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Clamp down on fly-tippers
56 vehicle checks and two arrests
Fly-tipping in the borough costs the tax-payer between £105,000 and £115,000 a year - and a joint exercise saw police and council staff check vehicle documentation for the legal disposal of business waste as well as the correct transportation of livestock.
The initiative resulted in three vehicles being seized - one uninsured, one un-roadworthy, and one transporting overweight soil from a site believed to be contaminated - with three further investigations
pending that will look at businesses responsible for waste collection.
Richard Palacio, Environmental Improvement manager at Swindon Borough Council, told us: "We are looking at vehicles which may be being used to transport commercial or industrial trade waste.
"Fly-tipping causes detriment to the environment, and Swindon Borough Council residents are paying for its landfill costs.
"We are trying to increase the awareness in trade and businesses, of the importance of having the documentation for the correct disposal of waste."
Traders found guilty of transporting waste illegally could face a £300 fixed penalty fine - with re-offenders paying up to £5,000 and potentially a 6-month custodial sentence.
PC Russ Printer, the officer in charge of the Commercial Vehicle Unit, organised the check in conjunction with Swindon Borough Council. "It's not just a case of checking vehicles for their condition and documentation," he told us.
"The main aim is to look at the potential criminal use of those vehicles, and trying to get some of those vehicles and some of those criminals off the streets."
Mel Turner-Wright |
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Swindon Borough Council - website | |||||||
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Swindon police - website |
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