New data from the TaxPayers' Alliance reveals that
forty-two councils, one in ten councils, in the
UK are considering a cut on waste collection services in some
form. This follows major backlash against Bristol
Council's consultation to extend residual waste pick-ups from
fortnightly to four-weekly.
Over eight million people may experience some
kind of bin change, of which almost five million
people could see some kind of reduction to their
residual waste in schedule, while over 800,000
could have their weekly recycling service cut to fortnightly or
monthly. This is despite analysis from the TPA out
yesterday in the Telegraph which revealed that
households in 21 council areas faced average band D bills of over
£2,500 from April.
Examples include East Hertfordshire Council,
which is considering reducing the frequency of residual (or
general) waste collections from fortnightly to three-weekly,
while also cutting bin sizes from 240 litres to 180
litres. East Ayrshire Council is introducing a
three-bin recycling system and extending collection schedules
from weekly to every four weeks. Meanwhile, both East Ayrshire
and Carmarthenshire councils are proposing to
lengthen their residual waste collection cycles from three weeks
to four. Bristol Council is considering moving
from fortnightly to four-weekly residual waste collections.
Angus council is proposing to move from a
fortnightly recycling collection schedule to a four-weekly
schedule. North Hertfordshire Council is
considering introducing a new recycling bin and changing all
waste collections to a three weekly schedule.
In August 2024 the TPA published a
comprehensive dataset of the number of bins that
residents in each council are required to separate waste into.
This revealed that in three councils (Blaneau Gwent, Cotswold and
Merthy Tydfil), residents had to separate waste into ten separate
containers.
CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL
LIST OF COUNCILS
Key findings:
- More than one in ten, or 42, councils are considering
reducing the frequency of one or more bin collections.
- Thirteen councils plan to extend fortnightly residual
waste collections to three-weekly.
- Babergh Council, Caerphilly Council, Cheshire East
Council, Dundee Council, East Dunbartonshire Council,
East Hertfordshire Council, East Suffolk Council,
Flintshire Council, Mid Sussex Council, North
Hertfordshire Council, North Somerset Council, North
Warwickshire Council, Teignbridge Council
- Seven councils plan to cut their weekly residual waste
collections to fortnightly.
- Allerdale Council, Arun Council, Basingstoke &
Deane Council, Birmingham Council, New Forest, Oadby and
Wigston Council, Sandwell Council
- Two councils plan to shift from three-weekly to
four-weekly residual waste collections.
- East Ayrshire Council, Carmarthenshire Council
- Four councils plan to cut their weekly recycling
waste collections to fortnightly.
- Lewisham Council, New Forest, Oadby and Wigston
Council, Sandwell Council
- Two councils plan to extend three-weekly recycling
collections to four-weekly.
- North Ayrshire Council, Dundee Council
- One council plans to extend fortnightly recycling waste
collections to three-weekly.
- North Hertfordshire Council
- Ten councils are planning changes but proposed changes
have not been released yet.
CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL
LIST OF COUNCILS
Joanna Marchong, investigations campaign manager of the
TaxPayers' Alliance, said:
“Residents will be left wondering what to do
when the bin lorries don't show up and the rubbish piles
high.
“A shocking number of councils are considering
cutting collections, which would leave people facing ever-growing
mountains of waste.
“Town halls need to stop making a mess of basic
services and focus on delivering what taxpayers pay for.”
TPA spokespeople are available for live and
pre-recorded broadcast interviews via 07795 084 113 (no
texts)
Media contact:
Notes to editors:
- Founded in 2004 by Matthew Elliott and Andrew Allum, the
TaxPayers' Alliance (TPA) campaigns to reform taxes and public
services, cut waste and speak up for British taxpayers. Find out
more at www.taxpayersalliance.com.
- TaxPayers' Alliance's research
council.
- Information was obtained via an FOI request to all UK
councils asking:
- How frequently are bins collected from residential
properties? Please provide the frequency for each type of bin
and the day its collected
- Is the council considering changing the frequency of bin
collections?
- If so please provide the current frequency as well as the
new proposed frequency.
- A total of 244 councils provided a response to the Freedom of
Information request in some capacity.
- The TPA has previously produced
analysis revealing that some councils require
residents to separate waste into as many as ten containers.