LACK OF PAPERWORK LANDS A ST PANCRAS MAN IN COURT

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
May of 2005

 

20/05/2005 - A London man was fined almost £500 yesterday for driving a lorry fully loaded with construction and demolition waste without the required documentation.
Michael Sexton, of Cromer Street, St Pancras, London, appeared at Barnet Magistrate’s Court, on May 19, where he pleaded guilty to two offences. The first for failing to register with the Environment Agency as a waste carrier under by the Control of Pollution (Amendment) Act 1989 and the second for failing to secure a waste transfer note containing a written description of the waste when transporting controlled waste, as required by the Environmental Protection (Duty of Care) Regulations 1991. Mr Sexton was fined £240 for each offence and ordered to pay a contribution of £300 towards the prosecution costs.

On November 26 2004 Mr Sexton was stopped by enforcement officers from the Environment Agency who were taking part in a joint operation with the Metropolitan Police and the Vehicle and Operator Services Agency. He was stopped by the police driving a tipper truck fully loaded with construction and demolition waste and taken to a checkpoint. When interviewed under caution Mr Sexton admitted that he did not have a waste transfer note and further enquiries established that he was not registered with the Environment Agency to carry waste.

It is important waste carriers are registered with the Environment Agency to ensure that waste is deposited at licensed facilities. Waste carriers must also complete waste transfer notes each time the waste is transferred so that it can be tracked throughout its lifetime in accordance with the duty of care regime established by the Environmental Protection Act 11000.

Brain Hyams, enforcement officer, said: “The Duty of Care exists to ensure that waste is disposed of legitimately without causing harm to the environment or human health. If the Environment Agency is unable to track waste from the cradle to the grave there is no knowing where potentially harmful waste will end up.”

Companies and individuals can contact the Environment Agency for advice and information on waste disposal by contacting 08708 506 506. Members of the public can report environmental incidents to the Agency’s emergency hotline on 0800 80 70 60.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship
(Emma Cassidy)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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