Tips across the country are heaving this morning as cooped-up Brits rushed out to reopened refuse centres to dump their rubbish for the first time since the coronavirus lockdown.
There were long queues from as early as 8am at dumps in Greater Manchester and Northumberland after local councils were finally given the green light to open tips after more than a month of social distancing measures.
However, Devon and North Yorkshire locals are among many across the country who will be forced to wait after their authorities refused to reopen waste centres until there is sufficient staffing and PPE for workers.
The decision comes amid a 300 per cent rise in fly-tipping across the UK with crooks taking advantage of the lockdown to illegally dump waste on country roads and at deserted beauty spots.
Local Government Secretary Robert Jenrick confirmed on Friday that some tips would reopen this weekend and hoped that more would do so in the coming weeks, adding it was ‘perfectly legal’ for Britons to take waste to the dump.
The Sharston tip in South Manchester was heaving at 8am this morning as refuse centres were opened for the first time since the coronavirus lockdown
There were long queues at Sharston dumps in Greater Manchester after local councils were given the green light to open refuse sites today
Brits were finally given the chance to dump rubbish after more than a month of social distancing measures that saw dumps shit down across the country
One visitor opted for a face mask during a visit to Sharston dump this morning, which was among the first dumps in the country to open its gates following lockdown measures
Brits have been given their first opportunity to clear out rubbish from their homes as lockdown rules are slowly relaxed
‘There is no reason why you cannot travel to a tip to put household waste there or do recycling. Councils should have the confidence to reopen them as soon as possible,’ he said.
Many councils closed waste facilities because they couldn’t meet social distancing guidelines or were hit by staff absences.
Darlington’s tip in County Durham, was one of the first to reopen this week, with queues of up to an hour and a half, despite the council asking people to only go if essential.
North Yorkshire County Council said it wouldn’t be reopening its tips ‘for public safety and to cut non-essential travel’.
While Derbyshire County Council said it couldn’t say when its services would reopen because of social distancing.
Devon County Council also said its centres were closed until further notice.
Measures being taken to help recycling centres open include authorities requiring visitors to show proof of their address in a bid to stop people travelling outside their local area.
Greater Manchester Combined Authority are opening ‘based on odd and even number plates,’ according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.
A spokeswoman for the authority said that the possibility of introducing a booking system was explored, but to implement it at short notice for 2.5 million residents would have been challenging.
Different restrictions will be put in place at a number of tips across the country.
In Hampshire there will be daily cleaning, a vehicle limit, plus reduced hours.
In Northumberland, council restrictions will be placed on the number of people allowed outside vehicles.
Lancashire will offer an online booking system.
On the Wirral there will be one-way systems with traffic stewards and in Surrey there will be restrictions on the types of waste when its sites reopen.
Local Government Secretary Robert Jenrick told the BBC on Friday that refuse centres could be opened in a ‘staged’ manner.
‘Obviously don’t abuse it, but we know that there’s lots of people with rubbish and recycling and boxes from all those deliveries people are getting piling up in their homes, and it’s right that we manage that and make people’s lives a bit more bearable by getting that out of the house.’
He said that, due to large demand, many councils may opt to reopen their sites in a ‘staged’ manner, adding that this is ‘sensible’ and the ‘right thing to do’.
‘The longer we delay it, the longer those queues are going to be when the waste sites reopen,’ he added.
The re-opening comes as new analysis revealed fly-tipping has increased by 300 per cent during the Covid-19 lockdown.
Researchers from the Universities of Southampton and Portsmouth said the increase in illegal waste dumping has followed the closure of almost all tips.
While at the same time the number of DIY projects has increased by householders stuck at home.
The problem has also been worsened with nearly half of all local authority recycling services in the country having been stopped or reduced, and charity shops being closed and not able to take unwanted goods.
A fly-tipping dumping ground in Wales has so much rubbish it can be seen from space.
Hundreds of car tyres, piles of clothes, suitcases and doors have been scattered across the disused road off the M4 in Newport, South Wales.
Newport’s landfill site is currently only open to commercial businesses.
The researchers also highlight that increased food waste is expected from the £1.9 billion worth of groceries stockpiled by panic-buyers at the start of the crisis.
And the increase in home deliveries is leading to a shortage of cardboard as many households are unable to recycle.
The researchers also point out that the environmental impact of the closures may be worsened with valuable resources having to be extracted that would normally have come from recyclables that have now ended up in landfill.
Professor Ian Williams, of the School of Engineering at the University of Southampton, said: ‘This pandemic has been a wake-up call to governments and the waste sector to ensure that supply chains and markets for recyclates are diverse and resilient.
‘Our current waste management system will need to evolve to be resilient to the impacts of these rare, extreme, global events to create a successful circular economy.’
Manchester’s Sharston tip was heaving this morning as cooped-up Brits rushed to reopened refuse centres to dump their rubbish for the first time since the coronavirus lockdown
Cars were seen queuing well ahead of opening time at Sharston tip in Manchester, which is among the first refuse centres in the country to open its gates after lockdown