
Plan emerges for huge Leicestershire substation the size of 120 football pitches
Plans for a huge substation in the Leicestershire countryside have emerged. Applicant NatPower UK Limited has submitted the request for land at …
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Brummies drop rubbish at mobile bin lorries while volunteers try to clean streets
Fed-up residents dropped off rubbish at mobile bin lorries in Birmingham on Easter Sunday – while volunteers tried to clean the streets of fly-tipped waste. Seven bin lorries parked up at Birmingham Central Mosque at 10am on Sunday (20/4). Pictures show several council workers struggling to make themselves busy as a slow trickle of cars entered the site to get rid of their waste. In one shot, seven men in total can be seen scrambling to empty one car of a few black bin bags. While few residents took advantage of the Easter Sunday mobile collection point, tonnes of fly-tipped waste was still in evidence around the city. Bin bags which appear to have been ripped open by vermin with rotting food spilling out lay stacked on street corners along with old sofas, beds and building materials. One resident said: “It’s madness to me to have so many bin men operating these mobile collections when the worst rubbish is piled up on the streets. “Birmingham is a grim place to be at the moment but it seems plain daft to have bin men twiddling their thumbs when there’s piles of rubbish on the streets.” Another said: “The rubbish is attracting rats and all sorts of other vermin. “It’s disgusting. I was really suprised to see bin men just sitting around at the collection point – why on earth not get a lorry and start picking up the rubbish all over the city?” Birmingham City Council is still locked in a bitter war with the Unite union over pay and conditions. Bin crews, who say a change of job roles will leave them up to £8,000-a-year worse off, have been striking since March 11 and say they will continue until September. The low turn-out comes two weeks after locals in Tyseley swarmed bin men with their waste and created a 5ft high rubbish mountain which took hours to clear. This is the latest mobile refuse collection spots, with a new location chosen each day. Volunteers from Project Clean Sparkhill were out in force cleaning the streets over the bank holiday weekend. City environment boss Councillor Majid Mahmood said: "We have prioritised our street cleansing teams to remove fly tips that have accumulated on the city’s streets. "An operational decision was taken to divert resource from one of our mobile household waste centres next week to fly tip removals. This will remain under constant review to ensure we continue to deploy our resources to the areas of greatest need. "Our approach will be evolving as we work tirelessly to clear up our city."
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Lewis Miley transfer stance clear as Newcastle United youngster struggles for game time
Lewis Miley may have just started one Premier League fixture this season but Eddie Howe insists the Newcastle United prodigy is 'pivotal' to what the …
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Brummies drop rubbish at mobile bin lorries while volunteers try to clean streets
Fed-up residents dropped off rubbish at mobile bin lorries in Birmingham on Easter Sunday – while volunteers tried to clean the streets of fly-tipped waste. Seven bin lorries parked up at Birmingham Central Mosque at 10am on Sunday (20/4). Pictures show several council workers struggling to make themselves busy as a slow trickle of cars entered the site to get rid of their waste. In one shot, seven men in total can be seen scrambling to empty one car of a few black bin bags. While few residents took advantage of the Easter Sunday mobile collection point, tonnes of fly-tipped waste was still in evidence around the city. Bin bags which appear to have been ripped open by vermin with rotting food spilling out lay stacked on street corners along with old sofas, beds and building materials. One resident said: “It’s madness to me to have so many bin men operating these mobile collections when the worst rubbish is piled up on the streets. “Birmingham is a grim place to be at the moment but it seems plain daft to have bin men twiddling their thumbs when there’s piles of rubbish on the streets.” Another said: “The rubbish is attracting rats and all sorts of other vermin. “It’s disgusting. I was really suprised to see bin men just sitting around at the collection point – why on earth not get a lorry and start picking up the rubbish all over the city?” Birmingham City Council is still locked in a bitter war with the Unite union over pay and conditions. Bin crews, who say a change of job roles will leave them up to £8,000-a-year worse off, have been striking since March 11 and say they will continue until September. The low turn-out comes two weeks after locals in Tyseley swarmed bin men with their waste and created a 5ft high rubbish mountain which took hours to clear. This is the latest mobile refuse collection spots, with a new location chosen each day. Volunteers from Project Clean Sparkhill were out in force cleaning the streets over the bank holiday weekend. City environment boss Councillor Majid Mahmood said: "We have prioritised our street cleansing teams to remove fly tips that have accumulated on the city’s streets. "An operational decision was taken to divert resource from one of our mobile household waste centres next week to fly tip removals. This will remain under constant review to ensure we continue to deploy our resources to the areas of greatest need. "Our approach will be evolving as we work tirelessly to clear up our city."
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A New, Full-Bodied Fraud Comes in a Whisky Barrel
There are some 48,000 barrels of Scotch whisky quietly aging in Martin Armstrong’s warehouses in southwestern Scotland. Last year, 17 of them became a problem. Mr. Armstrong normally deals with companies that buy hundreds of barrels at a time from distilleries, then pay him to store them as they …