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Bugged rubbish bins 'will charge' | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
More than 30 councils are fitting microchips to wheelie bins ahead of possible "pay as you throw" schemes. | |
It is the latest attempt to encourage more recycling to curb the amount of rubbish that ends up in landfill. | It is the latest attempt to encourage more recycling to curb the amount of rubbish that ends up in landfill. |
Household rubbish would be weighed to within 500 grams on collection trucks and the chips used to identify which property the bin belongs to. | |
Councils are expecting to get the go-ahead from the government to start using the chips to charge residents. | |
Many local authorities are in favour of "pay as you throw" and are already anticipating the changes, according to the information uncovered by BBC One's Real Story. | |
HAVE YOUR SAY If I find a bug in my bin it will go straight back to the council offices Andrew Howlett, Manchester href="http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?threadID=4111&edition=1&ttl=20061004101229" class="">Send us your comments | |
But Paul Bettison, chairman of the Local Government Association's environment board, appreciates that certain councils have taken the wrong approach. | |
"Any council that's issued chipped bins and hasn't informed their residents I would say has scored something of an own goal. We need to work with the public and it's sad that seemingly some councils didn't," he said. | "Any council that's issued chipped bins and hasn't informed their residents I would say has scored something of an own goal. We need to work with the public and it's sad that seemingly some councils didn't," he said. |
Once weighed, a bill for the waste would be sent to the owner. | |
Local authorities do not yet have the power to use the chips to charge people but have started introducing them in the expectation that they will be used. | |
The Mail on Sunday reported that an estimated 25,000 chips had been removed by disgruntled residents in Bournemouth. | |
Mr Bettison told BBC News in August that he expected weighing schemes to be commonplace across the UK within two years. | |
Tough fines | Tough fines |
With an estimated nine years of landfill space left, councils up and down the UK are faced with a tough decision about what to do with the UK's waste. | |
Simply burying rubbish in the ground is no longer an option. | Simply burying rubbish in the ground is no longer an option. |
Local authorities face tough fines from the government on what they bury and by 2010 they will have to meet 40% of recycling targets to avoid EU sanctions. | |
Councils are trying to encourage recycling | |
In some areas recycling is now compulsory, meaning if people do not comply rubbish will not be cleared away and they could face prosecution. | |
Alternate weekly collections are one way of tackling the problem but they have not been warmly welcomed by residents who say councils need to collect the domestic waste more frequently. | |
Mr Bettison believes that if people want to keep weekly collections of all household waste they will have to face the reality that it is going to cost them. | |
"If you wanted us to collect both bins each week that would mean doubling the number of collections and that would add approximately £100 a year to your council tax. | |
"There may be people who wouldn't want to pay that." | "There may be people who wouldn't want to pay that." |
Real Story's report on rubbish is on BBC One on Wednesday 4 October at 1930 BST. | Real Story's report on rubbish is on BBC One on Wednesday 4 October at 1930 BST. |