Changes to waste recycling centres proposed to save money

Cheshire East Council is currently considering four options for the future of its household waste recycling centre provision to enable them to make savings.

The Authority currently has nine sites in the borough and has been considering closing some, reducing opening hours and introducing new charges to generate an income.

Don Stockton, Regeneration Portfolio Holder, said "We need to make crucial decisions to ensure our household waste centres provide the best value for money option to residents. This consultation is focused on a specific service, but it is clearly linked to the wider Pre-Budget Consultation document published last week that set out the Council's response to potential medium term funding reductions for the period 2017 to 2020."

The first option being considered is to close their smallest and least efficient sites at Arclid and Poynton and make additional savings through reducing opening times.

The sites are currently open 12 hours in summer (May to August 8am - 8pm), 8 hours in winter (November to February, 8am - 4pm) and 10 hours in spring/ autumn (March, April, September and October, 8am - 6pm). The proposal is to reduce the opening hours at all sites to 8.30 - 5pm summer (April-September) and 8.30 - 4pm in winter (October – March). They would also close minor sites two days a week, introduce charitable reuse shops at the three largest sites (Crewe, Macclesfield and Knutsford) and generate an income by opening the sites to trade waste from small traders in the construction industry. This would provide estimated savings of £775,000.

Option two would reduce the number of sites to three (Crewe, Macclesfield and Knutsford) while maintaining the current opening hours. They would also generate income by introducing a charge for the deposit of non household waste in the rubble skip. This would provide estimated savings of £960,000.

Option three includes closing Arclid and Poynton and generating an income by introducing a charge for the deposit of non household waste in the rubble skip. Additionally savings would be made through reducing opening times but keeping all sites open seven days a week. Charitable reuse shops would be opened at Crewe, Macclesfield and Knutsford and income would be generated by opening sites to trade waste from small traders in the construction industry. This would provide estimated savings of £1,022,000.

The final option, which is the Council preferred option, is to close Arclid only, which the smallest and least efficient site, from the 1st April 2017. Additionally they would generate income by introducing a charge for the deposit of non household waste in the rubble skip and opening sites to trade waste from small traders in the construction industry. Whilst savings would be made through reducing opening times but keeping all sites open seven days a week. This would provide estimated savings of £726,000.

The survey for the household waste centre consultation, which will run until January 10th 2017, can be completed online.

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Comments

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below.

DELETED ACCOUNT
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 12:32 pm
Poynton recycling centre is packed out at all material times. It is open 7 days a week and regularly has above 80% for recycling. How is this inefficient? As to a charge for putting items in the "rubble skip" - this is the remains of bricks etc and it is sold on as "hardcore waste" and recycled into aggregates so Cheshire East wants to make money twice from this by charging people to deposits their broken plates, remains of old bricks there. This is a plan from the same Councillor who proposes to buy land in Crewe as a speculative venture.
Pete Taylor
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 12:55 pm
How much will it cost CEC to remove all the rubbish from roadsides and lay-byes which will be fly-tipped when the recycling centres close?
This is a plan from the same Councillor who stops the green bin collection two months early.
Nick Jones
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 2:42 pm
Charitable re-use stops, is a great idea... Realistically that will amount to Furniture / Clothing and non-electrical goods, as there would be a cost to PAT testing (Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations).
But In the inverse logic of CEC 'News speak'… Saving money (as demonstrated by the many previous threads on this site, not repeated here) .... means quite the opposite . ‘Crucial decisions to ensure households (Taxpayers and voters) are provided with the best value for money’.. should start with rapidly merging CE and CW and applying some common sense to requirement needs.
Julian Barlow
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 4:04 pm
Any idiot can "save money" by not providing the service they're being paid for- Under any other circumstances this would be known as a scam. If there was a genuine desire to make savings, there'd be a clamp down on exorbitant pay outs to senior management and less squandering of tax payers cash on ill conceived projects (Lyme Green anyone?)

The Council are only too happy to tell us about their environmental concerns when it suits them, until it's pointed out that limited wheelie bin collections and the closure of local refuse sites will create a greater number unnecessary car trips-All of a sudden everyone starts to cough and look at their shoes.

One of the greatest contributions to public health has been sanitation and the ability to
dispose of our waste safely. Combine this new idiotic proposal with CEC's reluctance to turn on the street lights and it would appear that they are trying to drag us back to the dark ages.
Terry Roeves
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 5:05 pm
Bollington has its own tip. We have nothing, nor does Handforth.
Yet again Wilmslow the cash cow is about to be abused by CEC.
Cllr Menlove please sort it! Your job. What has this to do with Regeneration?
Pete Taylor
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 7:26 pm
Don Stockton, Regeneration Portfolio Holder, is the CEC Cllr. for Lacey Green, Wilmslow, I'm not sure why Terry is asking the Lyme Green Cllr. to sort this out.
Terry Roeves
Wednesday 23rd November 2016 at 8:09 pm
Rod = Environmental Agency Liason Group.
Simon Worthington
Thursday 24th November 2016 at 9:18 am
This is a fairly simple job and the council proves yet again that they are not up to the job of providing the service for which they charge handsomely. Where do we find them and why do we have such a bunch of dreamers in charge?
Graham Jackson
Thursday 24th November 2016 at 4:55 pm
Closing Arclid site, just as Holmes Chapel is seeing a huge growth in new housing development - makes sense, not, and yet with perfect timing two weeks ago we get introduced to the CEC 'fly tipping' hot squad - another PR 'stellar performance' from CEC.
Laurie Atterbury
Thursday 1st December 2016 at 5:57 pm
I always found it amazing that, when CEC started to recycle plastic, that we actually got our grey wheelie’s back! At the time CEC called them silver wheelie’s so you can see how they exaggerate and interpret things; they do live in a different world to their clients.