Over 9,000 bins have been rejected for collection this week in North Kesteven
it's after a clampdown on incorrect items being put into them
More than 9,000 bins have been rejected by a Lincolnshire council so far this week as authorities clamp down on what can and canāt be recycled.
North Kesteven District Councilās recent introduction of a purple bin for dry and clean paper and cardboard has caused confusion with nearly 20% of green bins ā meant for plastic bottles and cans ā not emptied by refuse collectors, in the second collection since the scheme started.
Residents have hit out at the amount of rubbish left behind and the councilās strict rules ā with some even resorting to abuse of the refuse collectors ā but NKDC bosses say recycling contamination is āunderminingā their efforts and that advice is being offered to residents who break the rules.
Hereās the breakdown of collections this week so far:
Monday ā 1,864 rejected (19% of bins presented)
Tuesday ā 2,279 rejected (19.5%)
Wednesday ā 2,651 rejected (23%)
Thursday ā 2,320 rejected (21%)
Lynda Somers took to North Hykeham Community Page to write:
āThe straw that broke the camelās back⦠I am so meticulous in my recycling but bin not emptied to day. I want to dump it all and the two bins at the NKDC office.
āI will no longer recycle, Iām going to order a big black bin.ā
And her sentiments were echoed by several others.
Others took a lighter approach, with Daryl James writing: āJust heard there will be public floggings held at the North Hykeham Village Green Saturday morning for all of the naughty folk that didnāt obey the strict green bin protocolsā¦.. please bring your tag of shame so it can warrant how many floggings you will receive.ā
In the purple bin collection week, which ran from September 27, just 1.5% of bins were rejected.
A spokesman for North Kesteven District Council emphasised that what can and canāt be recycled hadnāt changed, just where it went.
Council leader, Councillor Richard Wright, said:
āContamination is an issue which is increasingly impacting on how much can be recycled and undermining all the efforts our households are making on their recycling at home.
āThe only way to stop this is by everyone taking responsibility for our waste, by making sure only the right thing goes into the right bin.ā
He said the council had been communicating with residents on the new rules since July.
āWe never want to leave a bin unemptied unless itās really necessary,ā he added.
āThe wrong things regularly found in green-lidded bins ā from soft plastics such as film lids and carrier bags to other items such as kitchen roll and used tissues, takeaway containers and even dirty nappies ā canāt be recycled and contaminate other good recycling in bins and even the lorry load itself.
āThis results in not only increased sorting costs but less items recycled as residents expect them to be,ā he said.