Waste services in England will not see the same levels of disruption during the second lockdown as were seen in the first, industry leaders have said.

This is because many are “better prepared” after facing significant disruption in the spring, but concerns remain over staff which need to self-isolate.

In the height of the first lockdown, weekly surveys carried out by the Association of Directors of Environment, Economy, Planning and Transport (ADEPT) found more than a quarter of dry recycling and a third of residual waste collection services faced disruption.

The main disruption was seen for household waste and recycling centres (HWRCs) and other recycling services such as garden waste, while MRFs were also hit by staff shortages.

The last survey results for the week commencing 7 September show that 10% of residual waste and 23% of dry recycling services provided by councils in England were reporting minor disruption.

Survey

Ian Fielding, chair of the ADEPT Waste Group, said that while there were “no plans to restart the surveys at this point”, ADEPT continues to “monitor the situation closely with Defra and our other waste sector partners”.

In a statement to letsrecycle.com, Mr Fielding said: “Local authorities are well prepared and if the local situation requires, will put into place their contingency plans to prioritise core household waste and domestic recycling collection services established during the first lockdown.

“The safety of our customers and employees is paramount, so we would ask the public to be patient with any minor disruption to services in their areas and stay safe at this difficult time.”

Recycling centres

Defra confirmed yesterday afternoon (3 November) that councils “should keep HWRCs open” in line with guidance it issued earlier this month (see letsrecycle.com story).

Lee Marshall, chief executive of LARAC, told letsrecycle.com that HWRCs were already operating in a Covid-secure way, and added that councils have systems in place across the board to better cope with disruption.

“Compared to the first lockdown in March, local authorities already have all their systems and mitigation in place to keep waste services running. They have been operating socially distanced services for months now and have contingency plans in place if staff absence levels increase,” he said.

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