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Saturday, 13th March 2010

Weekly bin collections return

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Published Date: 22 February 2008
Weekly bin collections are to return to every home in Preston in a dramatic u-turn which will cost hundreds of thousands of pounds.
Preston Council is planning to pour more than £400,000 in rolling out the collections to more than 50,000 homes across the city over the next four years.

The re-introduction of the seven day collection comes three years after it was scrapped.

The plans are included in the Conservative administration's first budget which also includes cuts to services in a bid to plug a £1.5 million black hole in the council's finances.

The Tory budget, which is almost certain to be approved by the majority of councillors, is also looking at cutting back opening hours at some of the city's leisure centres, removing creche facilities, axing a tourist information centre and selling off two landmark buildings.

The proposed 3.9% council tax increase would see the tax bill for a Band D homes in non-parished areas of the city will pay at least £1,318.71 in the next financial year, which excludes police and fire service precepts.

The return to weekly bin collections - which ended in May 2005 - comes after complaints from householders that rubbish left to fester for a fortnight was attracting rats and maggots and causing stenches.

Since last summer 7,000 homes in the Deepdale area have been having their food waste collected weekly as part of a pilot scheme.

Related stories:
>Council will scrap weekly bin pickup
>Bin pledge for worried villagers


Deputy leader Eric Fazackerley, the cabinet member for resources, said: "That is not going to happen in a year and there has obviously we have got to priortise the areas where we know there is the most need, but the government targets we are up against dictate we have to make improvements and this will do that.

"When we first came to power nine months ago, we said we needed to look at ways to develop our waste collections and we feel this is a way of meeting that obligation."

Residents in Whittingham hit out last year when the council announced it would not collect bins for three weeks over Christmas.

Whittingham Road resident Helen Atkinson, 53, said the new move to weekly collections was a good thing.

She said: "I'm pleased, as long as they carry on with the recycling.

"I cannot see how they will afford it though."

Under the changes, which will go before a meeting of the full council next Friday (FEB 29), homes would get an extra food waste container to go alongside their grey general waste bin, the brown garden waste bin, and other boxes for paper, glass, tin and plastic bottles.

Lancashire MPs Nigel Evans and Lindsay Hoyle called in Parliament last year for weekly collections to be reintroduced, after Preston, South Ribble, Chorley, Lancaster, Fylde, Wyre and West Lancashire switched to fortnightly uplifts.

But proposals to reintroduce weekly food waste collections in South Ribble were put on ice earlier this month when the cash-strapped borough council said reintroducing weekly uplifts would cost £2m and hike up council tax.

In Fylde and Wyre, weekly collections are set to return for kitchen waste when a new rubbish plant is built in 2010.

The budget proposals in Preston would see opening hours at the Fulwood Leisure Centre reviewed, creches at Fulwood and West View Leisure Centres shut, and the removal of free leisure centre use for the unemployed under the Passport to Leisure scheme.

Coun Fazackerley said that cuts had been chosen because the services "could not be justified" by the number of people using them.

There will be a review of the tourist information centres, which could see the centre in the Guildhall shut and services merged into either the Town Hall or Harris Museum services, which could save £140,000 over four years.

Other cuts including upping charges for crematoriums and cemeteries, introducing energy efficient light bulbs in the city's parks and selling off the historic former Post Office on Birley Street and Amounderness House on Lancaster Road.

It appears the plans could go through unchallenged with the opposition Labour group yet to draw up its own amendments to the Conservative proposals.

Leader Coun John Collins said that his group would prepare its budget at a meeting on Tuesday night and not present it until the day of the meeting on Friday.

But, mayor Christine Abram, who will chair the meeting, said she would not accept amendments "off the hoof."

Coun Collins said: "We will oppose these cuts and are now exploring ways to find the money."

Liberal Democrat leader Coun Danny Gallagher said the proposals put forward by the Conservatives was something his group would "broadly accept."

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  • Last Updated: 22 February 2008 11:44 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Preston
 
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1

nvr2old,

Preston 22/02/2008 09:55:00
So the scaremongers and wastrels have won their argument about rats, smells and public health. What a waste of money - our black bin is sometimes only half-full even after 2 weeks. Rather than chase cheap votes, these vote-desperate councillors should encourage better recycling and campaign against unnecessary packaging by retailers.

Can I start the campaign to return to 2-weekly colllections yet, or can I opt out of weekly collections and see the savings used to avoid cuts in other priority areas?
2

WhiteKnight,

22/02/2008 10:01:07
Totally agree with the first comment. What a huge step backward for recycling. It seems most of the complaints arose from mismanagement of fortnightly collections by the council, rather than objections to the principle. Why don't the council spend the money on making sure the fortnightly scheme is run properly??
3

Martyn Rolly,

Fishwick 22/02/2008 10:09:38
Previous two comments spot on - this is not a return to weekly collections, this is getting yet another bin when the current system is confusing people as it is.

They are cutting debt and welfare benefits advice services when the country is up to its eyeballs in credit and making cuts on parks and leisure centres when most of the country is clinically obese!

As long as the rural voters are happy eh?
4

Guerrero,

Preston 22/02/2008 10:45:40
I agree entirely. And I found a 'wheelie bin fly killer' that keeps insects and maggots at bay anyway. No need for it to go back to weekly as far as I'm concerned.
5

David C,

22/02/2008 11:26:31
Actually what a waste of Tax payers money, scrapping it was in the first place. Preston is 2 big for fortnighly collections. 1 rat, leads to thousands, So weldone on bring it back, might make the streets look a bit cleaner, Deepdale road looks a mess, Boxes thrown everywere and rubbish blowing about. But the council have to make sure people still recycle. I think Prestons Problem has been 2 many bins and Boxes. Surely it would be cheaper for the council and the People of preston to have a bin for general rubbish (waste food etc) and say 3 bins, 1 small 1 for Cardboard and paper and 1 for Tins and Bottles, also 1 for Garden waste for compose. Couple of Doll Dodgers sent to sort them out in a back to work scheme, for a £40 top in their benefit or if they refuse dock their benefits. Surely better than the curent system. A policey that could catch on and keep crime down as well.
6

David C,

22/02/2008 11:27:51
Dole*
7

barnfarm,

Once, weakly 22/02/2008 12:40:08
Great news for idle slobs and feckless types of the parish. Can't wait for the landfill-bill council tax timebomb to go off. Heaven forbid that they could have identified the multiple-occupancy house bits of town which were struggling and addressed that as a separate issue.
8

liampne,

22/02/2008 13:06:30
at last I can do away with the annoying recycling bins. Can't wait to start filling the bin without bothering about room.
9

kevin678,

22/02/2008 13:11:29
My black bin is always full after one week. When I asked the council for a bigger one, they said you have to have 6 in the house. This is the result. Bunch of amateurs running the whole thing.
10

WorkerBee,

Preston 22/02/2008 14:08:53
Common sense prevails at last. The amount of ridiculous things councils spend our cash on which no-one asks for is depressing. One of the few things everybody has a right to demand is their bins emptied. People should not need to be forced down fortnightly collections route to boost recycling. If people have the boxes then most will recycle anyway.
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