Five-bin Oldham? That’s nothing!
Date published: 17 February 2011
Oldham households who think it’s complicated using five recycling bins are trailing behind homes in Newcastle-under-Lyme — where they have nine!
The TaxPayers’ Alliance today released the first full survey of the number of bins that each council asks residents to sort their rubbish into.
It found Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, residents have the biggest job sorting their waste into nine separate receptacles.
But some far flung councils collect recycling from a single bin: the fewest bins are at Dumfries and Galloway and Isles of Scilly with one.
Oldham has bins for refuse; paper and cardboard; glass, cans and plastic; garden and food waste; and kitchen waste.
Neighbouring Tameside has five but one is for textiles, not food waste.
Rochdale has only four — refuse; glass, cans and plastic; paper and cardboard; and garden materials.
Other key findings are: the average number of bins into which residents in the UK are required to sort their waste is four, but 58 councils collect six or more bins.
Chris Daniel, policy analyst at the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “Having to sort rubbish into numerous bins often frustrates taxpayers.”
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