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Rubbish! Angry residents hit back at council's cycling solution to bin strike

Coventry City Council suggested people use bikes to take their rubbish to drop-off sites if they don't have a car...

Coventry City Council's advice that residents who are unable to drive to rubbish drop-off sites during bin strikes should use a bike has prompted widespread criticism.

Last Thursday, amidst photos on social media of backed up queues of drivers, a council employee reminded people that the facilities, opened for residents to dispose of household waste while their bins are not being collected, are accessible by bike.

The city's bin strikes have been extended until March after the union Unite confirmed a further 19 days of action following the council failing to negotiate with drivers over pay and working conditions.

Andrew Walster, director of Streetscene, told CoventryLive: "You can also access all of these sites on foot or by bike if you live nearby.

"We concentrated on Tuesday on everyone who's on our assisted collection list in the city. We tried to get to everyone on Tuesday with those along with people who live in flats and those sorts of properties.

"We'll be doing some extra work with some of the more vulnerable people in the city over the next week or so to help with that as well."

However, the council's cycling suggestion did not go down well with almost all of the 500 locals who replied to the local news website's story.

Karleen Michelle said: "On a bike? With bags of rubbish? Having a laugh aren’t they? Whatever next?"

Diane Rowstron wrote: "Okay I’ll balance seven bin bags on my head while I cycle, shall I?"

Others questioned the logic of safely carrying bags without a cargo bike. Although some did offer some innovative solutions, including Stacey Mctigue who shared a photo of the 'trashtrike 3000'.

Trashtrike 3000 Coventry bin strike (Stacey Mctigue/Facebook)

One brave soul did not see any problem with the council's request. John Grant said he "went on my bike to Hearsall Common yesterday. The guys at the site thought it was funny."

Coventry bin strike (John Grant)

 

Dan joined road.cc in 2020, and spent most of his first year (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. At the start of 2022 he took on the role of news editor. Before joining road.cc, Dan wrote about various sports, including football and boxing for the Daily Express, and covered the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Part of the generation inspired by the 2012 Olympics, Dan has been 'enjoying' life on two wheels ever since and spends his weekends making bonk-induced trips to the petrol stations of the south of England.

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27 comments

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EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
3 likes

To be totally fair to the people complaining...you literally would need a decent cargo bike to transport multiple bin bags, you just couldn't do it (reasonably) on a normal bike. In reality virtually no one has a cargo bike despite a 'boom' in recent years. Hopefully that will eventually change of course!

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mdavidford replied to EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
5 likes

EddyBerckx wrote:

To be totally fair to the people complaining...you literally would need a decent cargo bike to transport multiple bin bags, you just couldn't do it (reasonably) on a normal bike. In reality virtually no one has a cargo bike despite a 'boom' in recent years. Hopefully that will eventually change of course!

To be fair to the council, though, it's not like they're saying 'Stop whining and get on your bike' - they're just letting people know that the option is there if it's a viable one for you.

Complaining about it is a bit like them saying "our centres will be open over Bank Holidays" and people saying that's no good to them because they have to work on the Bank Holiday.

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EddyBerckx replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
1 like

Yeah fair enough

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Danbury replied to EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
1 like

Or a trailer. Can can be relatively cheap and a really useful long term investment.  I use my (not so cheap) Burley Travoy two or three times a week, mainly for shopping and the allotment. It won't manage multiple filled bin bags, but would cope with a couple with a little ingenuity.

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Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
5 likes

Here in Derby the local council has recently given permission to cycle to the local recycling centre. Good for them says I, however I've been dropping off any waste I create by cargobike for years.
Must be a trendsetter!!

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belugabob | 2 years ago
6 likes

Or just be more socially minded...
If, like so many folk nowadays, you're going to the tip in your SUV, why not ask your neighbours if they need anything taking, too?

Too obvious...?

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Benthic replied to belugabob | 2 years ago
0 likes

Not too obvious for my neighbours who did just that.

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Jammyb@hotmail.com | 2 years ago
3 likes

Fun fact: the photo used in this article was taken about 200yds from where a lady famously put a cat in a wheelie bin a few years back. Probably wouldn't be room now. 

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Captain Badger | 2 years ago
4 likes

Our local tip can't be accessed on foot or by bike. You have to use a car.

Edit: HP got there first - it clearly isn't a Herts issue

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peted76 | 2 years ago
3 likes

Although this is a bad news story all round (apart from the trashtrike 3000 obviously), I'm actually a bit sympathetic to the council here.. the bin lorry drivers are some of the highest paid in the UK are striking for a 12 (or 15%) increase arguing that other councils are giving their drivers that level of increase.. (but who are paid less than the coventry councils drivers to begin with)..  the unions are saying the council aren't talking to them and the councils are saying that the unions aren't responding to calls for talks.. it's a very 'predictable'  and has left everyone in Coventry without any bin collections over the christmas period. Asking people to take their rubbish to the tip any way they can is about all the council can do. 

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vthejk | 2 years ago
0 likes

I think Coventry CC are pushing it a tad. We have ONE decent stretch of completed posh cycling infra, but nothing I'd ever venture down on a cargo bike and it doesn't a) lead anywhere important or necessary - from the city centre straight uphill to a housing area; or b) join up seamlessly with other infra. The idea that residents could use bikes to transport potentially awkward and heavy loads of rubbish through our downright dangerous streets is laughable.

I can well imagine turning up to the drop-off and being abused or turned away, too - last time I went there it was a long, long line of SUVs.

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hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
13 likes

Meanwhile in Bristol, pedestrians and cyclists are banned from using the recycling centres - you have to use a car.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
2 likes

About to post the same, I'm pretty sure us in neighbouring Birmingham couldn't cycle and use a site. Pretty impressed although comes across as tone deaf when people are talking several weeks of household disposal and recycling if no cargo bike handy. 

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hawkinspeter replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
7 likes

AlsoSomniloquism wrote:

About to post the same, I'm pretty sure us in neighbouring Birmingham couldn't cycle and use a site. Pretty impressed although comes across as tone deaf when people are talking several weeks of household disposal and recycling if no cargo bike handy. 

Several weeks of household rubbish? Has the strike wheelie bin that long?

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eburtthebike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
11 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

Meanwhile in Bristol, pedestrians and cyclists are banned from using the recycling centres - you have to use a car.

Same in SGlos, except when I walked there with a broken radio (it's a five minute walk) they tried to make me go away, telling me that pedestrians weren't allowed.  I pointed out that everyone was a pedestrian when they got out of their car, but that cut no ice.  I ignored the threats of "getting into trouble" and threw the radio in the appropriate bin and walked off.  No trouble resulted; but I have been in hiding for the past five years, and moved three years ago, so I'm probably safe now.

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hawkinspeter replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
6 likes

eburtthebike wrote:

Same in SGlos, except when I walked there with a broken radio (it's a five minute walk) they tried to make me go away, telling me that pedestrians weren't allowed.  I pointed out that everyone was a pedestrian when they got out of their car, but that cut no ice.  I ignored the threats of "getting into trouble" and threw the radio in the appropriate bin and walked off.  No trouble resulted; but I have been in hiding for the past five years, and moved three years ago, so I'm probably safe now.

You've just blown your cover!

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mdavidford replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

I'd have been tempted to leave it in the middle of the entrance road for them to deal with and walk off. Technically, you might be opening yourself up to littering or some such, but practically, the likelihood of them tracking you down is probably pretty much zero.

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brooksby replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

eburtthebike wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

Meanwhile in Bristol, pedestrians and cyclists are banned from using the recycling centres - you have to use a car.

Same in SGlos ...

Pretty sure North Somerset is the same.

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
4 likes

This is one area where Edinburgh seems to do well. You have to book to turn up to a refuse site but they provide a slot to say "bike". On the occasions I've been I've had no issues. Indeed it's clear that staff are sensibly not worried about scrutinising your booking if you've only a bikes' worth of rubbish. I doubt the latter is actual policy though.

So just cycle yours up here!

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hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

chrisonatrike wrote:

This is one area where Edinburgh seems to do well. You have to book to turn up to a refuse site but they provide a slot to say "bike". On the occasions I've been I've had no issues. Indeed it's clear that staff are sensibly not worried about scrutinising your booking if you've only a bikes' worth of rubbish. I doubt the latter is actual policy though.

So just cycle yours up here!

Thanks for the invite, but as Mrs HawkinsPeter drives, we'll probably use the car and sit in a queue for half an hour (it's so busy that they split access according to whether your number plate is odd or even) to use our local site. It's annoying as we quite often walk past the dump if we walk to Temple Meads station, so it'd be handy to get rid of things that the weekly/fortnightly collections don't accept.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
4 likes

You could always send the household rubbish to Chris via royal mail and he could drop it off for you. 

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chrisonabike replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
0 likes

Alas it likely won't fit through the letterbox and as it's flats they won't leave it outside when I don't open the door.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

Although it would disuade parcel thieving faster then one of those glitter bombs.

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chrisonabike replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
1 like

You mean this? Actually if you've useful-looking sort of rubbish "local recycling" could be a way to dispose of it, just put it in your old online shopping packaging and leave it unattended...

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Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
5 likes

On the other hand why not just pay your bin men the going rate for doing a sometimes literally shitty job?*

*Disclaimer not a local so assuming the strikes are justified**.

** Not interested in any toryboy rants either before you start.

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chrisonabike replied to Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
0 likes

Agree, but not wanting to give the Conservatives credit for everything I suspect this applies more widely across councils of different shades. Brighton and Hove (Green Party 20, Labour 16, Conservative 13,  Independent 5) was perfectly capable of a barney with staff which caused a bin strike (analysis here - trigger alert for councillors or non-unionists).

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vthejk replied to Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
0 likes

Coventry CC have these strikes recurring at least every year - it's linked to the working time regs and working over the holiday/christmas period - so it's not like they haven't had sufficient opportunities to amend the problem.

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