The Council will use the rest of August
to collect any outstanding garden waste that remains on the street and
residents are asked to leave their garden waste out for collection until it is
picked up. We will collect it as soon as we can and we thank you for your
patience.
The next garden waste collection will
take place after the August Bank Holiday weekend, with a further collection
each month through the autumn. This on-going service will be dependent on
drivers being available. More information will be provided on collection days
towards the end of August.
Moving to monthly garden collections
earlier will, we believe, give us the best chance of maintaining statutory
waste collections – that is general waste, food, hygiene and recyclables.
Ensuring the collection of these waste streams has to be our priority as we
deal with the effects driver shortages and fallout from the pandemic is having
on our workforce.
Residents can help us ease the demand on
services by taking, where possible, their garden waste to our recycling
centres. To help with this, from Monday, August 23, Cardiff Council is:
·
Increasing
the annual allowance for visits to 30 per household rather than 26
·
Increasing
the available slots per day from 400 to 570 (up 42.5%);
·
Allowing
households to make a booking, and visit on the same day where slots are
available
·
Allowing
households to visit up to 3 times per day (this is currently limited to 1) and:
·
Increasing
our opening times, with last available slots for drop offs at 5.30pm (this is
currently 4pm).
These new changes will only apply if you
are visiting in a car.
You will still need to make an
appointment to visit the recycling centres at www.cardiff.gov.uk/recyclingcentres. You will need to bring your booking
confirmation, this can be a digital version, along with proof of Cardiff
residency e.g. your driving licence.
We want you to know that the council is
having to take this action to ensure we can continue to collect statutory waste
streams – general waste, food, hygiene and recyclables.
Like many local authorities
across the UK, Cardiff Council is experiencing unprecedented challenges to
maintain frontline services. 77% of UK councils who responded to a recent
Association for Public Service Excellence (APSE) survey said they were
experiencing difficulties recruiting drivers.
Our frontline staff have worked continuously throughout the pandemic with limited opportunity to take leave due to the impact of Covid-19. As restrictions are eased throughout the UK and beyond, staff are understandably requesting time off to re-charge their batteries in what has been an extremely challenging 18 months. This allied to issues around self isolation, the pingdemic, normal sickness and the shortage of HGV drivers has created a perfect storm.
While
every effort is being made in Cardiff to recruit more HGV drivers, so that garden
waste collections can resume as quickly as possible. The national shortage of
HGV drivers has limited our ability to provide holiday cover via the
recruitment agencies and many other Local Authorities across the UK are facing
similar challenges.
Almost a quarter of the
drivers we require on a daily basis are currently unavailable for work and, due
to the shortage of HGV drivers, recruitment agencies are struggling to provide
staff to cover sickness and holidays, as they would ordinarily do.
At the start of August the
waste and recycling sector wrote an open letter to Home Secretary Priti Patel
expressing concerns about a shortage of trained HGV drivers across the waste
sector, citing that the “UK is currently short of 100,000 HGV drivers” across
the economy in general. The Environmental Services Association (ESA) is
reporting an average of 15% vacancy rates for driving roles across the waste
sector alone and has called on the government to change points-based
immigration rules for trained HGV drivers who have been unable to work in the
UK since Brexit.
COVID cases in Wales remain
high, and with most restrictions now lifted, it is anticipated that our
workforce could continue to be impacted over the coming weeks and even months.
While being double jabbed means there is no need to self isolate if you come
into contact with a person with COVID, it does not stop you catching the virus,
and if you contract COVID then you must still isolate for ten days. We are
taking action now to ensure that any possible impact is mitigated so that our
statutory waste collections can continue to operate.
Many local authorities across
the UK have already taken the decision to suspend non-essential services like
garden waste collections. Here in Cardiff we have done our very best to keep
the service running for as long as we could.
Councillor Michael Michael,
Cabinet member for Clean Streets, Recycling and Environment, said: “We
recognise the inconvenience to residents and we want you to know we will do our
best to return the service, albeit reduced, as soon as we can. If residents do
have a car, and are able to bring their garden waste to the recycling centres,
this will help us clear the backlog. For those who are unable to drive, please
leave your green waste presented on the kerbside this week and we will collect
it as quickly as possible. Unlike many other councils, Cardiff collects garden
waste for free. It’s a discretionary service which, unfortunately, we have to
set aside at moments like this when resources are unavailable. The UK-wide
driver shortages, which trade organisations blame on Brexit, is creating major
issues for us, but our crews have been doing their best and we thank you for
your patience and understanding.”
A Q&A on the temporary
changes to garden waste collections is available to view here: https://www.cardiffnewsroom.co.uk/releases/c25/27269.html