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Charity posts back rubber bands | Charity posts back rubber bands |
(about 8 hours later) | |
They may not seem as offensive as dog dirt, cigarette butts or chewing gum but red rubber bands have stretched the patience of anti-litter campaigners. | They may not seem as offensive as dog dirt, cigarette butts or chewing gum but red rubber bands have stretched the patience of anti-litter campaigners. |
The charity Keep Britain Tidy called on people to collect up bands dropped by postal workers after a survey claimed they were found on 6% of UK streets. | The charity Keep Britain Tidy called on people to collect up bands dropped by postal workers after a survey claimed they were found on 6% of UK streets. |
Some 13,000 of them were handed in as part of its Big Tidy Up campaign. | Some 13,000 of them were handed in as part of its Big Tidy Up campaign. |
Now the charity plans to hand them back to Royal Mail in a giant envelope outside its London headquarters. | Now the charity plans to hand them back to Royal Mail in a giant envelope outside its London headquarters. |
In April, it warned postal workers they were not above the law and could face on-the-spot fines of £80 for littering by dropping the bands. | In April, it warned postal workers they were not above the law and could face on-the-spot fines of £80 for littering by dropping the bands. |
It had identified the problem through its Local Environment Quality Survey, which records what litter is found on 19,000 streets across England each year. | It had identified the problem through its Local Environment Quality Survey, which records what litter is found on 19,000 streets across England each year. |
It warned the bands could be dangerous to animals, if swallowed, and called on the Royal Mail to tackle the issue by telling workers to put the bands in their pockets. | It warned the bands could be dangerous to animals, if swallowed, and called on the Royal Mail to tackle the issue by telling workers to put the bands in their pockets. |
The Royal Mail says it regularly stresses to staff that they should avoid litter and that the vast majority of the bands it uses - amounting to millions each week - are re-used. | The Royal Mail says it regularly stresses to staff that they should avoid litter and that the vast majority of the bands it uses - amounting to millions each week - are re-used. |
Meanwhile, Sandra Laird in Edinburgh sent a photograph of discarded rubber bands collected near her home to the BBC News website. | |
She says she lives near a drop off point for her local postman and there are always elastic bands lying around, which her children collect. |
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