STIRLING city council will spend $12 million to move to a three-bin collection by July 2015, with ratepayers slugged an extra $37 per year to pay for it.
The council was forced to abandon its single-bin system after the Atlas recycling facility in Mirrabooka unexpectedly closed last August.
The facility had achieved a 65 per cent recycling rate over 10 years, from just one kerbside bin.
Since the plant’s closure the council has recycled virtually none of its kerbside waste, dumping nearly 7000 tonnes of rubbish in landfill every month (Voice, May 3, 2014).
“Our recycling record hasn’t been good over the last six months, largely due to matters out with our control,” Cr David Michael concedes.
Under the new system, households will receive a 140-litre red-lid general waste bin, a 240-litre yellow-lid bin for co-mingled recyclables and a 240-litre lime-lid bin for green waste. Red bins will be collected weekly and the yellow and lime bins on alternate fortnights.
Stirling mayor Giovanni Italiano says the council’s track record on recycling waste, prior to the closure of the Atlas facility, was recognised as one of the best in WA.
“While we are keen to see the new system in place as soon as possible, the acquisition process will mean the three-bin system will be introduced next year,” he says.
“If the new bins are used appropriately we will not only see an increase in the amount of waste recycled but also a reduction in the amount of waste going to landfill, which will in turn reduce costs for our ratepayers.”
Between 72 and 84 per cent of ratepayers surveyed were in favour of switching to the multiple bin system.

by STEPHEN POLLOCK

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6 responses to “Stirling flips its lid”

  1. Paul Avatar
    Paul

    For limited space apartments/townhouses like mine this is a disaster. I now need to find extra realestate to bins. As is it their is no extra room so this is just going to make the front of my property look like bins from one side of the street to another (Behind gates but alredy taking up visitor parking) Another bad idea Stirling Council.

  2. Rob Dexter Avatar

    Our 12 unit complex has two enclosures for bins and both are full. Where will we put the other 24 bins? Will the council pay for new enclosures if we can find somewhere to actually build them?! Couldn’t they build a recycling facility of their own?

  3. Michael Avatar
    Michael

    Most councils with the Greens and Recycling bins alternate pick ups on consecutive weeks. Does the “alternate fortnights” collection mentioned above mean that plastic milk bottles(for example), in the recycling bin, have to sit there for up to 4 weeks before collection?

  4. kitty Avatar
    kitty

    im on the body corp of a large 84 unit complex in Wembley and this has been workable on one level and a complete disaster on another. we now need to order skip bins for our larger dumped goods and we get a lot of that and the contractor is rude, bullish and wont access the property unless i am home to let them through the gates. they refuse to take the time to take a buzzer out of a hidden drop box on the property. i cant afford to lose any more money (im self employed) and as we need these skips, we are at a standstill. it takes them SO much longer to empty the bins and now its only once a week. we are overflowing. im all for recycling but this isn’t working

  5. kitty Avatar
    kitty

    also, we have no green bins. masses of green waste building up.

  6. Alan Beckett Avatar
    Alan Beckett

    I ORDERED A GREEN LID BIN WEEKS AGO, ONLY FOR THE DELIVERY GUY TO GIVE IT TO THE WRONG HOUSE, SO STILL WAITING, PHONE CALLS TO STIRLING COUNCIL DOESN’T GET YOU ANYWHERE, JUST THE SAME OLD RUNAROUND, OH THEY ARE VERY BUSY TRYING TO KEEP UP WITH DEMAND, SO IT’S A JOKE IT WAS THERE IDEA TO INTRODUCE THE EXTRA BINS, SO GET A FINGER OUT I NEED THE BIN SICK OF WAITING.

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