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'Envirocrime'
snoops paid £30,000 just to check your rubbish
UK Daily Mail | April 22, 2007
By
DANIEL BOFFEY
A council is paying plain-clothes
snoopers £30,000 a year to track down homeowners who put their
rubbish out at the wrong time of the week or in the wrong place.
The 'envirocrime' officers are employed to enforce environmental
regulations and have the power to fine residents who 'offend'.
Ealing Council in West London is
spending nearly £150,000 on recruiting and employing four new
enforcement patrollers to add to its 23-strong team that already
monitors 'waste disposal' regulations.
The same council attracted
controversy last month when it was revealed it had drawn up plans to
use hidden CCTV to catch fly-tippers.
Of more than a dozen councils
levying fines since the introduction of legislation a year ago
enabling local authorities to pursue residents, Ealing charges what
it calls 'envirocriminals' the most, with a £110 penalty notice.
Now, the revelation that £35,500 is
being spent on each 'envirocrime' officer in Ealing will enrage both
low-paid public-sector workers and those who believe councils are
taking a heavy-handed approach to rubbish collection.
Neil Dhot, head of communications
at Ealing Council, refused to say how much of the £142,000 spent on
the officers was made up of their wages, claiming recruitment costs
were included in the sum.
Yet a newly qualified nurse is
paid just £19,166, a midwife £31,004 and an Army lieutenant £27,762.
Christine Melsom, founder of
IsItfair, which campaigns for council-tax reform, said: "They are
being heavy-handed. We are living in a world where everything we do
is watched and regulated. George Orwell has arrived. If you go to
work early it is difficult to get it right with the rubbish."
Fixed penalties totalling more
than £185,000 have been issued this year nationally to people who
put their rubbish out for binmen too early.
According to facts released under
the Freedom Of Information Act, Birmingham issued the most with 592
penalty notices for envirocrimes in the past 12 months, Kensington
and Chelsea 365 and Cardiff 264. Ealing issued just 11 - but its
charge was the highest, equal with Medway.
A spokesman for Ealing Council
said the officers were not just focused on homeowners but were
employed 'to monitor and enforce legislation affecting the borough's
streets, including fly-tipping, waste disposal, illegal street
trading, graffiti and various Highways Act offences."
He added: "We aim to educate
residents before the last resort of issuing fines. If people do not
act on warnings we have the power to issue penalty notices. The fine
is £110 but if it is paid within ten days it will be reduced to
£60."
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