SURREY County Council will continue to accept basic DIY waste at recycling centres as it introduces a scheme that will cut costs for taxpayers.
Many councils in the region are bringing in charges for construction waste such as rubble and cement but will not allow any free allowance, whereas Surrey will still let residents drop off one bag per day without charge.
All household waste will still be free to dispose of at the centres but the council is bringing in a charge for major construction waste to prevent Surrey’s taxpayers footing the bill. A number of councils already charge for construction waste or simply don’t allow it to be dropped off.
In the last three years alone, the amount of construction waste being dropped off at Surrey recycling centres has grown by nearly a third, leaving taxpayers with an annual disposal bill of nearly £1m.
Mike Goodman, Surrey County Council’s cabinet member for environment and planning, said: “We have to reduce our spending across council departments because of rising demand for services such as adult social care, but most people using our recycling centres will not be affected.
“Those doing basic DIY will still be able to use our community recycling centres for free, the charges will only affect residents doing more significant construction work.
“The charges are part of a package which will save the council, and therefore the Surrey taxpayer, £1.8m per year and will enable us to keep accepting construction waste and maintain a full network of recycling centres.
“Residents will still be able to drop off all household waste for free as well as garden waste.”
“Some people are concerned there will be a big increase in fly-tipping as a result of our changes, but we’ve looked closely at other councils’ charging schemes and are not expecting to see an increase in fly-tipping based on their experiences,” he said.
“Fly-tipping is an existing problem which we’re already tackling.”





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