Greenwash Capital – how serious is Bristol about tackling fly-tipping?

Greenwash Capital – how serious is Bristol about tackling fly-tipping?

I am indebted to my friend Julien Weston for the images below of yesterday’s fly-tipping on Jane Street, a notorious fly-tipping hotspot just off Church Road in the Redfield area of Bristol (posts passim).

Jane Street fly-tipping photo 1

Jane Street fly-tipping photo 2

After 18 months of the Tidy BS5 campaign (both formally with UP Our Street and informally with residents acting on their own initiative. Ed.) to tackle litter and fly-tipping in Bristol’s Easton and Lawrence Hill wards, the cleanliness of the city’s streets doesn’t seem to be getting any better. Indeed it seems to be getting worse.

Furthermore, statistics released by central government recently reveal that Bristol is the filthiest of the West Country local authorities when it comes to fly-tipping. Fly-tipping reported to the four unitary authorities that comprise the former Avon County Council area during the 2014-15 financial year are as follows:

  • B&NES – 530;
  • South Gloucestershire – 1,359;
  • North Somerset – 2,343;
  • Bristol – 9,709.

Jane Street and the rest of Easton and Lawrence Hill wards are part of the Ashley, Easton & Lawrence Hill Neighbourhood Partnership. According to the city council’s website the Neighbourhood Partnership (NP) has the following purpose:

The Neighbourhood Partnership (NP) is about residents working with the Council to influence decisions. Its aim is to use local knowledge to make better decisions about what needs doing. It also has a small budget to spend on local improvements.

At the last NP meeting on Monday, 5th October 2015, the report of the Neighbourhood Partnership Co-ordinator promised the following change in the Area Action Plan in respect of Lawrence Hill/Church Road corridor where Jane Street is situated:

Increase responses to the ongoing problems of fly-tipping in Lawrence Hill, mainly Jane Street, Morton Street, Thomas Street, Ducie Road Car Park and Lawrence Hill.

The evidence of one’s eyes reveals that if there has been any increase in the local authority’s response, it must be starting from a very low, if not to say, almost non-existent base.

The fact that Bristol City Council allows this level of filth during its year as European Green Capital – and is seemingly helpless or hapless in tackling it – is an eloquent indictment of its treatment of its less prosperous wards like Lawrence Hill and Easton.

According to the European Green Capital website, the justification behind the establishment of the European Green Capital award is that:

Urban areas concentrate most of the environmental challenges facing our society but also bring together commitment and innovation to resolve them. The European Green Capital Award has been conceived to promote and reward these efforts.

If Bristol is prepared continually to tolerate the “environmental challenge” of high levels of persistent fly-tipping in its less prosperous districts, as well as lacking the commitment and innovation to resolve them, then I believe the city was awarded the European Green Capital accolade on false pretences.

Litter and fly-tipping are not only unpleasant to look at and live with day after day, they’re a hazard to health – both physical and mental.

Come on Bristol City Council, get your finger out and let’s not just have a tidy BS5, but a tidy city generally! Let’s see if you’re really prepared to deal with this serious level of environmental crime or are just going to carry on making placatory noises to angry residents who despair at your inability and inaction.

Footnote: my opinion of Bristol City Council’s ability and motivation to get to grips with environmental crime in Lawrence Hill and Easton has not been improved by the fact that I have reported 16 instances of fly-tipping – matching my highest daily count to date – to the local authority today. Help lighten my load by reporting fly-tipping too!

Author: Steve Woods

Generic carbon-based humanoid life form.

2 thoughts on “Greenwash Capital – how serious is Bristol about tackling fly-tipping?

  1. Jules

    Well said Woodsy. As you and I know, Jane St has been a persistent problem for at least 15 years now. It’s time for action. Here is my suggestion:

    Remove the bins completely from Jane St and Lawrence Hill itself.

    Convert a small area in the far corner of Ducie Road Car Park into an official waste reception site.

    Educate local people who might not be fully aware of or understand anti-fly tipping laws in the UK to use this facility instead.

    Clear such site on a daily basis.

    Make traders fully aware of their responsibilities and if they continue to ignore them, prosecute them, but still let them use the local reception site to place their waste (for a fee?)

    Not all people in the inner city have their own transport to visit Days Road. Not all people have enough money to pay for council collections of large items. Not all people in Lawrence Hill have somewhere to store their waste.

    Hence the persistent problem. Sticks alone will not do. Without some fresh thinking and a new approach, the issue of Jane St is NEVER going to be solved.

    1. Steve Woods Post author

      Some excellent ideas there, Jules.

      Let’s hope a passing council officer with sufficient nous reads (and acts upon) them! 🙂

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