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Councils rubbish fears microchipped bins to be used to fine families


RESIDENTS in Oxford will not be charged to throw away their rubbish, the city council has pledged.

John Tanner, executive member for a cleaner, greener city, made the pledge after human rights group Big Brother Watch produced a survey revealing 68 local authorities had installed microchips in the rubbish bins of 2.6 million homes.

This was a 62 per cent rise on the previous year, when only 42 local authorities had bins with microchips fitted.

The city council bought 70,000 wheelie bins fitted with the microchips when it switched to a new waste collection system in 2006. But to date, the chips have only been used to trace missing bins.

Mr Tanner vowed the technology would never be used to collect information which could then be used to weigh waste and charge residents for throwing away too much.

He told the Oxford Mail: “We have no intention of activating the chips with a view to running pay-as-you-throw schemes.

“We think people pay enough in their council tax to have their rubbish collected, without having to face an extra charge.

“There never will be any plans to introduce a pay-as-you-throw scheme while the Labour group is in charge.

“Our recycling rate is about 36 per cent, which means we are recycling a third of what residents throw away, and that level should increase as food waste collections are rolled out across the city.”

Mr Tanner added it would have cost the council more money to request bins without chips when the wheelie bins were introduced.

Dylan Sharpe, a spokesman for Big Brother Watch, said a growing number of councils were installing the microchip technology, to prepare for a “political climate more amenable to bin microchips”.

Wheelie bins provided by South Oxfordshire District Council have microchips fitted and Vale of White Horse District Council is planning a new waste system involving wheelie bins from October.

Gavin Walton, a spokesman for the Vale, said neither local authority planned to run pay-as-you-throw schemes.

Strategic director Steve Bishop said on behalf of both councils: “We have around 100,000 bins in South Oxfordshire and will be delivering 95,000 in the Vale during the summer. We have chips in the recycling, refuse and garden waste bins.

“This is so we can accurately weigh the waste and so we can be sure every bin on a round is collected, which helps us with customer queries.

“These bins are expected to last up to 25 years.”

Neither West Oxfordshire or Cherwell councils have bins with chips and no plans to introduce them, they said.

Bristol City Council wants to weigh rubbish and then pay residents who throw away the least amount.


Comments(5)

Jamie Burns says...
5:51pm Fri 12 Mar 10

So in other words it will be introducing a charging system very soon. The council always comes out with a load of BS before going back on it and doing the complete opposite, so why do they think they will be believed this time ?

Andrew:Oxford says...
8:11pm Fri 12 Mar 10

The "microchip", in reality a small black disc about the size of a two penny piece, is found under the upper "lip" of the main part of the bin. It's easy to spot if you have a look. Many bins have already lost them - they can pop out when bins are roughly handled. I'm told that it's also possible to pop it out like a tiddly-wink using a screwdriver. I'm not sure what the issues are regarding removing the chip though. The bins appear to belong to the householder when left inconveniently on the street, but imagine that it'll be claimed they belong to the council if they are "adapted"

Gunslinger says...
9:50am Sat 13 Mar 10

I don't see how they are in a position to 'promise' this, if in the future Government policy or financial pressures on the Council make it inevitable.
Remember, after the general election all sorts of things are heading our way that neither political party wants to spell out too closely now.....

oxbow says...
4:44pm Sat 13 Mar 10

At the point of buying our current house I asked the council if there were any plans to bring in residents parking and was told no. 6 months later when I was in, residents parking was brought in and I was told there were no plans to start charging for the permits. A year later I had to pay to park on a street that didn't even need the system. I will never trust a word the council says.

Concerned one says...
5:15pm Sat 13 Mar 10

Councillor Fooks Lib Dems in 2006

She added that Government proposals for an extra tax on residents who left large amounts of non-recyclable waste were at an early stage, but the bin chips would be necessary if plans went ahead.

The Labour Government have cajoled councils into fortnightly collections now they are doing the same with "pay as you throw". When Mr. Tanner's political masters speak our council will jump. Never trust a politician.


Councils rubbish fears microchipped bins to be used to fine families Councils rubbish fears microchipped bins to be used to fine families

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