Jayop wrote: » No but you can take them to a bottle bank and throw them in that. Costs nothing and the money goes towards charities. Surely you're aware of the existence of bottle banks??
henryporter wrote: » There's a charity somewhere in Dublin that recycles them entirely. On another note I lived for years beside a family of 5 adults who burned all their rubbish beside a river - scumbags never had a bin. Had Sky TV though
uch wrote: » To be honest, landfill is a bad idea, and nobody in this country wants to live within 25 miles of a landfill tip
HensVassal wrote: » Can you just throw your bottles in a bag and leave them in the street?
pickarooney wrote: » You have to pay to recycle and use the rubbish tip in Ireland? That's nuts. Would free rubbish tips not be a good deterrant to fly tipping? Probably not actually, the kind of cünt that does that presumably enjoys it.
Jayop wrote: » You pay to have bottles removed?? Why?
mansize wrote: » You can't put mattresses in regular waste anyway. Most companies will take away your old one when you buy a new one
seamus wrote: » So John registers with a bin collection company. But he never puts the bins out because he dumps his bags in the mountains. However, the bin collection company are getting peed off. They keep sending a truck to John's house but there's nothing there. So instead they introduce a registration charge which doubles as an account credit. You pay them €60 at the start of the year and then they deduct the cost of collections from that €60. John of course now reckons, fnck it, he's paying anyway, so why not just put the bins out instead of going to the hassle of driving them up the mountains in the dark twice a week?
neacy69 wrote: » John also pays by weight so fly tips any big/heavy stuff
joeysoap wrote: » If two neighbours share a bin is that now going to be illegal? If your children, living nearby use your bin is that now going to be illegal. Are they saying two neighbours must register and the second set of bins sits unused. What if my son registers and just stores the bins without actually using them? No fcuking wonder that labour minister was classed as a tossed by everybody (ok Delaney excepted)
HensVassal wrote: » You have always been fined if you are caught for illegal dumping. This is just another money grubbing scam under the guise of protecting the environment. The Irish are such suckers. Back in the day there was an incentive to return your bottles. You got 5p back for them. Then some schmuck scrapped that program while some other schmuck decided "hey, how about I generate loads of money by charging the public idiots to take their bottles? Ka-ching!" Complete scam and the Irish just never learn.
mariaalice wrote: » You cant out cat litter in the compost bin
mansize wrote: » If you are caught you are fined. Why is this so difficult for people??? I live alone, I pay for bins that are usually only 1/2 full.
HensVassal wrote: » Am I fcuking alone in the world here? How is this going to stop people illegally dumping stuff. Unless everyone pays a flat fee for garbage disposal even if they never put a bin on the street.
mansize wrote: » Shouldn't that be in the compost bin?
mansize wrote: » You have to seen to disposing of your rubbish correctly
Speedwell wrote: » And the other half of ours comes from cat litter.
Jayop wrote: » Why would they fly tip if they are paying for rubbish collection?
HensVassal wrote: » What are you on about? A guy drives out along a country road, dumps an old mattress in a ditch and drives off. That's fly-tipping. What's receipts got to do with anything?
maudgonner wrote: » I don't know if it will stop fly tipping though. Isn't pay-by-weight becoming mandatory? That means there will still be plenty of incentive for arseholes to throw their rubbish wherever they please to save a few quid.
mansize wrote: » No receipt for waste disposal equals fine