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HOW DARTMOUTH WORKS –


Recycling


Devon recycles more than any other county – and the South Hams is one of its top recycling districts – By the Dart talked to South Hams District and West Devon Borough Councils’ employee Andy Barron, Waste Minimisation and Recycling Officer, to find out where our recycling goes when we put it out in those clear and blue sacks.


“Recycling is something that most people are very positive about,” he says. “We put our efforts into mak- ing sure that everyone has as much information as possible so they can participate fully.”


The council run 25 `roadshows’ each year to inform the public about recycling and composting – you may have seen the ‘Love Food, Hate Waste’, ‘Home Composting’ and others touring the area at community events.


The campaign also tries to con- centrate on younger members of the community, and gives many talks in schools and to youth groups and organizations in the district. And South Hams has some impressive figures when it comes to recycling, so the roadshows definitely help.


It is one of the top councils in Devon and in the top 25 nationally. Its 42,500 homes produce 34,640 tonnes of waste each year and 55% of it is recycled.


This waste does not collect itself – so the Council has 20 trucks, and 52 staff to do the job.


The council has seen some dramatic increases in the amount of waste it recycles – in 1994/95 South Hams was only recycling just over 6% of the waste it collected – meaning 94% of


all our waste went to landfill and huge amounts of carbon dioxide and meth- ane were produced, which contribute to environmental pollution. “We’ve seen a big rise in the amount we are recycling in the last 15 years or so,” said Andy, “and this has been possible because we’ve changed the way we look at waste. We used to think of it as something to be just got rid of because we didn’t need it anymore – now we look at it as a resource to be put to good use.” Bad publicity a few years ago


the plastic bottles are sent to Peterborough to be reused as bottles or turned into ‘street furniture’


meant a headache for Andy – con- vincing some people that it was very easy to ‘contaminate’ waste which would then go to landfill – and also that councils were ‘lying’ about recy- cling, in that much of the waste was simply sent to landfill despite being collected as recycling.


“There were limited incidents where some councils and some private companies were not fulfilling that promise,” he said. “But even then it was a rare thing. Now we can assure everyone that all our recycling is ‘re- processed’ as it should be. The waste is reused – mostly in the UK. We are audited by the Environment Agency


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regularly – we have to be able to ac- count for every single bag we collect.” There is a small amount of contami- nation from incorrect items such as food wrappers and trays. They are removed when they arrive at their destination, so that everything else is recycled.


SO WHAT DOES HAPPEN TO OUR WASTE? I’m glad you asked:


Food and garden waste from the brown bin is composted ‘at Heath- field, near Newton Abbot and used as a soil conditioner on farms – the council has also given out compost for free to South Hams residents in previous years.


All the other waste is taken to DS


Smith’s recycling facility in Plymouth, where it is sorted and then sent on to various places around the UK. Paper, foil, steel, plastic bottles, newspapers, magazines and cardboard are baled up and sent out to be re-used by industry.


The steel goes to Wales to be used


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