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Council leader defends axing weekly bin collections

SCRAPPED: Council leader Simon Henig has defended axing weekly bin collections SCRAPPED: Council leader Simon Henig has defended axing weekly bin collections

A COUNCIL leader has defended axing weekly bin collections, predicting they are about to disappear nationwide.

Durham County Council leader Simon Henig said the twin-bin system of fortnightly collections promised huge financial savings, and said: “My prediction is every council will be running a similar system in the next few years.”

Speaking as his authority delivered its first twin bins to Chester-le-Street yesterday, Councillor Henig said promises of Government cash to save weekly collections had so far come to nothing and, while any proposals would be considered, he would be very surprised if the trend to fortnightly collections was reversed.

His council, which faces losing £190m from its annual spending power between 2010 and 2017, hopes the twin-bin system will save between £9m and £12m over the next five years.

Coun Henig said: “We’ve got to find enormous, unprecedented levels of savings of 40 per cent. We’ve got to look at all ways of saving money.”

New grey recycling bins will be delivered across the Chester-le-Street area in the coming days; with Teesdale, Wear Valley and Sedgefield receiving theirs in March and April; and Durham City and Easington in April and May.

The system, which involves existing rubbish and new recycling bins being emptied on alternate weeks, will begin in these areas in April, May and mid-June respectively.

Collection days may change, as binmen move to a four-day week. About 60 per cent of County Durham’s household rubbish is buried and landfill tax increases are expected to cost the authority an extra £1m every year.

Studies from Derwentside, which has had a twin-bin system since 2006, suggest the system increases recycling.

Coun Henig said people would be delighted to see the end of green bags, currently used for paper and plastics, and he had received no complaints from people living in the Derwentside area about the new set-up, except during extreme weather.

He also defended giving the £4.2m contract to make and distribute the 225,000 bins to Environmental Systems Expertise (ESE), which is making them in France, despite a UK firm bidding £250,000 cheaper, saying almost all bin manufacturers were international companies and ESE supplied many English councils.

For more information on the new system, visit durham.gov.uk/bins or call 0300-0261000.

‘Cut managerial fat, not services’

A TORY leader has challenged a council to cut managerial fat – not neighbourhood wardens and library opening hours.

Durham County Council’s ruling Labour group yesterday revealed proposals to axe 20 warden posts and increase service charges in an attempt to cut £26.6m from the authority’s 2012-13 budget.

Library opening hours are also to be slashed to 36 per week at town centre branches and 20 per week at community libraries.

But Conservative leader Richard Bell said: “We believe the council should be trimming managerial fat rather than cutting services like library opening hours and neighbourhood wardens. With about 250 managers being paid more than £50,000 a year and more tiers than a society wedding cake, there’s still plenty to go at.”

Councillor Bell also called on the council to declare how many full-time union staff were paid from the public purse and the cost of annual pay increments.

The Tories also want a flexible development fund established, to respond to economic opportunities. The Liberal Democrats are expected to unveil their alternative budget proposals on Monday.

Councillor Simon Henig, the council’s Labour leader, said if the libraries budget was to be cut, the only alternative to reducing opening hours was closing branches.

Labour’s budgetary and library proposals are to be discussed by the council’s cabinet on Wednesday, before the budget is agreed at a full council meeting on February 22.

Council finance chiefs expect to lose £190m from their annual spending power between 2010 and 2017 – about 40 per cent.

Comments(19)

GeordieB says...
12:31pm Thu 2 Feb 12

It's about time DCC realised they are no longing fulfilling the will of the people.

There must be something in the Council's Constitution that people can use to force accountability.

oldgit57 says...
2:12pm Thu 2 Feb 12

It is not often I agree with a tory councillor. But you can't get away from the obvious truth of the total failings of DCC to reduce cost not services. Richard Bell is perfectly correct in his statement " there are more tiers than a society wedding cake". Another example of the never ending task of empire building within local government. Unfortunately this will continue untill managerial pay from the top down is linked to service performance rather than number of staff and size of their egos. All these service cuts should generate a reduction in responsibilty and reduced pay levels. Come on Northern Echo publish the top heavy structures and let the council tax payer see what we are getting for our money "far too many chiefs and not enough indians".

redangel1 says...
2:30pm Thu 2 Feb 12

it beggars belief that they are making these bins in france when our country could have made them for £250.000 cheaper,coun henig and the managers need to cut their salaries and bonuses,the council workers haven,t had a pay rise for 3 years ,bet the councillors can,t say the same,no wonder this country is on its knees,also i bet there is an increase in fly tipping when the fortnightly collections comes in force because not everyone will recycle,everywhere you go there is dumped rubbish about,can only get worse.

Jolly Roger says...
3:03pm Thu 2 Feb 12

But where are the tennants going to put these extra bins especially those in terrace housing??

Come on Councillors do what we what not what you want.

We want weekly bin collections like not.

As for saving £9-£12m. does this include the cost of these extra bins, YES or NO !!!

the-big-yin says...
3:08pm Thu 2 Feb 12

oh!! my god again.....
d.c.c. and herr simon henig!!!!....you hypocrite!!!....
you must be blind, deaf and stupid as to not listen to what the people of this GREAT COUNTY want and need....it has been proven in councils all across the country that fortnightly bin collections do not work!!!thats why they all stopped them...more fly tipping and rubbish everywhere....are the lazy bone idle council binmen going to put the extra bin bags into the wagons...i think not....ask them now and they break out in a cold sweat at having to lift something....or its against council policy...lol....why don-t you just resign and let someone with more sense run this council...bet you don-t ..too busy lining yours and your labour cronies pockets from dodgy deals...free trips for fact finding and the rest........the truth will come out!!!!!!!!

simmo3578 says...
3:24pm Thu 2 Feb 12

I live in a mid terrace and currently have 2 unsightly wheely bins outside the front of my property, I wont be making it 3 as 1 of them will be dissapearing like my small green box although that was stolen!

Got Ya says...
3:45pm Thu 2 Feb 12

Bob Young the 'Rubbish' champion on DCC won't be satisfied until we have a different bin for each day of the week ....only 4 to go!

GeordieB says...
4:08pm Thu 2 Feb 12

I'm thinking about charging DCC rental for the storage space for this new bin.

Anyone else up for it?

David Lacey says...
5:56pm Thu 2 Feb 12

Hey - how many of you whingers voted Labour? Got what you deserved if you did!

house fly says...
7:36pm Thu 2 Feb 12

How can a Tory Councillor critisize the Council he sits on, when it is his Government who has forced DCC to cut back on services.

house fly says...
8:00pm Thu 2 Feb 12

The Con/Dems will say and do anything to take the heat off themselves. It's the Elections next year and it is they who fear for their positions. The Con/Dem Government has caused the adverse critisism towards DCC and you have all fallen for it.

spragger says...
9:14pm Thu 2 Feb 12

Has this Cllr cut his expenses. Has he decapitated the Council, as none that have lost the Chief Exec have missed them. Have all Climate Change, Diversity, European & political officer jobs gone? None of which are any value to CT payers. DCC is a dogs breakfast but someone is voting for it.
Normally those exempt from paying CT

the-big-yin says...
10:26am Fri 3 Feb 12

spragger wrote:
Has this Cllr cut his expenses. Has he decapitated the Council, as none that have lost the Chief Exec have missed them. Have all Climate Change, Diversity, European & political officer jobs gone? None of which are any value to CT payers. DCC is a dogs breakfast but someone is voting for it.
Normally those exempt from paying CT
THOSE JOBS WILL NEVER GO!!!!ITS SOME COUNCILLORS RELATIONS JOBS ...THEY ARE A WASTE OF MONEY...WHY SHOULD WE HAVE DUMB ASSED JOB TITLES LIKE THE ONES PREVIOUSLY MENTIONED....WE DO NOT NEED D.C.C. WORKERS LOOKING AT EUROPE FOR INSPIRATION...SPEAK TO THE PEOPLE OF COUNTY DURHAM FOR ONCE....VOTE THEM ALL OUT...USE YOUR LOAFS PEOPLE OF THIS GREAT COUNTY!!!!!!!!!!!

the-big-yin says...
6:15pm Sat 4 Feb 12

DEAR SIMON HENIG..CAN YOU ASK YOUR BINMEN TO DRAG MY WHEELIE BINS DOWN MY STEPS, AS I HAVE A BAD BACK...DO YOU NEED A SICK NOTE POSTING TO YOU?..PLEASE REPLY AS YOUR COUNCIL DEPERTMENT WORKERS NEVER DO...I MAY HAVE TO GO ON THE DOLE NOW...THIS IS DUE TO PULLING YOUR SACRED WHEELIE BINS....

caberwocky1 says...
6:35pm Sat 4 Feb 12

What a bunch of whingers-we have one of the best performing councils in the country.They get award after award-'outstanding' children services.
You do not need weekly bin collections unless you are not recycling properly.
Need to restructure and cut senior managers posts.

Bright And Cheerful says...
9:57am Sun 5 Feb 12

I used to be able to have my wheelie bin last upto 3 weeks before it needed emptying and yes recycled other items and again I could manage to put that out every two or three collections because I seem to buy little that has a lot of packaging to get rid of(I don't buy many newspapers/magazines either)

However, Mum is seriously ill(terminal)and we now have to basically put out rubbish as a family might with a young baby and so I can fill a bin weekly.

I make certain everything is enclosed in bin bags and we use products to keep the bin smelling sweet and enclose everything but I do wonder what I will now do if the main wheelie bin collection is only to be collected weekly.

I don't have access to transport so I cannot consider going to a collection point so many miles away.

And I assume I will always be one week out of step and having to store rubbish on the property so I am not too happy about this change.

I am fortunate that I can hide rubbish and the bins as we have a passage along the side of the house with a door we can lock but it must be difficult for may who live in properties that were never ever designed to store more than one bin.

Maybe it will work, perhaps the new bins are larger? Time will tell I guess.

Steamy1 says...
10:05am Sun 5 Feb 12

i dont supose the councillors went to vissit the factory where the bins are made????

antagonist1 says...
3:28pm Tue 7 Feb 12

do we need as many councillors ? would they fit in the rubbish bin as recycling them is not an option ?

another bin in my garden means another workmate for when i'm sawing wood, thats about it !

or, put a plank between them and use them as bench !

might just put it in my shed and store my gardening tools in it......

the-big-yin says...
2:58pm Wed 8 Feb 12

Steamy1 wrote:
i dont supose the councillors went to vissit the factory where the bins are made????
of course they did ....another free trip...another backhander????

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