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Recycling crews at Welsh council to search bins and hand £70 fines to rule-breakers

Recycling crews at Welsh council to search bins and hand £70 fines to rule-breakers

Recycling crews will rummage through people's bins in a scheme to boost recycling rates in a Welsh county. Caerphilly county council's recycling advisory teams could dish out £70 fines to repeat offenders who throw recyclable materials into their general waste bins.
Fines will only be used as a last resort if previous attempts to engage and educate repeat offenders are unsuccessful. Councillor Chris Morgan, cabinet member for waste, told colleagues that the county's residents are producing 410kg of residual waste each year compared to a national average of 360kg.
Research in 2023 found 59% of general waste bins' contents was actually recyclable. Failing to hit national recycling targets runs the risk of multimillion-pound Welsh Government fines.
Under the new penalty system residents will first receive a leaflet outlining what should be placed in each container or bin. Incidents of "non-compliance" will be dealt with by a recycling advice team visit and a letter explaining the breach.
A second incident would result in another letter and a so-called section 46 notice telling the resident involved they have a legal duty to separate their waste.
A third incident would ultimately lead to a £70 fixed penalty notice – which would be reduced to £35 if paid within two weeks.
Speaking at a cabinet meeting the council's waste strategy officer Hayley Jones said teams had "engaged with several thousand residents" on the existing recycling scheme coinciding with a sharp uptick in food waste collections.
"As well as the positive impact that removing the material would have... there are significant financial savings that can be achieved, particularly if we can divert food waste," she said.
This is because the cost of sending food waste for anaerobic digestion is cheaper than sending general waste for incineration.
"When we are using the anaerobic facility it's a real circular economy because it's in our county borough," added council leader Sean Morgan.
The council has launched an online tool, Recycle Right, where residents can check how to dispose of various items and materials.

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Tredegar House to be transformed into bumblebee sanctuary
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Tredegar House to be transformed into bumblebee sanctuary

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Students split on Welsh Bacc as some brand it 'waste of time' but others back it
Students split on Welsh Bacc as some brand it 'waste of time' but others back it

Wales Online

time3 hours ago

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Students split on Welsh Bacc as some brand it 'waste of time' but others back it

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Sign up for our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here. Article continues below Sam, 16, and Ioan, 17, say the 100%-coursework qualification piles on workload and stress at already pressured exam time. This means they don't have as much time for their other three A-levels, which could affect their grades. After reading their comments teenagers, parents, former students, and others responded to our story on Instagram with differing views. Some said the Welsh Bacc, as it's colloquially known, was valuable while others agreed with Sam and Ioan that it wasn't useful for them and shouldn't be compulsory.. The qualification holds Ucas points and is officially considered equal to an A-level. 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Sam is studying A-level law, sociology, and politics and wants to do a civil service apprenticeship, not university, after A-levels and he said the Welsh Bacc could be useful for some but not all students and they should be able to decide. Ioan, 17, who is studying politics, psychology, and sociology A-levels plus the Welsh Bacc, wants to go to university to study politics. ‌ The pair also argue that the stress the Welsh Bacc caused already under-pressure students went against the Welsh Government's own wellbeing guidance which, ironically, is part of the course. "We are campaigning for a policy change where colleges still get the funding if Welsh Bacc is optional," said Ioan, 17, adding: "The Welsh Government claims it is optional when in practice it is compulsory. The Welsh Bacc will not be useful to me but this isn't just about me." He claimed "the Welsh Bacc is not in the slightest bit as valuable as an A-level". 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The Advanced level is particularly relevant for those pursuing higher education with its Ucas points equivalent to an A-level." The Skills Challenge Certificate is a key part of the course and is assessed through four areas: an individual project, enterprise and employability challenge, global citizenship challenge, and community challenge. To achieve the Welsh Bacc learners must also meet specific requirements related to GCSEs in English or Welsh language, and mathematics or mathematics-numeracy. Article continues below

Plans for 31 ‘affordable' Bodelwyddan homes take step closer
Plans for 31 ‘affordable' Bodelwyddan homes take step closer

Rhyl Journal

timea day ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Plans for 31 ‘affordable' Bodelwyddan homes take step closer

In September 2023, Wales & Wales Housing lodged an application to demolish a bungalow and build 31 affordable 'general need' homes on Bryn Morfa. Denbighshire County Council's planning committee approved this in November 2024, but with 17 conditions attached; four of which have now been satisfied. The 31 new homes will comprise 19 houses and six apartments and bungalows each, with a planning statement saying: 'The proposed scheme is now a 100 per cent affordable housing scheme, to meet an overriding and pressing need for affordable housing in the county. 'Access to the site requires the purchase and demolition of existing bungalow on Bryn Morfa. 'By demolishing the existing bungalow on Bryn Morfa, the site can be developed to its full potential, providing units which complement the size, scale and mix of the existing surrounding houses and bungalows.' Though the council's planning committee granted this application planning consent, it attached conditions which included: Yesterday (June 4), the planning committee approved the developer's responses to these four conditions. Regarding Welsh language, it said: 'The proposed scheme will be given a Welsh name. The names 'Llys Morfa', 'Cae Morfa' and 'Llys y Cae' are being considered. 'An application will be made to the council's licensing team to confirm a Welsh name. 'All signs/notices will be bilingual and displayed on site throughout the construction phase of the development. 'The proposed scheme will have a Welsh name, and all on-site signage will be bilingual.' In terms of biodiversity, 18 trees are to be planted in the communal areas of the site, while a 'nest box' and 'bat tube' will also be incorporated. Prior to the application be approved, concerns had been raised about such factors as a loss of green land, an increase in traffic on a narrow street, and the safety of children playing outside. At a planning meeting last July, Cllr Jon Harland, seconded by Cllr Arwel Roberts, proposed that the application be refused, arguing that the site was not suitable as grassland and shrubs would be destroyed. But this proposal was voted down 12-4 by members.

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