Councils’ weekly waste collection fund launched
By Vivienne Russell | 3 February 2012
The £250m fund to help councils maintain or
return to weekly waste collections is now open for business, Communities
Secretary Eric Pickles has announced.
Details of the Weekly Collection Support
Scheme were
first set out last September, promising
extra cash for councils that keep up weekly waste collections for five years
and boost recycling rates.
It followed publication of the government’s
Waste Policy Review, published by the Department for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs in June. This stopped short of ordering councils to reinstate weekly
collections and was seen as a blow to Pickles, who has championed weekly
collections.
Speaking today, Pickles said: ‘Rubbish
collections are the most visible service that people get for their £120-a-month
council tax bill. But barmy bin rules have made putting out your rubbish more
complicated than solving a Rubik’s Cube. The public are fed up of all the bin
do’s and bin don’ts.
‘People just want a comprehensive service in
return for their council tax, which is why this government is working with
councils to increase the frequency and quality of rubbish and recycling
collections.’
The fund has been financed from savings in
the Department for Communities and Local Government’s central budget. Ministers
want it to support schemes that reward families for recycling as well as
promote innovation, better procurement and joint working between authorities.
Clyde Loakes, vice chair of the Local
Government Association’s environment board, said the extra funds would help
councils that could not otherwise afford to maintain weekly collections.
Councils could also apply to use the cash for weekly organic waste collections.
‘The decision ultimately comes down to local
choice, and we are pleased councils’ calls for the flexibility to spend this
money on weekly collections of food and organic waste have been listened to,’
he said.
But Loakes said it was ‘disappointing’ that
the government had excluded councils currently switching to alternate weekly
collections.
‘This sets a double standard which
arbitrarily penalises local authorities reviewing their waste collection
arrangements this year, while offering money to those who have already made the
switch,’ he said.
The prospectus and bidding form for the Weekly
Collection Support Scheme can be viewed here.