Exeter City Council plans to charge £45 to replace a rubbish bin

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Saturday, January 26, 2013
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Western Morning News

Households in a Westcountry city could find themselves having to pay as much as £45 for a rubbish bin.

Until now, new and replacements bins have been provided free by Exeter City Council. But faced with a cost of about £120,000 annually to cover this, the authority now plans to introduce charges.

  1. bins

The fee would be £25 for a 140-litre bin, £35 for 180-litre, and £45 for 240-litre.

The average bin lasts about eight years.

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Green bins will continue to be provided and replaced free of charge, but developers would have to pay for rubbish bins for new homes.

Robert Norley, the city's assistant director for environment, said: "We realise that this will come as a bit of a shock.

"Local authorities have been able to charge since the 1990s and about half have chosen to do so – until now we have chosen not to.

"Some households can't be bothered to bring their bin in after collection and it ends up being carried away.

"People don't like to see bins on the street and if there is some value attached to the bin then hopefully this will encourage people to take care of their bin and if they do this it will last longer.

"We hear from people who want to change from a larger bin to a smaller one then later they want to change it back again, but this has been just because they want a clean bin and can't be bothered to clean it."

The city council is also hoping the charges will encourage people to use a smaller bin, thus throwing out less rubbish for landfill and recycling more.

Mr Norley said: "We could all use smaller bins.

"A waste audit carried out by the city council and Devon County Council found that bins were only between 50 and 70 per cent full.

"There is a cost to waste, but with some members of the general public this doesn't register – there is financial cost as well as cost in terms of the environment. Sending rubbish to landfill is not good for the environment."

Councillor Yolonda Henson, leader of the city's Conservatives, has said that she fears residents will be shocked at being asked to pay for rubbish bins.

She said: "As a group the Conservatives are against this as we see the bins as being part and parcel of the service which the city council provides."

The city council has yet to discuss what exemptions there would be to the charges.

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2 Comments

  • Profile image for czarchasm

    by czarchasm

    Sunday, January 27 2013, 7:31AM

    “Residents are seen as victims to be milked dry. Instead of reducing bureaucracy, this council tries every devious way it can to extort yet more money!
    Shame on them!”

  • Profile image for Juan11_1

    by Juan11_1

    Saturday, January 26 2013, 8:38PM

    “Until now taxpayers have been paying for these bins (they were never free!). Exeter City Council now seem to want taxpayers to pay twice. Clearly the Council is keen to establish itself as more of a business and rather less providing a service to the public.”

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