Fortnightly bin collections approved by council

Alexander BrockLocal Democracy Reporting Service
News imageReuters A man in an orange hi-viz vest which says Birmingham City Council on the back loads a large black bin into an orange waste lorry.Reuters
Weekly food waste collections and a second recycling bin, specifically for recycling paper and cardboard, will also be introduced in phases

Birmingham City Council is set to push ahead with introducing fortnightly bin collections next summer.

The Labour-run council, which has been grappling with a financial crisis, said it needed to transform its waste service to improve reliability, hit recycling targets and aid its financial recovery.

The changes would end the city's "woefully underperforming recycling service", one cabinet member said.

But opposition councillors questioned the new system, saying the authority "can't even get the current one working".

The changes, which will see collections of household rubbish move from weekly to fortnightly, were initially meant to be rolled out earlier this year.

Weekly food waste collections and a second recycling bin, specifically for recycling paper and cardboard, were also set to be introduced in phases across the city from April onwards.

But the waste transformation was pushed back due to the impact of the ongoing bin workers strike, which left small mountains of bin bags piling up in city streets during its height.

As the industrial action drags on into the festive period, the council said the changes were now set to start rolling out in June 2026 "regardless of the strike situation".

Cabinet members at the council agreed to go ahead with the new transformation plans at a meeting on Tuesday, but opposition councillors were sceptical about the upcoming changes amid the current turbulence.

'Seems like madness'

"Residents will rightly ask how on earth Labour can justify pushing ahead with a completely new waste system when they can't even get the current one working," Conservative opposition leader Robert Alden said in a statement.

"The council has been unable to collect recycling for a year and yet Labour would have you believe they can successfully introduce food waste recycling during a strike."

Alden urged the council to "look again" at its plans while Conservative councillor Ewan Mackey added that it "seems like madness to introduce a new service" amid the current disruption from the strike.

"It wasn't long ago that we heard the agency workers themselves were going on strike," he said.

"Reputational damage is bad enough."

'We're ready to go'

However, councillor Majid Mahmood, the cabinet member for environment, said last week that he was confident that the rollout would take place next year and dramatically improve the service.

He said changes had been introduced in recent months to support the transformation, including more than 1,100 new routes, a new council-owned fleet and training for staff and managers.

"We have already made some changes, with our new council-owned fleet fully operational," the Labour councillor said.

"[This means] there is less reliance on hired vehicles, improved reliability and better consistency in collections.

"We're ready to go on this now," he said, adding: "We've very confident that we'll get the rollout in June."

'Underperforming service'

The council has also said there would be "extensive communication and engagement" with residents and a trial scheme for the food waste collections from March.

Councillor Rob Pocock, the cabinet member overseeing transformation, told the meeting that the proposals were the "biggest transformation in our household waste collection service for at least 25 years".

"[They] will finally bring to an end this city's woefully underperforming recycling service," he added.

"This is a position that has been unacceptable for a very long time."

This news was gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service which covers councils and other public service organisations.

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