Council slammed for spending £300,000 on storing thousands of unused wheelie bins

Council slammed for spending £300,000 on storing thousands of unused wheelie bins

A council is being blasted for storing thousands of unused wheelie bins and seagull-proof sacks at a secret location at a cost of £300,000. Liberal Democrat campaigners have slammed Cornwall Council’s Conservative regime for storing the bins since 2021 and ‘wasting taxpayers’ money’.

It is being reported that every household in Cornwall was due to receive a new wheelie bin or reusable sack as part of the waste collection contract signed with Biffa before the 2021 council election. But when the Conservatives took control of the council a decision was made to leave the bins in storage at a secret location – which is believed to be near Newquay Airport, according to CornwallLive.

The council has assured residents of Cornwall that they will still receive the bins and sacks, as well as an outdoor food waste caddy and kitchen food waste caddy, as it rolls out its new waste collection system.

But there have been delays to allow for upgrades at recycling sites, meaning the bins and bags have been kept in storage. The precise cost – an eye-watering £303,511.18 – was revealed by a Freedom of Information request made by Liskeard town councillor Naomi Taylor.

Cllr Taylor said the amount of money ‘wasted’ on storing the equipment was outrageous: “Hard-working Cornish taxpayers will be horrified to hear how much money is being wasted by the Conservative-run council. Their excuses are quite simply a load of rubbish.”

Acting Liberal Democrat group leader Cllr Colin Martin agreed, saying that there was ‘no excuse’ and that the the delay was bad for the environment as well as being a waste of money: “Every day across Cornwall, hundreds of bin bags are torn open by birds and animals, and rubbish is spilled into the environment. Aside from looking unsightly, the litter can be a hazard to health and, of course, much of the plastic ends up stuck in our rivers and seas.

“This problem could have been solved years ago if the council had stuck to the Liberal Democrat plan to provide every household with either a wheelie bin or a seagull-proof sack in 2021. There is simply no excuse for spending our money on warehouse storage when these bins could be in use outside our homes.”

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Last year the council agreed to spend an extra £62m on getting ready for a new waste and recycling collection service, which includes new vehicles and facilities to process waste, particularly in relation to food waste.

A Cornwall Council spokesperson said: “As part of changes to rubbish and recycling collections being rolled out in stages over the next two years, every household in Cornwall will receive a new wheelie bin or protective reusable sack, an outdoor food waste caddy and a kitchen food waste caddy. There will be no cost to households for the new bins and the changes will ensure we recycle far more waste in Cornwall than we do currently.

“We purchased the bins in 2021 to ensure prices were fixed as low as possible, and to prevent supply chain issues and inflationary costs of production. To date, it has proven cheaper to store these bins than to purchase them at today’s prices. There have been delays while work continues to upgrade our waste and recycling transfer sites to allow the new waste collection service to start.”

Cornwall Council did not verify if the bins and sacks are being stored near or at Cornwall Airport Newquay. However, it was mentioned by a councillor in a meeting of the council’s customer and support services scrutiny committee yesterday (Tuesday, July 18) that the council leases a former helicopter hangar at the airport in which to store the bins.

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