MY mate refuses to pay his bin charges. But he wont
find himself up in court because he deals with his own
rubbish. His solution could well be the answer to many
peoples waste problems.
Richard Crisp comes from Lowestoft, the most easterly
town in Britain, where men are men and fish are nervous.
Faced with the privations of the chilly North Sea, Lowestoft
men evolved into a practical lot.
Arriving in north Kildare Richards local waste
company wanted some e340 annually to deal with his rubbish.
Instead, he deals with it himself for around e30. How
does he do it?
Firstly, he recycles absolutely everything that can
be recycled. He separates plastic, paper, cans (he has
a good few of those) and so on.
Then he has a compost bin where he throws in his grass
cuttings, veggie skins and so on. Finally, he has a
wheelie bin for his rubbish.
Hes careful not to buy too much packing when he
does his shopping, buying loose veg and so on.
His bin takes two months to fill. Then he goes to the
amenity centre where they charge him around e5 to dump.
Getting rid of the recyclables is, of course, free.
And the compost bin provides free compost.
It mightnt suit everyone as a system, but everyone
could surely follow part of the way.
Why I paid up
I WAS not of a mind to pay my bin (environmental) charge
and I detailed my reasons why in this column.
It was mainly because I believed that the environmental
part of the name was bogus. Consequently, I didnt
pay up for a long time.
However, the provision of a green bin convinced me to
give the charge the benefit of the doubt. The green
bin has transformed recycling in my house and its
one of those things that has you scratching your head
and wondering why it wasnt introduced years ago.
I live in South Dublin County Council where the charge
is still flawed. Firstly, it is a flat tax and takes
no account of people trying to reduce the amount of
waste going to landfill. (The Fingal tag system is much
better). Secondly, again, it is a flat tax and undermines
the principles of our generally progressive income tax
system. Thirdly, it puts no pressure on the primary
producers of most of the waste - manufacturers.
So the charge isnt perfect. But it can be improved
and the pressure should not be on abolishing it but
on making it do the job its supposed to do - to
minimise waste.
I dont buy the double taxation argument.
Theres nothing wrong with local taxation or charges.
In fact, local government and local democracy is a sham
without them.
Let them go
IT is truly sickening to see manifestly decent people
like Joe Higgins and Clare Daly in jail while the chancers
and grafters of tribunal-land walk the streets with
impunity.
The idea that everyone must obey the law
is utterly laughable. Utterly laughable.