A rubbish protest or a protest about rubbish?

A war of words has broken out between a senior local councillor and community groups following a ‘dirty protest’ outside the council’s North Local Office in West Pilton this morning. TIE committee convener Lesley Hinds dismissed the protest as a poorly supported publicity stunt, but campaigners say they will escalate their activities if demands are not met.

Two local tenants groups – Tenants and Residents in Pilton (TRIP) and Tenants and Residents in Muirhouse (TRIM), supported by campaign group North Edinburgh Fights Back – urged local residents to support a campaign to get weekly bin collections restored by staging a publicity stunt at the local council office. Local people were encouraged to bring along their black bags and bins and ‘dump’ them on the council’s doorstep.

Speaking before the protest TRIP secretary Jon Black (pictured above) said: “The Council has mismanaged the changes to refuse collection, and its unacceptable. We shouldn’t have to be cleaning up our own streets, but this is what it has come to. Its a public health hazard, and the Council needs to sort it out. We are demanding that the Council re-introduce weekly collections, and we want adequate recycling facilities provided in the area. We also want the Council to clear up all the rubbish that has been missed.”

Around a dozen people supported the event, which attracted media attention – but Councillor Lesley Hinds, convener of the Transport, Infrastructure and Environment Committee, said the protest was a damp squib.

“This has been a  poorly-attended publicity stunt that neither improves the situation nor  accurately reflects the needs of the community. Of course I’d be happy to meet  any of the protesters to have constructive discussions on how we can improve  their waste collection service, but they have made no approaches to us so far. In  fact I’m told there have been very few issues in the Muirhouse and West Pilton  area – which may be why only a handful of people turned out on Monday  morning.”

The protesters plan to have a public meeting next month as part of a continuing campaign to get the council to meet their demands. If those demands are not met, the campaigners plan to take further action and say that they will fly-tip rubbish at the City Chambers.

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davepickering

Edinburgh reporter and photographer

3 thoughts on “A rubbish protest or a protest about rubbish?”

  1. I spoke to one of the council officers at the demonstration and was told they had a back log for issuing the recycling boxes.. That’s the problem… the recycling and fortnightly collection has been mismanaged, surely it should have been introduced slowly?, smaller areas to begin with with reports and feedback.

  2. If this bin dispute had been last year Councillor Hinds would have been leading the protestors from the front. Her photy would have been all over the Evening News! No change there of course.

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    Stuart Roy McIvor BA

    Inverleith Edinburgh EH3 5PY

    SCOTLAND

    Dileas agus Treun

    On 29 Oct 2012, at 15:41, North Edinburgh News wrote:

    > >

  3. Think councillor Hinds needs to open her eyes. How she can say we have no issues in Muirhouse is beside me. Since we went to fortnightly collections we have not had the appropriate recycle bins. Despite several emails to the council regarding recycle bins we still went without. I attended this today and was able to collect bins for my building. Why did I need to collect them, surely the council should ensure all households have had these prior to the changes. Ill maybe ask Cllr Hinds to attend our next TRIM meeting.

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