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Keep Weekly Bin Collections In Sheffield

Thursday 12th January 2012

 

GMB ACCUSE PICKLES OF DOUBLE STANDARDS AS SHEFFIELD RESIDENTS FACE AXING OF WEEKLY BIN COLLECTIONS DUE TO CUTS FORCED ON COUNCIL BY GOVERNMENT SPENDING CUTS

Reducing bin collections to fortnightly could mean up to 40 job losses and could threaten feedstock for plant that supplies heat and hot water across the City says GMB

GMB, the union for public sector workers, accused Eric Pickles, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government of double standards as weekly wheelie bin collections are to be axed in Sheffield due to cuts in funds to the council from his department to support local services.

At last year's Tory Party conference Mr Pickles said that the Government wanted councils to collect refuse weekly and that his department would pay £250m to support this. An announcement on how £250m will be made available is expected next week. See notes to Editors for information on Pickles statements.

Sheffield Council’s cabinet agreed on 11th Jan that rubbish will be collected from homes once a fortnight, rather than once a week. Free garden waste collections will end. The plans will now be brought before full council for final approval in March.  If agreed at the full council meeting weekly collections will end in April 2012. 40 jobs will be cut at Sheffield Council contractor Veolia. Savings will be £2.44m per year. The council said it will now look to ‘enhance’ recycling services but what this means has not been spelled out.

Peter Davies, GMB Regional Officer for the refuse staff,  said: “Reducing bin collections to fortnightly could mean up to 40 job losses. The proposals were the council’s worst-kept secret.

Eric Pickles stands accused of double standards. It is spending cuts imposed by his department that is forcing Sheffield to find savings. At the same time Pickles told the Tory Party conference that his Government will pay to keep weekly collections.

Sheffield burns most of its household rubbish at its incinerator which then provides all of the heating and hot water for public sector housing and buildings in the City. They need all they burn at present and this heating and hot water means the public benefit immensely from, what in real terms, is much cheaper provision. This could be threatened.

At the same time there is the threat of closure to Sheffield’s house-hold recycle centres looming so we can't assume this will not devastate actual recycle rates.

End

Contact: Peter Davies, GMB Regional Officer on 07501 228312 or 0845 3377777.  GMB Press Office Steve Pryle on 07921 289880 or Rose Conroy on 07974 251823.

Notes to Editors

Eric Pickles, the Communities Secretary, has been leading the drive to get rid of fortnightly collections, describing weekly services as a “basic right”.

Mr Pickles has defended the government's plans to offer councils financial support to restore weekly collections saying the proposal is what most people want. It was Mr Pickles who made the statement that “I firmly believe that it is the right of every English man and woman that their chicken tikka masala, the nation's favourite dish, the remnants can be put in the bin without the worry that a fortnight later it is rotting and making life unpleasant."

A £250m fund is being set up to help local authorities in England switch from fortnightly to weekly bin rounds under plans unveiled by Mr Pickles the Communities and  Local Government Secretary. He will next week set out incentives for English local councils to bring back weekly collections of household rubbish.

 

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