RECYCLING BUSINESS STOCKPILED WASTE


Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2009


A woman who claimed to be saving the environment has been sentenced for stockpiling waste around Scarborough.

At York Crown Court today (10 November), Louisa Smith was ordered to carry out 120 hours’ work for the good of the community after the judge told her that, despite her good intentions, her “chaotic” business had added to environmental problems.

Smith, 47, of the Mud Hut, Whin Covert, East Ayton, had pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to four charges of permitting environmental offences by her company.

The court heard Smith was a company director of Filey and Scarborough Trust for Recycling Limited (FAST), which has since ceased trading.

The company, of Wareham Road, Eastfield, Scarborough, was incorporated in November 2005 and its activities appear to have started the following year.

Its business was described as “recycling non-metal waste and scrap, social work without accommodation and collection and treatment of other waste”.

The court heard the intention appeared to be to collect unwanted items of all descriptions from domestic and business premises for recycling or redistribution. There appeared to be no discrimination about the items collected, which included waste cardboard, plastics, furniture, electrical goods, car batteries and paint.

In May 2006, FAST began free cardboard collections from Scalby School and some initial collections were free, although the company began charging for collection in January 2007. FAST advertised in Yellow Pages under “Skip Hire”.

The court heard the collection side of the business was developed with little thought for the disposal and recycling side, resulting in a large quantity of waste being collected with nowhere for it to go.

So it was piled up in various locations in and around Scarborough.

The Environment Agency first became involved in October 2006 after a report that waste was being stored at FAST’s site at Dunslow Court. An environment officer who attended found the unit completely full of waste and wrote to Smith warning this operation was illegal.

The officer returned in January 2007 with trading standards officers and saw 30 large sacks of paper waste, some of which had blown onto neighbouring land.

Smith was again warned verbally and in writing but the following month she and FAST leased more premises, in Wareham Road, and proceeded to fill that industrial unit too.

A surveillance operation discovered large amounts of waste were being processed at the Wareham Road site. Smith was observed taking a day-to-day role in the business.

From mid-September 2007, FAST was charging households in the Scarborough area to take away waste and in October 2007 Environment Agency officers discovered the business had an additional unit at Dunslow Court. All three units and Smith’s home contained mixed waste, such as wood, furniture, gas bottles, hand tools and electrical goods, batteries, vehicle parts, toys, shredded paper, pallets and paint tins. Only the paint tins were stored under cover.

Environment officers executed a search warrant at Dunslow Court on 2 November 2007. They asked Smith if FAST had any other sites where waste was stored and she directed them to Cleveland Road, where they found about 50 bin bags with domestic waste, ranging from vinyl records and white goods to mattresses and Christmas decorations.

The Environment Agency served FAST with notice in January 2008, requiring the company to file the necessary paperwork. No response was received.

Smith declined to attend an interview with environment officers.

In mitigation, the court heard Smith had started the business with the best of intentions but while she saw herself as in tune with the aims of the Environment Agency, the authorities did not see her business in the same way.

She was sentenced to a community punishment order for 120 hours but the judge made no order for prosecution costs after hearing about Smith’s financial circumstances.

Speaking after the case, environmental crime officer Steve Williamson said: “These offences were committed under the pretext of a recycling business and people thought they were helping the environment by giving their waste to Louisa Smith.

“However, her actions have blighted the Scarborough area, leaving household and commercial waste stockpiled at locations around the town.

“Recycling and reducing waste is an important way to protect the environment for future generations and I would urge householders and businesses to check the proper licences are in place for any waste disposal or recycling businesses they use.

“Louisa Smith chose to ignore repeated advice from us about how to run her operation legally and today’s case demonstrates that we will not hesitate to take action against anyone who flouts the law and causes environmental harm.”

Smith was charged with four offences:

1) Unlicensed keeping of controlled waste, contrary to sections 33(1)(b), 33(6) and 157(1) of the Environmental Protection Act 11000, that on 18 September 2007, being a director of the Filey and Scarborough Trust for Recycling, consented to, connived in or caused by neglect, the keeping by the said trust of controlled waste, namely commercial and household waste including packaging and electrical waste, on land at Unit 8, Wareham Road, Eastfield, Scarborough other than in accordance with a Waste Management Licence.

2) Unlicensed keeping of controlled waste, contrary to sections 33(1)(b), 33(6) and 157(1) of the Environmental Protection Act 11000, that on 16 October 2007, being a director of the Filey and Scarborough Trust for Recycling, consented to, contrived in or caused by neglect, the keeping by the said trust of controlled waste, namely commercial and household waste including wood, packaging and furniture, on land at Unit 8, Wareham Road, Eastfield, Scarborough other than in accordance with a Waste Management Licence.

3) Unlicensed keeping of controlled waste, contrary to sections 33(1)(b), 33(6) and 157(1) of the Environmental Protection Act 11000, that on 2 November 2007, being a director of the Filey and Scarborough Trust for Recycling, consented to, connived in or caused by neglect, the keeping by the said trust of controlled waste, namely commercial and household waste including wood, packaging, furniture, electrical goods, scrap metal and green waste on land in a compound adjacent to Unit 2, Dunslow Court, Eastfield, Scarborough other than in accordance with a Waste Management Licence.

4) Unlicensed keeping of controlled waste, contrary to sections 33(1)(b), 33(6) and 157(1) of the Environmental Protection Act 11000, that on 6 November 2007, being a Director of the Filey and Scarborough Trust for Recycling, consented to, connived in or caused by neglect, the keeping by the said trust of controlled waste, namely commercial and household waste including furniture, electrical goods, scrap metal and textiles at Unit 4, Cleveland Road, Scarborough other than in accordance with a Waste Management Licence.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom
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