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We Recycle


 

Our mission statement
 

Previously I was a Customer care manager for a large restaurant outlet I was always interested in level of service and customer satisfaction that could be achieved with effort. I have independently invested in APS and strived forward to improve these services to where they are today. It is important that every person I help gets an individual service tailored to their requirements and APS will always act always in the best interests of our clients. APS has survived in business for over 4 years, providing services of many types for many people from all walks of life, in this country and others. Already Property Services will act independently on the behalf of property management and agents but will never merger our business and partner, APS can be hired impartially by anyone, we will act accordingly to the instructions of our clients and their best interests, also help promote the knowledge of legislation and regulations of Duty of Care and the Control of Pollution Amendment act. I intend to help clients to help themselves, saving money, time and stress.  
 


This pages purpose

Waste disposal is a required part of service that APS has had to offer our clients, however they are unaware of the regulations that we have to follow, the guidelines are always changing and public awareness is not always good. This page has been developed for everyone's information. This page is for waste management guidelines and general information to enhance public knowledge for waste disposal and collections within their homes, these sites which have been linked are responsible for there own advice and content.

Already Property Service has provided this web page for our clients and the publics right to find all relevant information easily and promote knowledge, also to show the concerns of change which may affect the current ways we dispose of our every day waste.

Click the all underlined links below for more detailed information on any topic.

If you like the content of this page then please link to it, so more people become aware and find important information that is not found very easily.

Please always remember to use respectable companies that give waste transfer notes and dispose of your waste correctly, under law you are as responsible as they are for disposal under the DUTY OF CARE LEGISLATION.


Artical for
Westcountry Landlords Association News letter
Ref - Waste Transfer Notes
    3/11/09
(
To be published)

 Already Property Services is a licensed waste carrier due to demand of our customers, providing our customers disposal services deemed to be commercial.

Because we are a business we are regulated by the Environment Agency within the Control of pollution Amendment Act, we have to pass all our clients a Waste Transfer Notes when hired for waste collections and disposal from any waste stream type.

 Many small businesses and individuals are still unaware of the implications of hiring a person whom does not hand them a waste transfer note, they unfortunately think it does not concern there business activities, however this paper can be back tracked against your inventories and disposal receipts also investigated by the EA.
Please staple waste transfer notes with your receipts.

The implications are waste carrier can lose his licence or fined if he dismisses his responsibilities and does not provide a note, the client that hires the waste carrier can be just as responsible and liable for prosecution as the carrier.  

In a investigative hind sight, if you operate a property management company or you are a developer or builder, or landlord, you may be expected to produce a certain amount of waste per year, if you have no evidence of waste transfer notes and waste expenses, you could be suspected of moving commercial waste themselves or getting the tenant to get the council to dispose of it on their behalf., or finding other methods. 

Please note civil imminently sites in Plymouth CTTV cameras have been installed to take registration numbers of cars, in other Council boroughs they also use Security Guards to spot the fame old faces that they can prove to be commercial tradesmen. I think this will happen in Plymouth in time. 

Please beware that we all have an obligation to run our businesses correctly,  be aware that waste carriers are being caught and convicted, make sure you are protected, get a waste transfer note.


News In!

Tuesday, June 09, 2009, / 11:00 Fly tipping up 400% in a year
http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/news/TAXING-TIMES-EXPLOSION-FLYTIPPING/article-1060370-detail/article.html

Friday, June 19, 2009, 09:18 / Recession leads to fly tipping plague in Plymouth
http://www.thisisplymouth.co.uk/news/Recession-leads-flytipping-plague-Plymouth/article-1091792-detail/article.html
 



Plymouth which day is your  waste collections A-Z street by street  

ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES

WASTE COLLECTION & STREET SCENE

Department of Development Plymouth City Council Macadam Road, Prince Rock, PL4 0RZ

Tel: 01752 668000
Email: waste.rezoning@plymouth.gov.uk 

www.plymouth.gov.uk 


 

‘Which Day Bin Day’

 If there are any problems contact Kim Hayden in the waste rezoning project team on 01752 304573

Yours sincerely

Waste Rezoning Project Team
 

Other information on all kinds of waste and other issues           www.direct.gov.uk


 

Mattresses can be recycled rather than go to landfill

One of the UK's largest bed and mattress recycling facilities has started operating in the West Midlands.

 

Beds enter the new shredding machines at Dream’s distribution hub in the West Midlands.
 

Beds enter the new shredding machines at Dream’s distribution hub in the West Midlands.

Bed retailer Dreams has installed two new multi-million pound state-of-the-art bed shredders at its distribution hub, to crush and shred old beds and mattresses.

 

The mattresses come from Dreams customers who can pay a small fee for them to be collected as their new beds are delivered.

Click on the link below for more information-

http://www.letsrecycle.com/do/ecco.py/view_item?listid=37&listcatid=217&listitemid=9555

FEAT Enterprises

The Executive offered FEAT Enterprises £50,000 in 2004-05, £44,000 in 2005-06 and £40,000 in 2006-07 for a mattress recycling project based in Fife - covering Fife, Clackmannan and Falkirk - preventing unwanted beds going to landfill. This was the first such project in Scotland, and indeed by 2007 was still the only one in the UK. There was assistance also from the National Lottery's Transforming Waste programme.

Read more click below-

http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/SustainableDevelopment/2050
 


Chelson Meadow Closed! What happens to Plymouths rubbish now?

Residents in Plymouth are being urged to double their recycling efforts ahead of the closure of the city's only landfill site.

Plymouth council's Chelson Meadow landfill site is to close on Monday after more than 40 years
 

Plymouth council's Chelson Meadow landfill site is to close after more than 40 years

On 31 March 2008, the last lorry will tip rubbish into the ground at Chelson Meadow landfill site, which the council claims marks the "end of an era".

 

http://www.letsrecycle.com/do/ecco.py/view_item?listid=37&listcatid=322&listitemid=9830


Council appeals for public support in war on eco crime

Fly tipping in Plymouth cost taxpayers nearly £140,000 in just six months, the City Council revealed today.

From the beginning of December 2007 to the end of May 2008 the Council recorded 3,424 incidents of fly tipping in the city. The total cost - including staff time, vehicles and waste disposal - was £137,424.

Local residents and businesses are now being urged to join the Council in its war on what has become the UK’s biggest eco crime.

Councillor Michael Leaves, Cabinet member for Streetscene and the Environment, said: "This problem is just too big for the Council to tackle alone. Everyone in the city needs to play their part in beating a crime which blights our streets and neighbourhoods, damages the environment and in some cases puts people’s health at risk.

"Those who turn a blind eye to fly tipping or think it’s nothing to do with them should remember they’re ultimately paying the price. Taxpayers have to pay for the clean-up which diverts considerable sums of money from frontline services.”

The Council is determined to prosecute fly tippers who face a maximum fine of up to £50,000 and a jail sentence of up to five years for the worst offences.

But it needs local people to report incidents as they occur, to provide evidence  and be prepared to be called as witnesses.

"We have managed to prosecute a few individuals for fly tipping in the last couple of years but it's usually difficult to bring a prosecution because of a lack of hard evidence,” said Councillor Leaves. This is something we really need the public’s help with and we want to get across the message that this is everyone’s responsibility not just the Council’s.”

Members of the public who witness fly tipping are urged to report it immediately by calling the Council on 01752 304147.

City residents also need to be aware they are committing a crime by using cheap but unscrupulous 'man and van' services for house clearances.

The Council often has to deal with dumped bulky items which appear to be the result of house clearances carried out by rogue traders who sell valuable items and fly tip the rest.

Householders should always check that anyone offering to their remove household or construction rubbish is a registered waste carrier licensed by the Environment Agency.

Before paying someone to remove your rubbish, you should always ask to see their registration document or ask them for their unique carrier number. You can check that this is valid on the Environment Agency website or by calling them on 08708 506 506.

Householders who break these rules face a £300 fixed penalty fine from the Council or prosecution with a maximum fine of £5,000 if convicted. Council officers who deal with fly tipped rubbish always search for evidence which may link it either to the fly tipper or to the house or commercial premises it came from.



 

Waste electrical and electronic equipment Regulations 2006.


The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive (WEEE Directive)aims to minimise the impact of electrical and electronic goods on the environment, by increasing re-use and recycling and reducing the amount of WEEE going to landfill. It seeks to achieve this by making producers responsible for financing the collection, treatment, and recovery of waste electrical equipment, and by obliging distributors to allow consumers to return their waste equipment free of charge.

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive was agreed on 13 February 2003, along with the related Directive on Restrictions of the use of certain Hazardous Substances in electrical and electronic equipment (RoHS).

The implementation of the WEEE Directive in the UK has been delayed. It was due to be transposed into Member State legislation by 13 August 2004 and come into force by 13 August 2005.

The UK Regulations implementing the WEEE Directive were laid before Parliament on 12 December 2006 and enter into force on 2 January 2007.

Amending Regulations were laid before Parliament on 11 December 2007 and will enter into force on 1 January 2008. The WEEE (Amendment) Regulations 2007 will clarify how reuse can be counted as part evidence compliance and the recording of WEEE arising. There are no major policy changes. A report is available on the provisions of the WEEE (Amendment)Regulations 2007 and progress on the development of the UK WEEE system (see below).

Non-Statutory Guidance was published on 28 February, revised in August and updated in December 2007. The main changes in the guidance document reflect the amendments to the WEEE Regulations and the chapters relating to scope, reuse, local authorities/DCFs and evidence.

What is WEEE? There are ten categories of WEEE.?


1. Large household appliances
2. Small household appliances
3. IT and telecommunications equipment
4. Consumer equipment
5. Lighting equipment
6. Electrical and electronic tools
7. Toys, leisure and sports equipment
8. Medical devices
9. Monitoring and control equipment
10. Automatic dispensers.


The WEEE Regulations apply to electrical and electronic equipment (EEE)in the above categories with a voltage of up to 1000 volts AC or up to 1500 volts DC.


Schedule II of the WEEE Regulations provides a list of products falling within these categories.

Hazardous waste
What is hazardous waste?

Hazardous waste is waste that may be harmful to human health or the environment. Examples of hazardous wastes include:

asbestos
chemical wastes
healthcare wastes
electrical equipment containing hazardous components such as cathode ray tubes or lead solder
fluorescent light tubes
Lead-acid batteries
oily sludges
pesticides
solvents.


The European Waste Catalogue (EWC) contains a list of all types of waste and each waste type is given a six-digit code. Hazardous waste is identified in the EWC with an asterisk (*):some wastes, called 'absolute entries', are always classed as hazardous, for example inorganic wood preservatives, waste paint or varnish remover and wastes from asbestos processing other wastes, called 'mirror entries', are classed as hazardous if they are present in amounts above certain threshold concentrations, for example some wastes containing arsenic or mercury. Your environmental regulator has produced guidance that: will help you determine if your waste is hazardous lists the waste types in the EWC provides advice on classifying and assessing hazardous waste.
http://www.netregs.gov.uk/


How Exeter Council manages their waste collections!

Nigel Hillier, Exeter Branch Chairman has been very complimentary about the way Exeter City has made waste recycling accessible to small businesses in an affordable way. Full details are on the link below.
http://www.exeter.gov.uk/index.aspx?articleid=7678
If you think your council could be doing more, check out the link and if you like what is on offer in Exeter, push your council to offer the same.

 


 

Trade waste legislation

Duty of care waste transfer notes

As of 16 July 2005, every business is legally required to classify their waste in accordance with the european waste catalogue which uses 6 digit codes for each type of waste. By law, the new EU legislation now means that all trade customers must complete their waste transfer notes using these codes. As a registered waste carrier, Plymouth City Council cannot accept your trade waste without this coded declaration.

Trade waste legislation


 

www.plymouth.gov.uk

Specialised cleansing

Plymouth city council services

The Street Sweeping Team will remove any hazardous waste by the next working day after it has been reported.

The Street Sweeping Team will give advice on how to dispose, or collect hazardous waste such as clinical waste, broken glass, medicines, car batteries, gas cylinder, spillages, dead animals, asbestos and syringes, call the Waste Enquiry Line on 01752 668000

 
Waste and Street Services
Dept. of Development
Plymouth City Council
Plymouth PL1 2AA
 
Phone :
01752 668000
Email :
streetcleansing@plymouth.gov.uk
Fax :
01752 304786