Proposals for how household waste recycling centre services in Cheshire East could be provided in the future will be discussed by the Council next week.
Cheshire East Council needs to reduce spending by £100 million over the next four years.
At the 26th September meeting of the council's environment and communities committee, members will consider proposals for how household waste recycling centres (HWRCs) will be run.
The recommended option is
- To maintain sites at Alsager, Crewe, Macclesfield and Knutsford and to retain the mobile HWRC service that has been operating since August – expanding its reach to cover more rural areas.
- Extended weekday opening hours across summer months would also be retained, as would a booking system for visiting HWRCs during weekends and Bank Holidays.
- Bollington, Poynton and Middlewich HWRCs, which are currently under an emergency closure, would not reopen.
Councillor Mick Warren, chair of Cheshire East Council's environment and communities committee, said: "In Cheshire East, we currently provide one of the highest levels of HWRC provision per 100,000 of the population in the country, and we provide the longest opening hours for our customers in comparison to most other councils.
"While we understand that the option of reducing HWRCs was not supported through feedback from the consultation, keeping services as they are now is simply not affordable.
"Each of our seven household waste recycling centres needs investment to bring them up to modern standards to comply with new safety regulations – amounting to more than £1.2m in total.
"This investment is in addition to the significant annual maintenance and running costs of these sites, which continue to rise.
"The council is under significant financial pressure, as shown in the council's medium-term financial strategy, and forecasting for this year already shows that this pressure is rising further – we must make difficult decisions and reduce our spending."
Subject to committee's approval, the changes are targeted to go live from 1 September 2025 once a new contract for the provision of HWRCs is in place, with the emergency arrangements for HWRCs that are currently in place continuing until then.
Cllr Warren added: "If implemented, the option we are recommending focuses our limited resources on the sites that receive the highest use, while also ensuring that the vast majority of our residents are still within a 20-minute drive time of a HWRC, which meets national statutory guidance.
"Our proposals will also ensure that residents living in more rural areas can also access an adequate level of service through the mobile HWRC.
"We are proposing to expand the mobile service to cover eight areas where residents are not within a 20-minute drive time of a HWRC site, or to areas where data indicates that incidents of fly tipping are at an increased level."
Click here to read the full report for the environment and communities committee meeting on 26th September.
Comments
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Recycling Centres exist specifically as a public facility to reduce damaging landfill, recycle reusable materials and reduce carbon emissions.
The relative nickels and dimes saved by the council will pale into insignificance compared with the environmental damage caused by the additional vehicle mileage, time and energy expended by households having to travel considerably further to a Recycling Centre. To say nothing of the inevitable increase in fly-tipping.