Forum back online. Please post!
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
You sound surprised!
Having just seem my Air fare for the hols next year£230 on flights, £250 on taxes!
Quote from: "Evilgoat"Having just seem my Air fare for the hols next year£230 on flights, £250 on taxes!Hols??? What are they?? I can't afford them because of all the tax the government are extracting from me :roll: :lol: So, if we take our refuse to the local tip ourselves, do we not have to pay the tax? Somehow I suspect we will!
Quote from: "V8MoneyPit"Quote from: "Evilgoat"Having just seem my Air fare for the hols next year£230 on flights, £250 on taxes!Hols??? What are they?? I can't afford them because of all the tax the government are extracting from me :roll: :lol: So, if we take our refuse to the local tip ourselves, do we not have to pay the tax? Somehow I suspect we will!you'll be exempt from the tax but they'll charge an admission fee at the tip and if you get stopped on the way to the tip you'll get done for been an unlicensed waste carrier.
Offset by a reduction in your council tax. snipI do all these and our wheelie bin is not even half full each week with a family of four. I reckon that I could leave our bin two, sometimes three weeks between collections so that would be all I paid for.
I can't help thinking that those plastic milk bottles could be replaced with reusable options but that's a long way off.
, £250 on taxes!
REDUCE the amount you buy and the amount of packaging you accept i.e. unwrap it at the shop and leave the shop to dispose of it.
RECYCLE. If you've been clever with the first two above then you won't have much of this either. Most supermarkets have bottle banks etc, just include it in the trip to the supermarket.
I do all these and our wheelie bin is not even half full each week with a family of four. I reckon that I could leave our bin two, sometimes three weeks between collections so that would be all I paid for.
Offset by a reduction in your council tax. The rest is EASY by throwing less away.REDUCE the amount you buy and the amount of packaging you accept i.e. unwrap it at the shop and leave the shop to dispose of it.REUSE. Theres plenty of plastic out there that can be reused rather than throwing it away or buy something that can be reused. I can't help thinking that those plastic milk bottles could be replaced with reusable options but that's a long way off. Compost kitchen waste is another reuse option that saves you cash on buying the stuff.RECYCLE. If you've been clever with the first two above then you won't have much of this either. Most supermarkets have bottle banks etc, just include it in the trip to the supermarket.I do all these and our wheelie bin is not even half full each week with a family of four. I reckon that I could leave our bin two, sometimes three weeks between collections so that would be all I paid for.EASY
[I'm not at all convinced that they will charge 'per collection'. It is far more likely to be an annual figure added to your council tax. So it won't make any difference how few times you have it collected. Until they get a bar coding or chipping system in place, they have no way of logging how many collections they do.Ultimately, this is just another easy way to tax the public and look politically correct in the process. It is nothing to do with the environment. It's simply to raise revenue.
Come live down in the warm south in the summer where we already have 2 weekly collection, the bins stink, fly's and rat's are becoming a major problem
Looks like we are about to get charged double for rubbish collections folks. After all, we pay for it in the bloody council tax already :S
Quote from: "mike142sl" I can't help thinking that those plastic milk bottles could be replaced with reusable options but that's a long way off. We used to have a version of that when I was little, they called them milk bottles. This guy called milkman used to deliever full ones and take empties back to be refilled.
Funny what some of you have said about recycling. In Rotherham they only seem to 'recycle' stuff they can sell.So tins and bottles get collected, green waste and cardboard go to the ******* farmer near us to get pulped into 'fertiliser' but plastic? no-one wants it second hand so it still goes to landfill.