Additional Wheelie Bin Questions
I have started a new section for these questions so they don’t get lost in the irrelevant, but hopefully entertaining, joust between myself and Anna on the previous article.
Points and Comments from Brian Druce:
1. Park Cottage used to be collected on a Thursday in common with the rest of the village (with a few exceptions). Now we are told that our day will be Wednesday; with Parkwood changed to Friday. No alteration permitted; it is all to do with postcodes. On how many days of the week will bin lorries be thundering up the street?
2. Previously there were up to three lorries each Thursday, i.e. Week A was brown bins/purple bags/black bags. Week B was green bottle box/clear bags/black bags.
3. Will Hill Lane have wheelie bins? Is there now a suitable vehicle to go up there? Or will the residents be exempt?
4. We are told “no dirty foil” but no aluminium foil either. This is unclear.
How are we to dispose of the new energy efficient bulbs when they wear out? What about batteries from torches, radios etc?
5. When the green bin is full, may the green glass collection box be used as well?
FOOD WASTE. The Council has provided us with containers allowing us to dispose of 20+ litres per week! We would have a job to eat that much in a fortnight. As we have compost bins, access to a bonfire and neighbours with hungry animals, we expect our use of this box to be minimal. What an astonishing indictment of our profligate Western society.
In 1960 Vance Packard published his book The Waste Makers. His thesis that business was planning for obsolescence, in a systematic attempt to make us wasteful, has come entirely true.
As so often, society tries to cure the problem by tackling the symptoms and not the cause which I believe is mainly
a. Unbridled consumerism
b. Convenience food
c. The packaging industry.
Anyone who has been faced with, for example, one six inch nail in a blister pack, or a turnip individually shrink wrapped in high grade polythene, will understand what we have to deal with. The Victorian cottager only had to dispose of ashes, broken crockery, and unwanted bottles, which went into a pit at the end of his garden. No dustcarts and binmen in those (happier?) days!
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Mary Mackenzie
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James
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Brian Druce
