Council apologises for wave of missed bin collections

A bin lorry worker in orange hi-vis T-shirt and trousers is tipping a recycling bag into a bin lorry in a residential street. The lorry is bright green and has cartoons showing where workers place different recycling materials.
Image caption,

Some residents say they have waited three weeks for recycling to be taken

  • Published

A councillor has apologised to residents whose bin collections have been missed due to "driver shortages".

Many households in North Somerset – including those in Weston-super-Mare, Nailsea, Portishead and surrounding areas – have experienced missed collections for recycling and garden waste this summer.

The BBC understands some residents have waited up to three weeks for collections. Recycling is normally collected weekly while garden waste, a paid service, is collected fortnightly.

North Somerset Council's Mark Canniford told BBC Radio Bristol: "We've got to apologise. No one is happy with this scenario, my bins were late this week. Everyone's suffering with the same problem."

Speaking to the BBC, one resident said: "With the gulls, if the rubbish isn't covered properly, it goes all over the road.

"It's awful. And of course, [it's worse] with the hot weather. I don't understand it."

Mark Canniford, a middle-aged man with grey-speckled stubble, and wearing a blue check shirt, stands in front of North Somerset Town Hall in Weston-super-Mare. Not much of the building is in the picture but a sign for it is behind him.
Image caption,

Mr Canniford has apologised to residents for the situation

Mr Canniford said it was not an exclusively "North Somerset problem". The UK is currently 20,000 to 40,000 bin lorry drivers short, he said.

He said part of the problem was the high demand for time off during summer.

"It's hot, people want to be on their holidays," he said.

"These were pre-booked a long time ago, then we find we got a shortage. It makes it really difficult."

North Somerset Council is appealing for locals to help drive its bin lorries and said anyone with a HGV licence should contact them.

Mr Canniford said: "You can expect things to go back to normal.

"I'm not saying we won't have these problems again in the future, simply because of the HGV issues, but we're trying to find ways and work around that."

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