|
|
|
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100,
group: alt.uk.edinburgh.misc
back
has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
improved quite a bit.
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100
author: Marvin
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
wrote this:-
>We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>improved quite a bit.
Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 12:00:54 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
> wrote this:-
>
>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>> improved quite a bit.
>
> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>
>
This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
the following rubbish spoiled the view:
Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
Overflowing rubbish bins
One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
person's hostel
Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
off the only green park in the area
As for the 'bus shelters'......
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 15:08:17 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Marvin wrote:
> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> improved quite a bit.
Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being laid
down. Can't say I've noticed casual litter, although I haven't exactly
been looking out for it. It would be a pleasant change!
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 17:19:28 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug equipment, dirty paving slabs.
Sounds like a Leith picture postcard. :-)
Actually, now that I think about it, I would appreciate the streets
being cleaned up by taking all these beggars who hang about ATMs away
and using them for something useful. Like landfill.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 17:21:09 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Mike Dickson wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>
>> Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug equipment, dirty paving slabs.
>
> Sounds like a Leith picture postcard. :-)
>
> Actually, now that I think about it, I would appreciate the streets
> being cleaned up by taking all these beggars who hang about ATMs away
> and using them for something useful. Like landfill.
>
Oh for Leith - working ladies and TRAMS to come ;-}
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 16:39:56 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Mike Dickson wrote:
> ...Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being laid
> down. ...
You must be joking! Ok it is relatively free of litter, but looks good?
It is a granite wasteland. The remit, as far as I understood it, was to
create a continental type market place feel for the street. Well I can't
remember ever visiting anywhere similar on my travels around
continental Europe, with the exception perhaps of La Defense. You can
tell how successful it is by the fact that the street is usually free of
people except on the days it is covered over by stalls.
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 07:44:36 GMT
author: Graeme Wood
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Graeme Wood wrote:
> Mike Dickson wrote:
>
>> ...Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being
>> laid down. ...
>
> You must be joking! Ok it is relatively free of litter, but looks good?
It looks substantially better without the decades-old chewing gum
trampled into the paving stones.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 17:24:11 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Graeme Wood wrote:
> Mike Dickson wrote:
>
>> ...Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being
>> laid down. ...
>
> You must be joking! Ok it is relatively free of litter, but looks good?
> It is a granite wasteland. The remit, as far as I understood it, was to
> create a continental type market place feel for the street. Well I can't
> remember ever visiting anywhere similar on my travels around
> continental Europe, with the exception perhaps of La Defense. You can
> tell how successful it is by the fact that the street is usually free of
> people except on the days it is covered over by stalls.
Why did they want to make it look continental? This is Scotland, can we
not have our own ideas?
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 17:54:11 +0100
author: Marvin
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 2007-05-23 17:54:11 +0100, Marvin said:
> Why did they want to make it look continental? This is Scotland, can we
> not have our own ideas
No. All individuality must be erased.
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 21:20:56 +0100
author: Tim Bradshaw
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
wrote this:-
>We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>improved quite a bit.
Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 12:00:54 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
> wrote this:-
>
>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>> improved quite a bit.
>
> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>
>
This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
the following rubbish spoiled the view:
Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
Overflowing rubbish bins
One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
person's hostel
Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
off the only green park in the area
As for the 'bus shelters'......
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 15:08:17 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Marvin wrote:
> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> improved quite a bit.
Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being laid
down. Can't say I've noticed casual litter, although I haven't exactly
been looking out for it. It would be a pleasant change!
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 17:19:28 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug equipment, dirty paving slabs.
Sounds like a Leith picture postcard. :-)
Actually, now that I think about it, I would appreciate the streets
being cleaned up by taking all these beggars who hang about ATMs away
and using them for something useful. Like landfill.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 17:21:09 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Mike Dickson wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>
>> Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug equipment, dirty paving slabs.
>
> Sounds like a Leith picture postcard. :-)
>
> Actually, now that I think about it, I would appreciate the streets
> being cleaned up by taking all these beggars who hang about ATMs away
> and using them for something useful. Like landfill.
>
Oh for Leith - working ladies and TRAMS to come ;-}
date: Tue, 22 May 2007 16:39:56 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Mike Dickson wrote:
> ...Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being laid
> down. ...
You must be joking! Ok it is relatively free of litter, but looks good?
It is a granite wasteland. The remit, as far as I understood it, was to
create a continental type market place feel for the street. Well I can't
remember ever visiting anywhere similar on my travels around
continental Europe, with the exception perhaps of La Defense. You can
tell how successful it is by the fact that the street is usually free of
people except on the days it is covered over by stalls.
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 07:44:36 GMT
author: Graeme Wood
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Graeme Wood wrote:
> Mike Dickson wrote:
>
>> ...Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being
>> laid down. ...
>
> You must be joking! Ok it is relatively free of litter, but looks good?
It looks substantially better without the decades-old chewing gum
trampled into the paving stones.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 17:24:11 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Graeme Wood wrote:
> Mike Dickson wrote:
>
>> ...Castle Terrace looks good thanks to the new paving stones being
>> laid down. ...
>
> You must be joking! Ok it is relatively free of litter, but looks good?
> It is a granite wasteland. The remit, as far as I understood it, was to
> create a continental type market place feel for the street. Well I can't
> remember ever visiting anywhere similar on my travels around
> continental Europe, with the exception perhaps of La Defense. You can
> tell how successful it is by the fact that the street is usually free of
> people except on the days it is covered over by stalls.
Why did they want to make it look continental? This is Scotland, can we
not have our own ideas?
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 17:54:11 +0100
author: Marvin
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 2007-05-23 17:54:11 +0100, Marvin said:
> Why did they want to make it look continental? This is Scotland, can we
> not have our own ideas
No. All individuality must be erased.
date: Wed, 23 May 2007 21:20:56 +0100
author: Tim Bradshaw
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In ed.general David Liddle wrote:
> David Hansen wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 May 2007 11:44:59 +0100 someone who may be Marvin
>> wrote this:-
>>
>>> We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
>>> he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
>>> hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
>>> to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
>>> improved quite a bit.
>>
>> Take a look at the bus stop at the top of Waverley Steps on the
>> other side of the road. Cracked paving slabs and drains, used drug
>> equipment, dirty paving slabs. I will measure the new regime by what
>> they do with this location, a fairly prime one for visitors.
>>
>>
> This norning I walked down to our locl shop - Grove Street. On the way
> the following rubbish spoiled the view:
> Numerous cigarete butts litter the pavement and gutters.
> Chewing gum covers most paving slabs
> Overflowing rubbish bins
> One fully loaded hypodermic syringe lay on the pavement outside a young
> person's hostel
> Dog shite is reducing - largely because our considerate council has sold
> off the only green park in the area
> As for the 'bus shelters'......
One of the problems with the modern bus shelter is that it mustn't be
comfortable enough to encourage a homeless street person to sleep in
it. Am I right in thinking that there's more homeless people sleeping
in the streets than there used to be?
--
Chris Malcolm cam@infirmatics.ed.ac.uk DoD #205
IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
[http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/]
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 07:47:46 +0000 (UTC)
author: Chris Malcolm
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On 22 May, 17:19, Mike Dickson wrote:
> Marvin wrote:
> > We have a Canadian guest staying with us just now and yesterday he said
> > he was amazed how clean the streets are here, no litter etc. Now I
> > hadn't noticed this, but I looked around after he said it and he seems
> > to be right. Edinburgh used to be very dirty but it seems to have
> > improved quite a bit.
>
> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
bin bags has made difference
Phil
date: 30 May 2007 13:47:11 -0700
author: unknown
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
>> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
>> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
>
> I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> bin bags has made difference
I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
hard to encompass.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
wrote this:-
>I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>hard to encompass.
Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
--
David Hansen, Edinburgh
I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 07:35:19 +0100
author: David Hansen
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
David Hansen wrote:
> On Wed, 30 May 2007 22:45:01 +0100 someone who may be Mike Dickson
> wrote this:-
>
>> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
>> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
>> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
>> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
>> hard to encompass.
>
> Indeed. However, when the council tried to introduce such bins they
> were accused of all sorts of things and ISTR taken to court by
> people who didn't want "ugly" bins.
The problem is that the 'ugly bins' already exist; just about every
restaurant in town has at least two, and that establishment owned by one
Mr J Chung has five. This much I know because they habitually have them
parked right outside our stair door, hosting all-night parties for the
myriad gulls and rats that gather there.
--
Mike Dickson, Edinburgh
date: Thu, 31 May 2007 08:06:56 +0100
author: Mike Dickson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article ,
Mike Dickson wrote:
> philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk wrote:
>
> >> Depends where you look. Grindlay Street and environs still looks like
> >> Mordor some mornings thanks to a combination of gulls and arseholes who
> >> think it is their right to put out their black bags seven days a week.
> >
> > I think you've hit on something there. Having wheelie bins rather than
> > bin bags has made difference
>
> I agree wholeheartedly, but that is something that we are not going to
> gte, as this is a 'National Heritage' site of some kind. It seems that
> it's better to have rubbish strewn all over the place than it is to have
> 'unsightly' bins on the roadway. A more simple-minded approach would be
> hard to encompass.
But the predecessor to the current local authority had a workable
solution: minimise the time that the bags are out in the street. They
did this by collecting the bags at a reasonable time in the day so that
they don't have to be out all night. We still have a sticker in our
stair saying something along the lines that it's illegal to put rubbish
bags out before 7am on the day of collection. That worked a treat.
Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
me get started... too late.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:15:58 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
> Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> me get started... too late.
>
> Sam
9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 15:27:35 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
In article <46602cda$0$8754$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net>,
"Alan" <me|@me.com> wrote:
> > Then the current lot came in and decided they couldn't afford to let the
> > binmen start work as late as 9 and that led to more foxes and gulls in
> > then to big black bins parked on double yellow lines. Arrgh, don't let
> > me get started... too late.
> >
> > Sam
>
> 9.00am is the earliest your black bin bag collextion should take place. If
> they are collected earlier then complain to the council.
That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
Sam
date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 15:55:56 +0100
author: Sam Wilson
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>
> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>
> Sam
It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
bothered complaining.
alan
date: Fri, 1 Jun 2007 16:54:38 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
Alan wrote:
>> That's what it said on the wall about 10 years ago. Then the council
>> was reorganised, insisted that bins had to be out earlier and then
>> insisted that the only way to stop the vermin from attacking the bags
>> overnight was to install big black bins. On the double yellow lines
>> where it was too dangerous to park cars. In an area where they had
>> spent money on their safer routes to school initiative.
>>
>> Sam
>
> It was still the case in December 2006 when I last complained, it was
> confirmed to me that the first collection should not before 9.00am. Until
> this week they seems to have improved but on Monday the refuse was collected
> at 8.45am, one of my neighbours missed the collection, I couldn't be
> bothered complaining.
>
>
> alan
>
>
The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected
anytime from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but
only 1 or 2 are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some
cannot be used) recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin
appeared. There does not seem to be a regular collection as the former
was overflowing for several weeks.
Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
civilised countries?
date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 08:22:59 GMT
author: David Liddle
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
Re: has Edinburgh cleaned up its act?
>>
>>
> The realty seems to be here (Grove Street) that bins are collected anytime
> from 0800 onwards. There are four bins in the sidestreet but only 1 or 2
> are collected each time (carefully positioned so that some cannot be used)
> recently a pape re-cycling and one other re-cycling bin appeared. There
> does not seem to be a regular collection as the former was overflowing for
> several weeks.
>
> Rush hour collecting of course helps to f*** up further the city centre
> traffic but then that may have been a deliberate decision re the timing.
>
> Why can't rubbish be collected in the evening and daily like most
> civilised countries?
Sorry, one of is confused, I was referring to black bin bag collection,
these should not be picked up until 9.00am.
alan
date: Sat, 2 Jun 2007 12:51:57 +0100
author: Alan me|@me.com
|
|
|