The website points out that “The number of fly-tipping incidents in Hammersmith and Fulham decreased between 2005/06 [after the Labour Administration at the time introduced street wardens to fine the culprits] and 2006/07– from 5941 to 5275 in 2006/07. However, [following the election of the current Conservative Administration] there was a significant increase in the number recorded in 2007/08 – to 9334 incidents. The most common size of fly tipping incident in Hammersmith and Fulham is small van load, which has seen a big increase in 2007/08. The occurrence of large incidents has increased significantly, and the number of significant/multi load incidents is higher than the number of single item incidents.”
Cllr. Wesley Harcourt (Lab), the Shadow Cabinet Member for the Environment says he's also noticed a "big increase in dog-fouling, littering and fly-tipping" since Hammersmith and Fulham’s Conservative Administration introduced new policies that involved:
- cutting the street cleaning and refuse collection budget by £1m
- cutting the number of street wardens who were to meant to seek out and stop the people from dumping litter or allowing their dogs to foul our streets
- cancelling the garden waste removal service
- bringing in brand new stealth taxes for removing unwanted bulky household items
3 comments:
Fly tipping is not new. We have regularly had orange bags and household rubbish dumped outside our block on the Arthur Henderson Estate. Fly tipping, given the inability of the council to do anything, has been a fact of life for the last few years here.
I heard that, from 1 April, the Council is introducing a charge to collect bulky items which, at the moment, it offers free of charge. Is this so?
Fly tipping is in the increase and until the council investigate who is behind this and take those responsible to court it will always be on the increase.
Simply removing fly tipping is counter productive without proper investigation and then 'taking on' those that are actually fly tipping.
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