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Birmingham council ‘on track’ to clear waste backlog

Phil Mackie

Midlands Correspondent

Shyamantha Asokan

BBC News, West Midlands

Chris Blakemore

BBC Radio WM

BBC A group of people stand in a row and hold red flags and banners in different colours. The red flags say BBC

Birmingham City Council says it is on track to clear a backlog of uncollected waste by the weekend, despite the ongoing dispute with the Unite union.

Craig Cooper, strategic director of city operations, said collections would focus first on “the poorest parts” of the city “affected the most” by the ongoing bin strike.

Striking workers have held a rally a day after Unite union members rejected the city council’s latest pay offer.

Mr Cooper said the amount of uncollected waste had peaked at 22,000 tonnes, but he expected to be back to “one household collection every week” for all residents by the weekend.

Hundreds of bin workers began an all-out strike on 11 March in a standoff with the Labour-run council that has led to bin bags and fly-tipped rubbish piling up on streets.

The city’s residents are caught in the middle of the dispute and many have told the BBC of their increasing frustrations, with one saying it “can’t go on”.

Mr Cooper said garden waste and recycling would not be collected by the authority until the strike is over.

“We’re already back to collecting normal household waste this week,” he said. “We are back into a position of good control.

“The priority now is street cleansing and making sure the fly-tipping is at a manageable level.”

He added the council had 120 bin lorries out every day completing rounds, which was roughly half of its total capacity.

Mr Cooper described it as “disappointing” an agreement had not been reached with Unite and urged them to “come back to the table” to end the dispute.

More negotiations between the two sides are expected to take place on Wednesday.

The dispute centres around the council’s decision to remove Waste Recycling and Collection Officer roles from some bin workers.

On Monday, workers voted to reject the council’s latest offer, which Unite said was “totally inadequate” and also did not address potential pay cuts for 200 drivers.

A council spokesperson said the offer was fair and included options for affected workers.

The rally started at 10:30 BST outside the council house and Unite confirmed that a petition containing 3,000 signatures was handed in during the event.

Dozens of Unite officials, bin workers and supporters turned up to the rally, which included speeches from union figures and striking staff.

There were cheers and loud horns from the crowd, who held up placards and flags.

A man stands in a car park, with a white truck in the background. He is wearing black trousers, white trainers, and a dark blue top, and red gloves.

Many Brummies have stepped forward to help each other out during the strikes, with neighbours sharing trips to the tip and volunteer litter-pickers seeing their work increase.

“Where we can help people out, we should help out,” said Haroon Hassan, who was collecting bin bags from residents and carrying them to a mobile waste centre in Small Heath on Tuesday.

“That’s just being a good citizen, a good member of the community.”

During the strike, the council has been running mobile collections where bin trucks park at a fixed location in a neighbourhood for a morning, so people can bring along their rubbish.

Mr Hassan told BBC Radio WM that the bin strike had been “very, very tough” for residents, especially with the weather getting warmer in recent weeks.

He said he was hopeful the two sides would soon find a solution as “this sort of stuff can’t go on forever”.

A woman stands on the pavement of a busy road. She has straight black hair, and she is wearing a blue and white striped shirt and jeans. There is grey fencing behind her.

Violet Williams, a Small Heath resident who was using the waste centre, said she felt “awful” when she saw photos of bin bags piling up on the city’s streets, which have made headlines around the world.

Ms Williams, who does not have a car, was dropping her rubbish off at the centre before taking a bus to collect more rubbish from her 92-year-old mother.

Standoff continues

As the strike rumbles on, national government ministers have also voiced concerns over the situation in the UK’s second largest city.

“Our message, loud and clear, is that Unite need to call off the strike, accept the deal, and let’s get back to normal,” industry minister Sarah Jones told BBC Breakfast on Tuesday.

The union said its workers were striking in order to prevent pay cuts, not in a bid to get more money than they currently receive.

“Our members would like nothing better than to be able to call off the strike and get back to work,” Onay Kasab, Unite national lead officer, told BBC Breakfast.

“But as things stand, we still have people who are going to be facing huge pay cuts as a result of this.”

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