The delivery of the 165,000 new recycling, rubbish and food scraps bins to 55,000 Tauranga households will be completed this week.
The last of the bins are on track to be delivered to Mount Maunganui households this week, following a city-wide rollout which began in March.
All that remain are bin deliveries for the 116 multi-unit dwellings such as apartments and care villages, where some have chosen to have shared rubbish and recycling collection points.
Tauranga City Council is continuing to work closely with building owners and residents to determine the number of bins they need.
The new rates-funded kerbside collection service, which aims to halve the amount of household waste Tauranga residents send to landfill by 2028, begins in July.
Sustainability and Waste Manager Sam Fellows says almost 70 per cent of the household waste that Tauranga residents send to landfill could be recycled or composted.
'The new kerbside collection service is a more convenient and sustainable solution for our community and for our environment.
'We know that success will require more effort from residents, especially those who have been using plastic rubbish bags up until now, or who may not have been recycling. Together, as kaitiaki (guardians and protectors) of our land we have a responsibility to do this.
'Reducing the amount of waste we send to landfill will also help mitigate the future impact on our community of rising landfill costs due to increases in the waste levy and will support reducing overall emissions.”
The new service includes a weekly food scraps collection, which aims to reduce the amount of food that ends up in landfill when it could be composted.
Currently, 33 per cert of Tauranga's household waste sent to landfill is food scraps.
'When food ends up in landfill, it rots without oxygen and releases methane, a gas that's harmful to our environment and contributes to climate change. By using the food scraps bin for your leftover food, fruit and vegetables, meat, fish and bones, egg and seafood shells, we can reduce the amount of food we send to landfill and in turn reduce the cost to our environment.
'And using your new weekly food scraps bin and fortnightly recycling collection service will free up space in your rubbish bin for the stuff that can't be reused, recycled or composted.”
Collection days will remain the same as they always have been.
If you're unsure what week your fortnightly rubbish and recycling bins will be collected, look on the side of your bins and check out the calendar in the brochure in your food scraps bin (which is inside the red-lid wheelie bin).
The calendar is also on our website.
12 comments
Food bin Fiasco !
Posted on 31-05-2021 12:34 | By xenasdad
We put our food waste into a small bin under the sink, lined with biodegradable plastic, tie it, and replace it every 2 days, NO SMELLS. With the new "Food Bins" we are not allowed to use ANY liners, not even biodegradable. After 2 days this NOT AIRTIGHT container will smell, and a weeks worth in the Summer, YUK. I will be expected to wash the unlined stinky thing every week. Obviously it can't live in the house and will have to be outside, meaning a special trip every use. Did the brains at the TCC ever consider these facts ?? Yeah Right ! Will we ever use it for scraps ?? NEVER !! But it could be handy as ashopping basket.
xenasdad
Posted on 31-05-2021 13:57 | By AJSommerville
Rather than hitting the caps lock button I called TCC. The issue is that there is no standard for biodegradable bags and many just breakdown into small bits of plastic. They said I can line it with newspaper (like the weekend sun), circulars, paper towels or paper shopping bags.
Give us the facts
Posted on 31-05-2021 14:09 | By First Responder
What happens to the contents of the recycling bin? I bet 90% goes to land fill.
Food
Posted on 31-05-2021 15:02 | By Kancho
Don't have a lot and what I do will continue to go down the insinkerator. No smell no fuss. Perhaps I'll grow a plant in the food bin lol
This is only the start......
Posted on 31-05-2021 15:22 | By The Professor
.......of the dictatorship this country is becoming. Just wait for further instructions to be dished out along with a list of what fines can be applied for not following those instructions......mainly around the subject raised by 'xenasdad. As for your comment First Responder - I suspect you are correct - most of this will end up in a landfill or shipped off to another country. We're not going to save the planet by the way. Look it up on Google, and there have been many programmes shown on TV in the past - the world is naturally tilting and does so by about 2 or 3 degrees over millions of years. We are inn the warming up phase right now, but in thousands of years time, we will start cooling down and more ice will form. All the taxes and recycling in the world will not stop this process.
Waste not
Posted on 31-05-2021 15:58 | By Equality
I have taken all stickers etc off my green bin - stuck some big sunflower stickers on it and it will be used for large summer picnics. Good size for the thermos, wine bottles, crockery and other stuff etc. The blue 'glass' bin is my washing basket. The big bin will have the bottom cut out and will be my new compost bin. I will actually use the waste paper/plastic bin as intended. :)
'No Waste' - ps..
Posted on 31-05-2021 16:02 | By Equality
..... food scraps go in the worm farm and any bones etc are cleaned up by the dog.
Use as a foot spa
Posted on 01-06-2021 06:18 | By dave4u
Bit of hot water/Epsom salts and you have soft warm feet while you sit in your favourite chair. Great as a port a loo and gets emptied weekly of your biodegradable crap.
Some good ideas
Posted on 01-06-2021 10:30 | By Kancho
Lots of uses for unwanted bins so inventive . I have no real problem with the new bins, I doubt the food bin will be used at least for its intended use. The two things I don't like are: contacted to a Chinese company for ten years, inequitable as a set compulsory charge for amount collected. More effort could have been put into using current contractors and employees by defining areas for each company . It's not financially equitable per head of household so there should be opt out for people who produce very little for collection with other workable options like charge per collection like the rubbish bag, and small recycling. Still we are stuck with it aren't we. I also note green bin can't be full of only grass clippings, the only reason I need one !
keeping our existing service..
Posted on 01-06-2021 12:51 | By jed
We're just going to keep our existing service, new bins are insufficient. Just another council stuff-up .
@ jed
Posted on 01-06-2021 14:01 | By Kancho
Well I hope they are still around as I would have thought the council enforced one size fits has put all the local companies out if business ?
@ By Equality
Posted on 01-06-2021 21:56 | By The Caveman
YES, they will make great compost bins with a few holes drilled in the bottom !! In fact ALL of the bins will be compost bins. I just need ONE bin, into which ALL my rubbish will go and onto the street each week..........
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