We've only got green bags here
+ Visit Cardiff FC for Latest News, Transfer Gossip, Fixtures and Match Results |
To save you from reading the green book all you need to do is put the red bag and the blue bag in the blue bin, put the blue bin in the black bin, add all your waste on top, and place out for curbside collection.
We've only got green bags here
What's wrong with black bin (fortnightly), green bags, food waste (weekly), garden waste (whenever they feel).
Is this new system easier for them to collect?
Haven't got this green book that you talk off as nothing has changed here (yet).
Happy to do my bit though - it can't be that inconvenient surely.
Black bins/bags, every 3 weeks !!!!!
Rats dream
It will be OK for me and most people that have side access, a nightmare for terraced houses.
The hessian bags look rubbish and will fill up with rain water the cardboard and paper will be soaked and they blow around the streets, the glass blue bin looks much better they probably should have gone for similar bins maybe a bit bigger.
It would be a nightmare in a small busy house with lots of children and rubbish and don't have side access.
I'll give it a go but if it's too much hassle I'll black bin it bar the glass, I think they'll end up worse off by it.
The green bags were pretty good simple and used by most people, as usual, if something is OK and working quite well, the council have to step in, make things a lot worse and feck it all up.
Still better than the Vale.
Its so that the council can save a few shekels while simultaneously spending £200 million on an uneeded new arena.
The councils waster mangement department is a joke, real toxic workplace culture there.
https://nation.cymru/news/strikers-s...rdiff-council/
Earlier today had a leaflet posted through letterbox, from Unite. They say they will be coming round shortly to ask for signatures to a petition which will be put to the council, asking them to 'get back round the table for negotiations..'. Whatever the rights of wrongs of a dispute, I really don't think the general public should be used as a bargaining tool..
In my council area (Huntingdonshire) we have 3 bins, blue for recycle stuff like paper and plastic, green for garden waste, grass etc, black for everything else. Blue and black every two weeks on Thursday. So blue this week and black next week etc. The green bin is every 4 weeks on Wednesday. Now the council are stopping the green bin to save money but they will offer a special service for the early bird price of only £50 a year to have your green bin emptied. I can't remember the last time I remembered to put my green bin out on time. I don't think I will bother. Further east I have heard that Newmarket are changing to 5 different bins very soon.
We don’t get any bins is the first thing, so storing 3 black bags over 3 weeks is not ideal. It’s the amount of bags and caddy’s we have to store, also the bags are useless and blow away in the slightest wind.
We have:
Food caddy
Glass Caddy
Green waste bag (if you pay extra)
Blue bag for plastic
Orange bag for Cardboard
White bag for Paper
Another bag for batteries
Store 3 black bags
So that’s 7 bags/caddies to store plus 3 black bags
If you have children you have another caddy for nappies.
The storeage bags are not fit for purpose.
The bands clearly mean that people in bigger homes and/or more 'exclusive areas' pay more - but Council Tax is regressive and those in lower value homes, in poorer areas with greater state or council needs pay proportionately much more than the affluent.
The Guardian did a good summary of Council debt (40% reduction in real terms central government support to Councils from 2010 to 2020) which is hitting councils of all colours like never before. It also included this snippet:
The issue is exacerbated by the fact that worse-off areas typically have greater needs for council provision despite their smaller tax base. Richard (Partington) points to an example of how that plays out from the Northern Powerhouse Partnership: a house in Hartlepool worth £150,000 pays over £200 a year more in council tax than someone in Westminster in a property worth £8m.