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Councils and Re-cycling
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RichardW



Joined: 24 Aug 2006
Posts: 8443
Location: Llyn Peninsular North Wales
PostPosted: Sun Aug 28, 11 12:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

1000seeds wrote:
Roughly speaking, the fact is under Legislation, anything that is taken by a Council, its employees or vehicles, is designated as waste and has to follow the rules of movement to landfill sights and the disposal of under said legislation. Other then designated schemes and vehicles, etc, such as for the use of green waste and recycling points.
If any item is taken to another person, place, site or even a charity, it is illegal as it has become waste and can only be moved via official means from waste site to waste site.
I have tried in the past and present to redirect - legitimately I hasten to add! - items for charities, etc. It cannot be done anymore. The 'Powers That Be' prohibit it. Councils hands are tied.


I think you will find that just how they are reading the legislation not the actual intent of it. Lots of companies collect waste & then resell as a product some times they need to process & others not. As long as its documented it fine.

Out local council run tip is just starting a reselling venture. Not been since it started so cant comment on how its run.

onemanband



Joined: 26 Dec 2010
Posts: 1473
Location: NCA90
PostPosted: Sun Aug 28, 11 1:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

1000seeds wrote:
Roughly speaking, the fact is under Legislation, anything that is taken by a Council, its employees or vehicles, is designated as waste and has to follow the rules of movement to landfill sights and the disposal of under said legislation. Other then designated schemes and vehicles, etc, such as for the use of green waste and recycling points.
If any item is taken to another person, place, site or even a charity, it is illegal as it has become waste and can only be moved via official means from waste site to waste site.
I have tried in the past and present to redirect - legitimately I hasten to add! - items for charities, etc. It cannot be done anymore. The 'Powers That Be' prohibit it. Councils hands are tied.

Yes this is roughly correct in that once something has entered the waste stream and becomes waste it can then only be dealt with by the appropriately licensed people.
However under the Landfill Directive it is also law that all waste going to landfill is pre-treated. Basically the Landfill Directive says that anything that can go somewhere other than landfill should be removed from the waste and not go to landfill.
Councils probably meet the directives conditions by saying waste is treated at source (ie householders are removing the recyclables before waste is handed over to council) But if there are still items that can be re-used then surely the councils are not fully complying with the directive.
I am not aware of any reason why things can't be removed from waste and then be reclassified as recyclable - this allready happens with metals, plastics etc. Recyclable materials are not subject to the same laws regarding transportation and storage as waste is.
IMO it is fear of litigation rather than waste regulations that are tying councils hands

Landfill tax is currently £48/ton plus there are the landfill site's charges to pay. I pay nearly £150/ton to dispose of my business waste.
Councils are wasting money by not controlling household waste sites properly. Every item they refuse to allow somebody to remove costs money to dispose. And when householders do multiple trips to the site because of their consumerists lifestyle we all pay for its disposal. IMO If you can afford a new kitchen/settee/bathroom etc you can afford a skip rather than letting other tax payers foot the bill.

Mutton



Joined: 09 May 2009
Posts: 1508

PostPosted: Sun Aug 28, 11 8:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Our tip used to have a separate stack of help-yourself-timber, and various items around the edges. You were asked to put timber in this one hopper by the gate and there was a big "help yourself" notice on it. I'd drop by when I went shopping and load the car with timber - often useful offcuts of tanelised decking that sort of thing. Great for little jobs. Then the place changed contractor and that all stopped.

On a different group read about practice in one part of the US. The council there would have a couple of days per year in which they would advertise to towns that they would pick up large items from the kerbside. It was custom and practice that the items would be put out a day or two early, and the surrounding countryside, and presumably neighbours, would turn up with pick-up trucks trawling round for useful items and the council only had to take away what was left at the end of it.

1000seeds



Joined: 21 Aug 2011
Posts: 76
Location: Garden of England
PostPosted: Mon Aug 29, 11 5:34 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Quite right. RichardW, Onemanband and Mutton. My mistake. Councils can as you say, redirect from landfill to 'recyclable/salvageable'. It is allowable. The problem for a council is setting up as a 'recycling to buy to take away' enterprise, or salvage yard. The costs, etc of sorting, man power and space makes it very difficult to compete and use taxpayers money wisely. Council taxpayers wouldn't be happy if it costs more money to operate than it takes. Local and County Councils do have systems in place where they sell on recycled metal or paper, etc. Plastics collected from households directly can be difficult due to the volume to weight ratio in a lorry. It isn't that viable to operate, I have been told. The costs of operation aren't paid for by the amount of plastic that would have to be collected.

As it stands, unless you have the capacity and capability to put this into action on a business footing, it is a case of, sorry you can't have those dumped books or furniture. I am not legally allowed to let you take it. Of course, there are entrepreneurs with lorries going around picking up metal off the streets that has been dumped and taking it to scrap yards. Good luck to them!
The other problem of course is that any local business who has a salvage yard would not take kindly to the possibility of a council putting them out of business through setting up in competition. Councils are not too bothered about that aspect anymore, as the cuts to their funding mean they have to find additional revenues to keep everything going. Only so many managers can be sacked and buildings sold off before they have to face facts and 'diversify' onto a business footing.

Hairyloon



Joined: 20 Nov 2008
Posts: 15425
Location: Today I are mostly being in Yorkshire.
PostPosted: Mon Aug 29, 11 8:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

They were inviting tenders to run the yards in Sheffield not so long back...
I thought I'd mentioned it here, but I can't find the post.

Banzai



Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Posts: 3

PostPosted: Thu Apr 05, 12 6:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Hairyloon wrote:
They were inviting tenders to run the yards in Sheffield not so long back...
I thought I'd mentioned it here, but I can't find the post.


Hairyloon wrote:
I had an email this morning from Sheffield Council inviting tenders to manage the Household Waste sites.
Perhaps we should stop moaning and take the bull by the horns...

Think it is too big a project for me on my own though.

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