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  • Single Waste Disposal Authority

    • Reference: 2002/0273-1
    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    The Draft Municipal Waste Strategy sets out a desire to create a single waste disposal authority for London. Bearing in mind many boroughs are already engaged in long-term waste contracts, how do you intend to create this single authority and how will it work? .
  • Recycling Rates (Supplementary) [6]

    • Question by: Brian Coleman
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    I know Mr Duffy is keen to interfere all he can in boroughs. Some of us can't keep him out of our boroughs. Whether or not a borough has wheelie bins I would say is a matter for the borough council, and not for anybody else. Would he accept a scheme that we're about to introduce in Barnet, which is where in the past the Labour administration, if somebody phoned up for a second bin on the grounds that they needed one, just delivered it, our administration tends to send a waste minimisation officer round for advice on why they...
  • Recycling Rates (Supplementary) [13]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    John - both you and Nicky, as the Mayor's Waste Advisor, have told us at the Environment Committee, that the use of wheeled bins by boroughs actually reduces the amount of recycling. Now, from the borough's point of view, wheeled bins are useful because it reduces their cost of collection, and from the householder's point of view, they're convenient. So, are you actually planning, as a part of your approach to waste, to be reducing wheeled bins in London, or are you going to accept them as a reality?
  • Recycling Rates (Supplementary) [14]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    You say you would hesitate if a new wheeled bin scheme was proposed. What form of activity would that hesitation take?
  • Recycling Rates (Supplementary) [20]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    Well, either you think that wheeled bins are a bad thing and you're going to do something about it, or you're going to use them in a positive way, to help to improve people's recycling rates. I can think of several ways that you might actually modify a bin scheme to do that.
  • Recycling Rates (Supplementary) [21]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    Can you envisage yourself turning down a contract because of the size of wheeled bins?
  • Recycling Rates (Supplementary) [22]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    So, it's just words then, really, is it?
  • Single Waste Disposal Authority (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    Which is most likely? Is the Secretary of State amenable to making legislative changes, or will we need to do it ourselves?
  • Single Waste Disposal Authority (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    So are you saying that a London-wide waste authority would have come to a different decision about the Bexley incinerator?
  • Single Waste Disposal Authority (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 13 November 2002
    I suspect local residents wouldn't see the decision as being any better if it was a London decision than a Western Riverside one.