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Household Kerbside Refuse Disposal & Recycling Collection
until Friday, 16th September, 2011
Household Kerbside Refuse Disposal & Recycling Collection from 19th September, 2011

  Kerbside Collection Checklist until 16th September, 2011     
Kerbside Collection Checklist from 19th September, 2011

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The Vale of Glamorgan Council's What's in your bin? campaign was launched in November, 2003 and by December, 2004 the council had collected 100% more material than in the same period the previous year.  This waste awareness promotion also won a national Green Apple Environment Award that rewards and promotes best practice by local authorities, commerce and industry around the world.  In 2005, the Visible Services Department of the Vale Council won national recycling awards: Outstanding Manager (the head of visible services); Outstanding Team (waste management development team); Best Recycling Training and Information Campaign (What's in your bin?) at the Severnside annual recycling awards.  Over Christmas 2007 an additional 200 tonnes of waste for recycling was collected compared with the previous year.  The kerbside collection of green waste time table was extended in 2008.  Visit Severnside website.  Weekly recycling of kitchen waste was piloted in some areas during 2009; this trial was extended during the year to include more villages and in 2011 was introduced to all areas. 

From week commencing Monday 19th September 2011, a co-mingling collection service for dry recyclables will begin and all waste will be collected on a Thursday. 

Scroll down or use the following Quick Search links for specific information:  

Bank Holiday collection arrangements
(including any changes to normal day)

Refuse collection general information    
Fortnightly refuse collection dates

Recycling collection general information  
(details of which day particular items are collected)

Weekly kerbside collection:
Kitchen waste (and what happens to it)

Green week kerbside collections:  
Cans  (and what they can be used for)
Glass  (and what happens to it) 
Paper  (and how it is recycled) 
Green week collection dates
  

Blue week kerbside collections:  
Cardboard  (and how it is recycled)
Plastic 
(and information on the different types and what it can be turned into) 
Green waste (garden refuse) collection  (and information on its disposal)
Blue week collection dates
  

Miscellaneous:
Christmas Tree collection  
Household Recycling Centres
Discounted home composting bins

 

Bank Holiday Collection Arrangements     Return to top / Quick Links

Under normal circumstances there is no change to the usual collection day whenever there is a Bank Holiday.  However, sometimes special arrangements may need to be made at Christmas and New Year depending on how the Bank Holidays fall.  Details will usually be given by the Vale of Glamorgan Council in April together with notification of rates, in the local press in December and, sometimes, on leaflets delivered door-to-door.  Recycling dates are shown in the relevant sections (Quick Links above) and changes are marked with an asterisk.

Christmas & New Year refuse/recycling collection arrangements for our area in 2011/12 to be advised
Normal Collection Date Revised Collection Date
   
   

Kerbside Household Refuse Collection     Return to top / Quick Links

Collection of refuse is every other Thursday.  Domestic rubbish should be put out on the kerbside by 7.00 am; refuse bags can be put out the night before but no earlier than 7.00 pm.  Black bin bags (26 each time) have been delivered to households twice a year in May and November; however, this may be subject to change with the introduction of kitchen waste recycling and anticipated subsequent reduction in the amount of ordinary rubbish, and the change to fortnightly collection. 

Fortnightly Refuse Collection Dates     Return to top / Quick Links
(changes from normal day marked with an asterisk)

2011
March 24th & 31st
April 14th & 28th
May 12th & 26th
June 9th & 23rd
July 7th & 21st
August 4th & 18th
September 1st, 15th & 29th
October 13th & 27th

Kerbside Household Recycling Collection      Return to top / Quick Links
(No refuse sacks)

Collection of kitchen waste is every Thursday; the kerbside caddy should be put out by 7.00 am.  Line the daily-use (smaller) kitchen caddy with biodegradable corn starch bags which, once full, can be tied and placed in the lockable (larger) kerbside caddy.  When you have around five liners left, tie a piece of cloth or bag to the handle of the kerbside caddy and the recycling crew will leave another roll.  Newspapers can be used as an interim measure.

Green week collection of paper/glass/cans (in separate carrier bags, one for each material) on a Friday alternates with blue week collection of cardboard (all flattened; tie smaller cardboard in a bundle or place in a carrier bag) and clean plastic (in a separate carrier bag)  These can then be put in a recycling box if you have one and should be placed on the kerbside by 7.00 am on the day of collection.  If the box is full, place additional bags next to it.  Please note any other material in the box will not be collected.  Any items contaminated with, for example, food will be left behind.  You do not have to remove paper labels from jars, tins or bottles.  Any materials left behind will have a sticker attached to explain why they have not been collected. 

From the first week of April to the last week of November there is fortnightly Friday collection of garden waste on the same day (but not at the same time) as plastic and cardboard (ie blue week) and from the first week of December to the last week of March a Ring and Request collection service is in place.  Place garden waste in biodegradable or re-usable fabric bags purchased from the Vale of Glamorgan Council by 7.00 am, which will be collected at any time between 7.00 am and 7.00 pm.  Do not place them out for collection in black refuse/bin bags because they will not be taken away. 

Weekly Kerbside Collection    

Kitchen Waste     Return to top / Quick Links
(and what happens to it)

Cooked as well as uncooked food: bread, cakes, pastries; coffee grounds; dairy produce; egg (including shells); fish (including bones and shells); fruit; meat; noodles; pasta; peelings; pet food (including biscuits, canned meat, bird seed, small mammal mixes for hamster, rabbit, etc); pulses, beans; rice; table scraps and leftovers; tea bags; vegetables.  NO fats; liquids e.g. milk, gravy; oils; NO human waste or animal/pet waste

The kitchen waste collected is taken to a local farm and turned into a soil enhancer.  

Green Week Kerbside Collections

Cans     Return to top / Quick Links
(and what they can be used for)

Food and drink cans (aluminium, steel, tinplate steel) e.g. baked beans, soup, fish, soft drinks, beer, pet food tins.  Remember to rinse/wash and preferably squash before recycling as contaminated items will be left behind.  Small metal items such as old scissors can also be recycled.  No aerosols, aluminium foil or paint tins.

Aluminium can be completely recycled, known as closed loop recycling.  Cans are flattened and shredded, then the lacquer and decoration is removed by blowing hot air through the shreds before the metal is melted down, cooled and rolled and made into new 100% recycled cans or food packaging.  Aluminium can be made into ingots which are then used in the manufacture of cars and aeroplanes.  Recycling cans also reduces the amount of bauxite (a raw material used to make aluminium) that needs to be extracted.  There is a microscopic layer of tin on steel cans in order to stop rusting which is recovered before they are melted down and made into foil pellets.  Recycled steel cans can be made into car parts, road signs and railings.  It takes as much energy to reprocess 20 cans as it takes to create a new one.  The energy saved by recycling one aluminium can is enough to run a TV for three hours.  It takes 50-100 years for an aluminium can to decompose when buried. 

Note: Aluminium foil (not currently collected from the kerbside) is a different alloy to cans and is made from 98% aluminium.  It can be recycled by a simple re-melt process that will save up to 95% of the energy used in the first production.  To check whether "foil" packaging used for items such as bread, biscuits and crisps can be recycled, scrunch the packet into a ball; if it retains its shape as a ball it is foil but if it returns to its original shape then it is metallised plastic film and cannot be recycled. 

Glass      Return to top / Quick Links
(and what happens to it)
 

Glass jars and bottles, e.g. paste, pasta sauce, mincemeat, jam jars, beer and wine bottles.   Remember to rinse/wash before recycling as contaminated items will be left behind.  No Pyrex, Visionware cooking dishes, glass crockery, light bulbs window panes or broken glass.  Return glass milk bottles to the milkman as they can be reused 20 times before being recycled. 

Energy-saving light bulbs should be placed in special bins at a Household Recycling Centre. 

Glass can be turned into aggregate and sand.  Recycling one glass bottle/jar saves enough energy to light a 60 watt bulb for eight hours, to power a TV for one and a half hours or to boil enough water for three cups of tea.  Recycled glass can be made into road surfacing, paving, insulation and stained glass and uses 20% less energy than raw materials. 

Paper     Return to top / Quick Links
(and how it is recycled - please scroll down to paragraph after collection dates)

Paper includes newspapers, magazines, office paper, leaflets, brochures, junk mail, telephone directories.  No envelopes, wrapping paper, napkins (as they are waxed).  No greetings, birthday, Christmas cards. 

The Vale Council in partnership with the Woodland Trust and Yellow Pages organise the Yellow Woods Challenge; local schools collect as many Yellow Pages telephone directories as possible for recycling into various products.  This raises funds for the Woodland Trust and schools, with cash prizes.

Green Week Collection Dates     Return to top / Quick Links
(change/s from normal recycling day marked with asterisk)

2010
September 10th, 24th
October 8th, 22nd
November 5th, 19th
December 3rd, 17th, 31st
2011
January 14th, 28th
February 11th, 25th
March 11th, 25th
April 8th, 22nd
May 6th, 20th
June 3rd, 17th
July 1st, 15th, 29th
August 12th, 26th
September 9th

In some recycling plants, paper and card goes through an automatic recognition equipment process where laser-guided jets of air are used to separate the heavier mixed paper (eg cardboard, magazines, coloured paper) that is turned into cardboard packaging for toys and goods (such as fridges, computers, TVs) from the lighter newsprint that can be recycled by paper mills.  Recycled paper can be made into newspaper, magazines, toilet paper and hand towels.  Cardboard can be made into new cardboard such as that used for cereal boxes, egg boxes and chipboard products.  It takes two to four weeks for a paper towel, six weeks for newspaper and two months for a cardboard box  to decompose when buried. 

Blue Week Kerbside Collections

Cardboard     Return to top / Quick Links
(and how it is recycled - please see above paragraph)

Flatten, and put smaller items such as cereal boxes in a carrier bag or tie into a bundle and place larger items on the kerbside.  Plain greetings, birthday and Christmas cards can be put with normal cardboard but any decoration such as ribbons and beads must be removed.  Remember to remove any packaging such as plastic and polystyrene.  Contaminated items will be left behind.  No glitter or highly-decorated greetings, birthday and Christmas cards.  No Tetra Pak type cartons such as those for fruit juice, milk and soup, or cardboard drink cups. 

Tetra Pak items can be taken to a Household Recycling Centre and some Tesco stores also have a collection point. 

Plastic     Return to top / Quick Links
(and information on the different types and what it can be turned into)

This includes medication, milk, mineral water, pop, shampoo and washing up liquid bottles; butter, cheese spread and ice cream tubs; ready meal and take-away food containers.  Plastic lids can also be recycled but need to be removed.  Other suitable items are dessert, fromage frais, mousse and yoghurt pots; fruit punnets; food bags such as for bread and fruit.  Clingfilm and cellophane are also accepted.  Remember to rinse/wash & squash plastic before recycling as contaminated items will be left behind.  No larger items, for example patio or garden furniture, flower pots, washing-up bowls and toys.  No polystyrene trays. 

Plastic bearing the triangular logo with a number 1, 2 or 3 in the centre can be shredded and re-cycled where facilities exist and is made from one of three types: PET (polyethylene terephthalate) which is opaque or coloured and used for items such as fizzy drink and cooking oil bottles as well as some milk bottles; HDPE (high density polyethylene) which is used for thicker items such as milk and washing-up liquid bottles; and PVC (polyvinyl chloride) which is clear and used for items such as still mineral water and cordial bottles.  PET bottles (sometimes marked by the number one in the universal recycling symbol to aid sorting and which have a small dot on the base) are used by some companies to make material for fleece jackets, filling for sleeping bags and anoraks, new packaging, industrial strapping as well as wall and floor coverings.  Bottles are sterilised, crushed, chopped into flakes which are drained and dried, stripped of any further impurities then melted into a thick liquid in large vats, from which fibrous polyester strands are produced that can be knitted and woven into fabric.  It takes 25 (or 11 two-litre) recycled plastic bottles to make a fleece jacket in a process lasting around 12 weeks from start to finish.  Plastic bottles can be made into fencing, compost bins, traffic cones, watering cans and drainpipes.  The free storage boxes given to householders for use with the kerbside service are made from recycled materials.  Recycling one plastic bottle saves enough energy to light a 60 watt bulb for 60 hours. 

Green Waste (Garden Refuse)     Return to top / Quick Links
(and information on its disposal)

Garden waste includes: grass cuttings; chopped woody stems; shrub & hedge pruning/clippings and debris; leaves; plants; flowers; and non-invasive weeds.  Garden waste is no longer sent to landfill sites and instead is used by local farmers; therefore, it must be placed in biodegradable or re-usable fabric bags purchased from the Vale of Glamorgan Council Offices.  No invasive weeds (e.g. Japanese Knotweed); kitchen waste (e.g. vegetable peelings); animal waste; plastic, including plant pots; logs; rubble or stones; soil; turf; or general rubbish.  Any bags found to contain this type of refuse will be left behind. 

Blue Week Collection Dates     Return to top / Quick Links
(Change/s from normal recycling day marked with asterisk)

2010

 

September

3rd, 17th

 

October

1st, 15th, 29th

 

November

12th, 24th

 

December

10th, 24th

Ring and request collection service for garden waste from
29th November, 2010 to 1st April, 2011 inclusive
(therefore, our collection re-starts on 15th April, 2011)

2011

January

7th, 21st

February

4th, 18th

March

4th, 18th

April

1st, 15th, 29th

 

May

13th, 27th

 

June

10th, 24th

 

July

8th, 22nd

 

August

5th, 19th

 

September

2nd, 16th

 

Kerbside Household Christmas Tree Collection     Return to top / Quick Links

After the festive season, recycle your (real) Christmas tree via the Vale of Glamorgan collection service.  Check the local press, the Vale of Glamorgan website, our Diary Page or look out for  posters advising when you can put your (real) Christmas tree out with your rubbish ready for recycling.  This is usually on the next normal collection day following the week that included Twelfth Night (ie 6th January).  Remember to remove all decorations. 

Two town councils and 20 community councils took part in the Vale of Glamorgan Council's Christmas tree recycling competition in 2004/05 which, together with the tree collection points, resulted in 1,488 trees being collected and 2,200 recycled.  They were disposed of in an environmentally friendly way - either shredded for compost or "chipped" for use as animal bedding at a local farm.  More than 10,000 festive trees were recycled in the 2005/06 season, thanks to a tremendous response to the newly established kerbside collection; once again used as bedding and to clean out cattle sheds, the material was then used as a soil conditioner on the farm's fields.  Over 12,000 trees were collected in early 2007, saving 46 tonnes from landfill.  At the beginning of 2008 more than 15,000 Christmas trees were put to good use locally.    

Household Recycling Centres     Return to top / Quick Links

Sites at Llandow Trading Estate and Hayes Road, Sully, have recycling banks for: glass, paper, cans, cartons (Tetra Pak), textiles, plastic, foil, garden waste, car batteries and waste oil; and will accept electrical items, including appliances such as: cookers, freezers, fridges, microwaves, washing machines; and household equipment such as computer monitors, energy saving bulbs, fluorescent tubes and TVs; as well as small items such as hairdryers, irons, kettles, keyboards, radios and toasters.  Vale of Glamorgan Council can arrange to collect large, bulky electrical equipment.  Sully also has recycling banks for cardboard and wood. 

Discounted compost bins (information kindly supplied by Vale of Glamorgan Council) 

The Vale of Glamorgan Council is offering residents the chance to purchase discounted home compost bins, which come in two designs and three sizes.  Kitchen and garden waste can be easily turned into compost at home, such as: uncooked fruit and vegetable waste, tea bags and coffee grounds, egg shells and cardboard egg boxes, small amounts of paper and cardboard, grass cuttings, hedge and shrub clippings, old plants and flowers.  Waste Awareness Officer, Helen Ball said: “Making compost at home is a great way of saving money and also provides an environmentally friendly way of reducing your rubbish.”  Visit Original Organics website which supplies home compost bins (discounted for Vale of Glamorgan residents) or to order call them direct on 01884 841 515.  For further information on waste minimisation, recycling and home composting contact the Vale of Glamorgan Council Visible Services. 

It takes one to two weeks for bread, two months for an apple core, six months for orange peel and one year for a banana skin to decompose when buried. 

 Council vehicle kerbside recyling collection of paper, cans and glass    Council vehicle kerbside recycling collection of plastic and card

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  Kerbside Collection Checklist until 16th September, 2011     
Kerbside Collection Checklist from 19th September, 2011

Household Kerbside Refuse Disposal & Recycling Collection until 16th September, 2011
Household Kerbside Refuse Disposal & Recycling Collection from 19th September, 2011

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