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‘Every’ household faces black bin inspection with risk of £100 fine

ALL households in a Welsh county have been targeted by black bin bag inspectors.

‘Every’ household faces black bin inspection with risk of £100 fine

“Every” household in one county have had their black bin bag waste inspected by council officials during the last eight years. ALL households in a Welsh county have been targeted by black bin bag inspectors.

At a meeting of Blaenau Gwent County Borough Council’s Economic Development and Environment Management scrutiny committee on Tuesday, October 21 councillors received an annual report on the authority’s Waste and Recycling performance for 2024/2025.

While the recycling rate went up from 66.18 per cent for 2023/2024 to 68.89 per cent in 2024/2025 it still fell short of the 70 per cent recycling rate. Cllr Gareth Alban Davies (Independent group – Rassau and Garnlydan) asked questions around the council’s Waste Wardens.

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Cllr Davies said: “We are reliant on the public to tell us about their neighbours who are not putting out any or very little recycling – Waste Wardens obviously respond to that.

“A lady contacted me to say that she put out four black bags every three weeks and felt she was recycling everything.

“A waste warden paid her a visit and vastly reduced how much black bag waste she puts out.

“Do wardens go out on a black bag day with our collectors and see who is putting out a lot of rubbish and then advise them accordingly?”

Andrew Long, who manages of the council’s frontline enforcement services, answered: “The wardens are very proactive in all the work they do the main enforcement tool we use at the moment is the – ‘keeping up with the Jones’ campaign.”

Mr Long said: “Over the last six to eight years every property in the county borough has had an enforcement visit so that’s over 32,000 homes.

“The work involves taking a black bag out of someone’s presented residual waste, photograph and log it and take it to the Silent Valley HWRC (Household Waste and Recycling Centre) and examine it for any recyclable material it might contain.

“If people are identified as putting out recyclate in their residual waste then we take an enforcement process which involves serving a legal notice and FPN (fixed penalty notice) and prosecution if that isn’t paid.”

Mr Long said: “There’s a large body of work that the guys do proactively in addition to the crews notifying us where waste is being presented on collection days and we will subsequently monitor those addresses if there’s repeat offending.

“We’re very proactive when it comes to targeting non-compliant properties.”

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