour group finance spokesman, said: "It's an admission it was a disaster from the start. But £10 is still a lot of money to a lot of people. We want to see it removed completely."

A Preston Council spokesman confirmed that waste is only picked up by refuse collectors if it is in a council wheelie bin. Binbags and other waste containers are not collected, meaning householders face a trip to the waste tip on Tom Benson Way, Ingol, to dispose of rubbish.

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  • Last Updated: 05 February 2010 6:01 PM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Preston
 
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Jack Davenport,

Preston 08/02/2010 08:49:48
The scheme/'stealth tax' has NOT been scrapped. The Tories have simply said that the first replacement bin incurs a delivery charge of £10 - though it is less than the original charge, it is still a fixed rate amount that will have more of an impact on those on the lowest incomes or on fixed incomes.

For further replacement bins, the charge goes back to £28. So if you are the victim of crime once it costs a little less than originally, but if you are a victim of crime twice or more then it will cost you a lot more. As people in poorer areas are relatively more likely than those in richer areas (predominantly represented by Tories and Lib Dems), then this is a burden that will fall unfairly on the poorest in the city.

They still argue that the scheme works, but this is not the first time that the Tories have tried to alter the charges. The last time was just before the Fishwick by-election last year - voters saw through the sham policy then and I hope that they will see through it now.

The Lib Dems are equally culpable - they voted in support of the scheme (which is why it passed), but then had the nerve to say it was a Tory 'stealth tax' (a charge that, interestingly, the Tories have not refuted in Council).

This policy has been a mess - though 'rubbished' might be the more appropriate term I think - from start to finish and it should be scrapped.

2

Goodsocialist,

Dystopia 08/02/2010 10:50:55
To charge anyone for a replacement wheelie bin is wrong but imagine charging a disabled pensioner £10 when some kids run off with their bin!

But the Conservative Cabinet, which includes two wealthy farmers and a retired banker, won't really care will they?

Do these people represent the views of the average Preston Council Taxpayer?

Answers on a postcard to K. Hudson, Preston Town Hall.
3

Tallula,

08/02/2010 11:05:15
People without bins seem to dump their bin bags on the street outside their houses, from where they are not collected until a huge pile accumulates.

The people who are happy to live with a pile of bin bags outside their doors and expect their neighbours to have to put up with the mess leave a lot to be desired.

Can we have some common sense - either the bins can be free and therefore paid for by council tax (cuts in services or a tax increase) or those who lose their bins have to pay. The bins aren't free to the council!
4

Tallula,

08/02/2010 11:06:33
Another thought, people used to have to pay for bins, from when did we start to get them for free?
5

JEANIUS1974,

08/02/2010 11:39:59
The bins originally had microchips secreted in them, in order that a stealth tax could be levied on useage. Maybe they should of had trackers built into them--for easy recovery, and prosection for possesion of stolen property.
6

RED JACQUES ,

08/02/2010 11:47:48
why should you pay for a new bin (marked council property) if its stolen from outside your home???
7

Jack Davenport,

Preston 08/02/2010 11:51:57
Comment 3 - bin replacements were part of the original budget and were absorbed into the rest of council spending. It was the Tories and Lib Dems that identified them as a potential charge - a charge that has fallen mainly on the people most unable to pay.
8

Pigletess,

Preston 08/02/2010 13:19:56
I have just in the last 10 mins ordered and paid for a replacement bin for my daughter who had her bin stolen and she cannot afford a new one. The council insist on delivering it to her home not mine so all I can hope it that when they deliver it, it isn't stolen before she arrives home from work and we are back to square one.
9

TaxPayer2,

08/02/2010 13:28:21
So, if something I own (the bin or an ipod) is taken away from me who pays?

ipod - me
bin - council, WHY?

They both belong to me, I bought the ipod, i got the bin for MY rubbish FREE, I am the victim not the council. Most people on here want something for NOTHING or want people who work for a living to pay more tax for lower income earners or non-earners. Sorry, no, pay it.
10

craigals,

Preston 08/02/2010 13:35:59
I had to pay £10 for my first ever wheelie bin, therefore it is my bin not the councils, when I move I will take the bin with me as it is my property, if the council provided the bin for free then yes it would be their bin, but as I paid for the bin, the bin is now my own property and not that of the councils
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