Archive - Sunday, 18 January 2009


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Modern life is rubbish: litter is everywhere on Dorset streets

IT might only be a mile long, but the walk to work is quite conclusive when it comes to establishing whether Britain has a litter problem. The streets, hedges and gardens between Charminster and the centre of Bournemouth were full of rubbish this morning and they looked no dirtier than when I normally walk through them.

WALK ON BY: The amount of litter on my mile-long journey to work is staggering WALK ON BY: The amount of litter on my mile-long journey to work is staggering

Yet unlike most days, today I’m tallying up the amount of litter I spot on the way – not scouring through shrubs or looking under cars, you understand, just going about my usual walk and noting down what rubbish I see. The results aren’t good.

In this short journey there were nearly 120 discarded cans and plastic bottles, 23 cigarette packets, 28 bits of takeaway packaging and many other items, which bizarrely included an X-rated DVD case, a toothbrush and a bike tyre.

However, I don’t pass a single bin.

Yet this is not a problem confined to the streets of Bournemouth, it’s a nationwide issue. So much so that since 1960 the amount of litter dropped in Britain has increased 500 per cent, costing the tax-payer more than half a billion pounds a year to clean up.

Robin Bawtree, director of the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE), said: “It’s a major problem. When you drive along any road you can see all the litter in the verges – it’s a disgrace.

“People are coming to nice towns in the countryside like those in Dorset and are rather shocked when they see areas covered in litter.”

The CPRE is running a campaign to reduce the amount of litter dropped in Britain, some of which killed or injured 69,000 animals last year and has helped our rat population boom to 60 million.

So what can be done?

With no bin in sight on my walk to work, it’s tempting to argue more are needed. However, this would cost money, and even if there were bins on every corner some people still wouldn’t use them.

“We put bins all through the town centre, but we still have a litter issue,” says Dave Holman, operations manager for street cleansing at Bournemouth council. “They don’t solve the problem.”

So what will?

Robin Bawtree believes stricter enforcement would help.

“We need a few high profile fines for dropping litter,” he said. “It’s a criminal offence to litter and you can receive an on-the-spot fine – but we haven’t got enough authorised people to issue them.”

However, the council is trying to rectify this and employs a small team of officers to warn or fine anyone caught dropping litter.

“We’ve issued more than 100 fixed penalty tickets for littering in the last 12 months – the fine is £75,” says Kevin Ingram, Bournemouth council’s senior environmental civil enforcement officer.

“If we see them dropping litter we advise them of the law and the penalty for doing so – if they pick up the litter they probably get a verbal warning. It depends. We do sometimes give them a fixed-penalty ticket.”

While this might seem like a softly-softly approach, such action has been undermined by other councils fining people for throwing biodegradable apple cores away.

Perhaps some gentle encouragement is also needed?

In many countries consumers get money back for returning empty bottles and cans. I have seen this work well in Sri Lanka, Australia and even at last year’s Isle Of Wight festival – where revellers were given 2p for every cardboard cup they handed to bar staff.

It was also in place in Britain during the sixties, which could explains why there was less litter then.

“You used to get 5p for every empty drinks bottle you returned,” says Robin. “This used to work well and would be effective if reintroduced.”

Robin also believes fast food restaurants and supermarkets can do more to help.

“They are trying, but I think they can do more,” says Robin. “They could put more bins near their premises and cut down on packaging. That’s a major problem, as everything is packaged.”

While a combination of these things could help clean up Britain, if we are going to see a decrease in the amount of litter being dropped, it is attitudes that really need to change.

“We accept it because it’s there,” says Robin. “What we’re trying to do is to get rid of it and attach a bit of a stigma to littering.”


Comments (21)

18/01/09

Gastines says...

How many times does the same point have to be made.Perhaps Bournemouth Councillors should take a walk around these areas and see that the whole town,commercial areas included are filthy. If the so-called cleaning contracts are "Outsourced" it's about time the contracts were cancelled and directly employed staff with a local interest in keeping the area tidy were employed.It might even encourage a bit more pride in the town.

18/01/09

Moon - Face says...

I've noticed an increase in litter where I live, in Winton, but it looks more like household rubbish from the bins rather than just "normal" dropped litter. The more bizzare items mentioned in the report could also have come from bins. It seems to have got a lot worse since the cold weather at the start of December, I'm wondering if anything has changed with the dustbin rounds,etc, resulting in more spillage. I really started to notice this over Christmas and since, when the streets looked "scrappy"

18/01/09

Laurie Marsh says...

Instead of giving petty criminals a slap on the wrist and a warning, why not give them an orange jacket and an armful of sacks and send them out to clean things up?
Or better still, install some civic pride in the population!

18/01/09

wonderway says...

Perhaps we start at the root of the problem teach your children from a early age to place rubbish in the bins provided, Then Mr Ingram should do tours of infants and junior schools and work with teachers to teach our youngsters. Then senior schools at this level make them aware the they can recieve heavey fines. The Neighbourhood Wardens do clean ups with local children from young as 4yrs old in the parks in Boscombe with their parents. Teach from young age, get officers from council teachers and parents involved. Watsons do a great job see them every day picking up litter that is dropped by people to lazy to walk 2 feet to put rubbish in bin. Fast food outlets can be enforced to place bins outside their businesses and pick up their customers rubbish up to certain distances from the doors before they close, but council' Night Time Ecomony officer and enforcement do not ensure this is done even if it is in the remit to do so Face it we are a lazy disrespectful society we have to be re-taught civic pride and it has to be done by parents, teachers and council officers like Mr ingram can fine them hard but efforcement have to do their bit to educate before being heavy handed

18/01/09

Nickolai says...

Receiving money for taking back empty bottles and cans wasn't just around in the sixties - we were still doing it in highcliffe in the 80's !
Unfortunately, litter is just another example of a lack of respect and sense of pride in where you live - there is nothing worse than litter-covered verges and pavements, it looks awful.
If you drop litter rather than putting it in a bin, then your a thick cacker.

18/01/09

MICHAELJCARPENTER2003@YAHOO.CO.UK says...

HAVING MONEY BACK ON BOTTLES WILL NOT WORK NOWADAYS AS SHOPS ARE SUPPLIED BUY BIG SUPLIERS (BOOKERS, MISCO AND OTHER DISCOUNT SUPPLIERS) RATHER THAN THE MAKERS OF THE DRINKS, SO THERE IS NO INCENTIVE TO STORE AND RETURN THE BOTTLES BACK TO THE SUPPLIERS.

18/01/09

Laurie Marsh says...

Michael,
In S. Aust. the State gov. insists that a 5 cent deposit is made on every bottle, this is not a fortune but the local kids ensure that there are no bottles anywhere!

18/01/09

no vested interest says...

Ah! the perennial problem of the British Litterbug through the ages,rich or poor the problem never gets better.Although the place I call home is overseas and not Poole or Bournemouth anymore,the litter problem in hometown U.K.,just seems to get worse on each return visit. Where I live now the problem was just as bad 32 years ago when I first got here, but over the years has changed out of all recognition. One of the main reasons was the recycling of paper/plastic,metal & glass drink containers etc.The city suburb I live in was the one of first councils in the world just over 20 years ago,to sponser the bins to put litter/refuse into and encourage private enterprise to make a profit by picking it up. After all these years this system has become part of the culture,the public are used to it and the councils are not so heavy handed in encouraging the public to use it.Everytime I return to the Poole lately,I'm amazed at the draconian attitude of the local council's to recycling,as the local people I meet are so angered by it. Subsequently where I live now the public do not drop litter because they are used to cooperating with a recycling system that encourages and not coerce's people to use it. The result is even though I live in the city the person in the street feels a little more responsible for cleaning up after its self and cor blimey the private sector can make a profit out of it too,amazing.If councils in the U.K. use recycling laws as another excuse or reason to turn the screw on the public's right's and liberty's to make their own choices because they're getting so overpaid to do it,then they will.So said council appear's to the their constituent's to act like some Soviet style Secret Police state and frighten the proud citizens of said town into dumb and dumber behavior.Well then,it does'nt take a brain surgeon to work out that lo and behold the public will not give a monkey's toss about the detrius it leaves behind it,will it then.So as I usually say to the voters of Poole/Bournemouth,pa
y council's well for being enterprising and treating its employer's,the public,with the respect they deserve but sack the lot of them if they dont,you have to vote in council election's.They used to say the answer lie's in the soil but these days the excuse for the abuse seems to be in the refuse,nice one N.V.I.

18/01/09

GB1980 says...

Never mind takeaway boxes and x-rated DVD cases, how many cigarette ends were there? That is the biggest problem and should be punishable by public execution.
The kids responsible just get a slap on the wrist and let off. It's political correctness gone mad.
My mother is 85 and I have children.

18/01/09

dopey says...

I read with interest and agree with your dialogue, however, I couldn't work out what part of the world your Utopia is. Guess Singapore ?

18/01/09

alumchineboy2 says...

here in Alum Chine the council have cut back the tree's and vegetation yet exposed years worth of rubbish and haven't even sent someone along to pick up the old stuff - nothing coordinated at all........there again there are no visitors to be upset so its not worth spending the money on wages until easter when they arrive.

18/01/09

signup says...

"Never mind takeaway boxes and x-rated DVD cases, how many cigarette ends were there? That is the biggest problem and should be punishable by public execution."

Whys is a cigarette butt any worse than any other kind of litter? Is it just because you hate smokers?
People like you should be tortured to death for suggesting such things.

18/01/09

loopymoo says...

I was brought up to always put my rubbish in a bin or take it home, and have never deliberately dropped any litter. I feel guilty even if I accidentally drop something and it gets blown away so I can't get it back. My 15 year old daughter has been brought up the same way, but I see so many parents throwing their rubbish on the ground, so what example are they setting their children?!
Maybe if people took more responsibility for their own actions and those of their children, this world would be a slightly better place to live in.

19/01/09

GB1980 says...

signup wrote:
"Never mind takeaway boxes and x-rated DVD cases, how many cigarette ends were there? That is the biggest problem and should be punishable by public execution."

Whys is a cigarette butt any worse than any other kind of litter? Is it just because you hate smokers?
People like you should be tortured to death for suggesting such things.

How come you get a £75 fine for dropping a cigarette end then?
Tortured to death? You should be hung, drawn and quartered for suggesting such things.

Elf n safety gone mad.

19/01/09

amused says...

It is as stated in comments above, if you teach your children to take litter home they are used to it. I put mine in my pocket if I can't find a bin, when we go to the park or beach we take a carrier bag to take the rubbish home. Chewing gum is far worse than cigarette ends as that horrible stuff sticks and is hard to remove. At least fag ends are biodegradable.

19/01/09

2Much...again! says...

Laurie Marsh wrote:
Instead of giving petty criminals a slap on the wrist and a warning, why not give them an orange jacket and an armful of sacks and send them out to clean things up?
Or better still, install some civic pride in the population!
I mentioned to this to a councillor once, the reply was daft (no surprise there then), apparently it still takes manpower to supervise the people litter picking, and they also need health & safety training before they can do it.
If we didn't live in such a namby pamby country, a lot more ideas like this could be put to good use!

19/01/09

Zzzz says...

You could always do what Victor Meldrew did: follow a litter bug back to their house and then post their rubbish through the letterbox.

19/01/09

amused says...

Zzzz wrote:
You could always do what Victor Meldrew did: follow a litter bug back to their house and then post their rubbish through the letterbox.
Now thats an excellent idea

19/01/09

Cazzam says...

I drive this route to work and quite often see men in high vizzies picking up litter. Agree with all that is said about taking your letter home - why should us taxpayers be footing the bill for those who can't be bothered to shove an empty crisp packet in there pockets till they get home, it's hardly an effort is it.

19/01/09

GB1980 says...

amused wrote:
Zzzz wrote:
You could always do what Victor Meldrew did: follow a litter bug back to their house and then post their rubbish through the letterbox.
Now thats an excellent idea
It's not as if we have a shortage of Victor Meldrews.

19/01/09

paul.p says...

I go Litter picking quite regularly (Litteraction.org Hamworthy Litter Hounds) and the amount of stuff I pick up varies but it's usually Drinks cans/Bottles and Cigarette packets but not many ciggy butts. Industrial estates are to blame for a lot of Litter dropped which blows out onto main roads where either I or the council picks it up. so maybe the Industrial estates should be made to pay extra towards the cost?

Whichever way you look at this problem you have to remember that when 1000's of Holiday makers visit they'll take back 1000's of memories with Litter probably being one of them. So lets give them something else to remember...how tidy the place was!