Thread: Tip permit!
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Jim K.. Jim K.. is offline
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Default Tip permit!

Steve Walker Wrote in message:
On 11/04/2019 16:46, NY wrote:
"R D S" wrote in message
...
Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard
and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've
no permit.

Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with
which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year.
A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits?

Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on.

In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem.

Pure genius.


Some years ago I dug up a large pile (maybe several hundredweight) of
sandstone sheets (naturally occurring, in the sandy soil). I took most
of the smaller pieces to the tip in refuse bags, at a time when it was
still free to dispose of rubble as long as you didn't take more that n
bags per month - so I took n bags per month to each of several tips in
the area (nothing wrong with playing the system).

The rest ended up in a large pile at the bottom of the garden. By that
stage, tips were charging colossal sums of money - we worked out that it
would have cost over £100 to dispose of it. We could have hired a skip,
which would probably have been cheaper, but it was overkill for
something that would barely cover the bottom of a skip. The official
explanation for what people should do with their waste rubble was
"advertise locally to see if anyone wants rubble for filling potholes in
farm tracks". Oh yeah. I bet you'd get a *lot* of takers...

So my wife build a "dry stone wall" of the slabs, alongside part of the
hedge beside a brick compost heap, where we had problems with local dogs
getting in when their owners let them off the lead while going for a
walk along the unofficial "footpath" at the bottom of the garden.

The concept of paying to dispose of any waste, over and above normal
council tax, seems fundamentally wrong when *I* transport it to the tip
and don't even want someone else to collect it.


We were also expected to pay extra if we wanted the council to collect
garden waste. Initially it was free. The council sounded aghast when I
asked them to collect the bin, and said that we'd take our garden waste
to the tip ourselves for free.


Our council introduced a charge for garden waste two years ago. We kept
the bin though, as it is still used for food waste and cut flowers are
also allowed.

As we didn't pay for the garden waste removal service, we didn't get a
sticker and so couldn't put such waste out in the bin - so I bought an
old style, round, black bin and just took that along to the tip every so
often.

I am assuming that they had a lot of people do the same and got a lot
less money in than they expected, as the charge is being dropped from June.

SteveW


To be replaced by a charge at the tip
:-)
--
Jim K


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