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Local Democracy Reporting

Red warnings issued to hundreds of recycling rule breakers

3:00pm
File image of person putting recycling in bin

The clean recycling message has been slow to kick in for some Southland residents, more than one year after bin inspections began in the region.

By Matthew Rosenberg of Local Democracy Reporting

In March last year, WasteNet rolled out a three-strike system which meant offenders who received three red tags for significant contamination lost their bins.

Since the programme’s inception, 20 properties had hit that threshold and only five had applied for reinstatement.

A recent report from WasteNet director Fiona Walker showed there was still room for improvement, even though contamination had dipped.

"Data collected to-date reinforces the need to have a programme which is based on both education ... and enforcement, noting that some residents are not motivated by education alone as demonstrated by repeat red tags being received in a relatively short time period," Walker wrote.

The report showed that from the start of the year to March 29, 10,656 bin inspections had been completed across the three council areas with a compliance rate of 88%.

Five per cent of inspections (488 total) had resulted in an orange tag, while 7% (782 total) led to a red tag.

The most common form of contamination seen during monitoring was soft plastics followed by organic waste and general refuse or dirty items.

There was some good news, with the report showing the contamination rate had dropped from 17% to 13% when comparing 2023/24 with the current financial year-to-date.

That meant the amount of contamination sent to landfill from recycling was down by 18 tonnes a month.

For the 2023/24 year, 944 tonnes of waste was redirected to landfill from recycling at a cost of $339,604, based on transfer station fees at that time.

WasteNet is a shared waste service for Southland District, Invercargill City and Gore District councils.

Changes are in the pipeline which would allow bins to be confiscated if contamination was recorded three times across two years, instead of over a one-year period.

– LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

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