Council scraps waste and recycling company to take collections back in-house

Cheshire East Council has announced it is closing both its waste and recycling and bereavement companies because it can make savings by delivering the services themselves.

The council's finance sub-committee decided last month the services provided by its wholly-owned companies, Ansa Environmental Services and Orbitas Bereavement Services Ltd, both created in 2014, are to be brought back-in house and delivered directly by Cheshire East Council.

This includes bin collections, street cleansing, maintenance of green spaces, fleet, social transport, bereavement services and the handyperson service.

Councillor Nick Mannion, chair of Cheshire East Council's finance sub-committee, said: "The decision to bring the services delivered by Ansa and Orbitas back in-house following recent reviews is considered the most efficient way to deliver these services to our residents.

"It will deliver a one-off saving of £1m in 2024/25 to support the council's medium-term financial strategy, followed by a permanent minimum reduction in costs each year of £200k from 2025/26 onwards.

"Over the next four-years, the council is forecasting a funding gap of £100m.

"The council's critical financial position means that we urgently need to transform the organisation to help us to move towards financial sustainability, and to be able to continue supporting those residents who need our help the most.

"The decision to bring the services delivered by Ansa and Orbitas back in-house forms part of this whole-organisation transformation programme and will allow us to look at how we can maximise service efficiency and provide the best value for money for council taxpayers."

Subject to a formal consultation with trade unions and engagement with staff affected by the changes, the new working arrangements are expected to be introduced in a phased approach.

This will start this autumn and finish before the end of March 2025, with Ansa and Orbitas staff members transferred to join the council's existing teams.

Cllr Mannion added: "Our key priorities while these services are brought back in-house are to ensure that high-quality frontline services continue to function efficiently and effectively, to support all staff affected by these changes, and to ensure value for money for the council and our residents.

"I would like to reassure residents that services, including bin collections, will continue as normal throughout this process.

"The council also recognises that both Ansa and Orbitas colleagues bring with them a lot of knowledge, commitment and experience, which will be of great value as the authority moves towards delivering exciting transformational change."

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Comments

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

Tony Haluradivth
Monday 15th July 2024 at 8:37 pm
Mark Goldsmith ...the present system works fine. You are not a typical household. My grandaughter (different name from me)s a 5 person houshold 2 kids and her husband's dear Mum who has early onset Alzheimers at 60. My Grandaughter has a Tot and adult in Diapers . Go figure. We don't need the cost of new bins so stop wasting our money and tell Sam too.
Brian Hall
Wednesday 17th July 2024 at 1:19 pm
Orbitas Developments ??? surely not connected to Orbit Developments of course. When will so call managing bodies realise that buying in so-called expertise is never cost effective e.g. the railways!
Jon Williams
Wednesday 17th July 2024 at 5:34 pm
A company owned by Cheshire East Council

Orbitas is a council-owned and controlled company. The Council have set up a number of companies to deliver services on its behalf. The Council is taking this innovative approach to ensure that levels of service can be maintained or improved upon, at no extra cost to the tax payer.
John Harries
Thursday 1st August 2024 at 1:34 am
Hum, have I got this right. Wasn't ANSA the result of taking the established centralised CEC (and earlier CCC) environmental services (waste collection/disposal/recycling/'cleansing' etc. to us simpletons) into a private (but wholly owned??) initiative that would, and I paraphrase "maximise service efficiency and provide the best value for money for council taxpayers".
So it was a ledger book exercise 10 years ago to save money, improve efficiency and generally provide a really good deal for the ratepayer.....yet now it isn't!
The new light bulb moment is that this vital provision by CEC is "now going to be brought back in-house to ensure that high-quality frontline services continue to function efficiently and effectively, to support all staff affected by these changes, and to ensure value for money for the council and our residents".
Seems to me that CEC have found the civic equivalent of perpetual motion.....