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	 Don't waste your 
	recycling efforts 
	LIVERPOOL people are being urged 
	not to let waste intended for recycling end up in landfill sites because 
	inappropriate types of material is put in bins.
	Putting material in plastic bags in blue bins mean that it will not be 
	recycled as recyclable materials need to be loose in the blue bin or box. If 
	these items are in plastic bags it makes it difficult for them to be sorted 
	and recycled. 
	The facility in Liverpool, where the recyclables are sent, sorts and 
	separates paper, cardboard, glass bottles and jars, plastic bottles, steel 
	and aluminium cans. It uses conveyors that carry the recyclables over 
	sorting screens, passing them over rollers, magnetic and eddy current 
	separators and other recognition equipment. And green bins will be 
	"contaminated" if plastic plant pots and trays, used soil and branches over 3 inches in 
	diameter are placed in them 
	 
	Councillor Steve Munby, cabinet member for neighbourhoods, said:- "A 
	Keep Britain Tidy survey in the City showed that people want to recycle; 
	only 1% said they did not believe in the principle of recycling.
	However, while many people believe they are recycling and are 
	well intentioned, if they put plastic bags in their blue bins then its 
	contents will just end up in landfill because of the problems they cause 
	with the recycling facility.
	And, as spring approaches, we tend to have a problem with people getting 
	back into the garden and putting plant pots and other inappropriate waste in 
	green bins. While we welcome them using the green bins rather than putting 
	garden waste in with the general waste we would ask them to make sure they 
	know what can be put in green bins. 
	Currently ,we recycle about a third of our waste but we are looking to push 
	this up to 55% by 2020 not only is it environmentally responsible, but if we 
	fail to reach targets we face substantial financial penalties." 
	 
	Councillor Laura Robertson Collins, chair of the neighbourhood services 
	select committee, added:- "The introduction a 5p charge for plastic 
	bins has had a real impact with the number found in blue bins down by more 
	than 50%.
	But the latest figure shows that there were still nearly 300 bins in the 
	City which had recyclable material in plastic bags in them.
	With the cooperation of householders we can get that number down a lot more 
	and boost our recycling rate. More than 60% of what gets thrown out can be 
	recycled, with much of it able to go in the blue and green bins. And there 
	are other ways to recycle items. The recycling centres at Otterspool and Old 
	Swan will take Tetrapaks for example, vegetable peelings can be put in a 
	composter, charity shops will take clothes and shoes and Bulky Bobs will 
	collect small electrical items and will also collect textiles if they 
	accompany a bulky item collection." 
	 
	Information about what material can go into green and blue bins is available
	
	
	online.  |