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  • Peter Gillson
    • Apr 2018
    • 2594

    #1

    Household rubbish!

    Nothing to do with modelling, I was just wondering if we in Guernsey have the most complicated system for getting rid of our household waste.

    Based around maximising recycling the curbside collection system is a two week cycle:

    Week 1 collections:

    Sunday : paper and cardboard
    Wednesday. : food waste and glass bottles and jars

    Week 2 collections:

    sunday. ; plastic and tins
    Wednesday. : food waste and general 'black bag' waste

    We pay for this in two ways, about £160 per year on our property rates and having to put a pre-paid sticker on each bag of general 'black bag' waste which each cost £2.50. Any black bags without stickers are left, uncollected and the person responsible is liable to a heavy fine.

    Peter
  • Jim R
    SMF Supporters
    • Apr 2018
    • 15783
    • Jim
    • Shropshire

    #2
    Hi Peter
    I'm sure they mean well but most average 10 year olds could have come up with a more practical system.
    Jim

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    • Peter Gillson
      • Apr 2018
      • 2594

      #3
      jim

      Not sure about a ten year old, but it did take ten years to develop and agree this solution to our waste problem.

      Peter

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      • BattleshipBob
        SMF Supporters
        • Apr 2018
        • 6818
        • Bob
        • Cardiff

        #4
        It seems every council has a totally different idea, my father in law lives 20 mls away and a different authority but totally different bins, bags etc and he is on the third version!

        Comment

        • Peter Gillson
          • Apr 2018
          • 2594

          #5
          I was told that central government is looking at standardising what all of the UK councils are doing - 'i hope they don't look to us as inspiration!

          Comment

          • BattleshipBob
            SMF Supporters
            • Apr 2018
            • 6818
            • Bob
            • Cardiff

            #6
            My cat has better ideas! Same bins across the UK would a fortune buts what the chance of that happening lol

            Comment

            • Guest

              #7
              Peter.
              Does seem a bit OTT, but that's councils for you, probably took outsourced consultants plus several steering committees, and half a dozen other meetings to proceed.
              Glad we live in Lincolnshire, 3 bins, one for landfill, one for recycling, and a paid for garden bin. On a rotating bi weekly system.
              land fill and recycling both have the new food waste bin at each collection.
              Mind you no one seems to be able to understand the collection time table, seems it was written by a collective of coloured blind members.
              John.

              Comment

              • Guest

                #8
                Are alcoholic beverage containers handled separately as well?

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                • Adrian "Marvel" Reynolds
                  • Apr 2012
                  • 3008

                  #9
                  Wolverhampton council paid someone £250,000 to look into how they could save money!?!?!?

                  Comment

                  • Guest

                    #10
                    Originally posted by John Race
                    landfill
                    I was amazed to discover last year that in the UK, a third of household waste is just buried … Here in the Netherlands it’s 1%!

                    As for bins, we’ve just got two where I live: one for vegetables, fruit, and garden waste, and one for everything else (except for what’s collected separately for recycling, this latter including glass, plastic, paper, etc.). The schedule is that one week you put the green bin out, and the next week week, the grey one.

                    Comment

                    • Guest

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Jakko
                      I was amazed to discover last year that in the UK, a third of household waste is just buried … Here in the Netherlands it’s 1%!

                      As for bins, we’ve just got two where I live: one for vegetables, fruit, and garden waste, and one for everything else (except for what’s collected separately for recycling, this latter including glass, plastic, paper, etc.). The schedule is that one week you put the green bin out, and the next week week, the grey one.
                      Unfortunately Jakko the government have not been hard enough and the super markets have been supplying items in film that is not recycled. Why on earth do they shrink wrap for example cucumbers, and appes in packs of 4. Is this allowed in the Netherlands ?

                      Only recently Walkers crisps were forced to find a recycling company to take their crisp pkts. ( There are other makes available ) People had been sending the empty packets back in the post, the Post Office got fed up with letter boxed full of pkts and asked Walkers to do something about it. They now have collectors you can take the used bags to, they send them off in bulk to the recycling company.
                      John.

                      Comment

                      • Tim Marlow
                        • Apr 2018
                        • 18940
                        • Tim
                        • Somerset UK

                        #12
                        John mate, the shrink wrapping has two functions.....the first is obvious, it helps with handling and looks good on the shelf, the second is less obvious and a little darker.....it makes it more visible if the fruit, veg, whatever has been tampered with....goes back to a time when unscrupulous people were trying to blackmail supermarkets by adulterating food and drink. It has the same function as tamper proof lids and the click buttons on jars.

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                        • Mickc1440
                          • Apr 2018
                          • 4786

                          #13
                          Our latest update to recycling gave us a fourth wheelie bin and two calendars to work to for their collection.

                          Comment

                          • peterairfix
                            • Jul 2012
                            • 11080

                            #14
                            My collections are easy where I live recycling every week and general rubbish every two simples.

                            Comment

                            • Guest

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                              John mate, the shrink wrapping has two functions.....the first is obvious, it helps with handling and looks good on the shelf, the second is less obvious and a little darker.....it makes it more visible if the fruit, veg, whatever has been tampered with....goes back to a time when unscrupulous people were trying to blackmail supermarkets by adulterating food and drink. It has the same function as tamper proof lids and the click buttons on jars.
                              Morning Tim, got it, certainly remember the guy who was putting something into jars being caught, and the resulting tamper proof lids.
                              John .

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