Lane flytippers left 150 beer barrels

Wednesday 19th November 2008, 11:40AM GMT.

wd3140566flytipping-1emai.jpgFlytippers dumped 150 empty steel beer barrels in a Staffordshire country lane – stacked neatly down both sides of the road.

The barrels were dumped in School Lane, Little Wyrley, overnight between Monday and Tuesday this week. It is believed a large vehicle would have been needed to transport them with possibly three people, a driver and two others, to unload them.

Cannock Chase Council environmental health officers believe unloading and lining tup would have taken a significant amount of time and would have blocked the lane.

They have appealed for help finding those responsible for the dumping – the latest in a series of flytipping incidents on the lane. People who might know where the barrels came from are urged to come forward.

The barrels were originally supplied to the Coors brewery, Burton upon Trent, which has been contacted by the council.

The US-owned drinks giant agreed to collect the barrels at no cost to the council but could not find where they were delivered to as there are no serial numbers on the barrels. Despite the firm picking up barrels Cannock Chase Council has said it will pursue the offenders for flytipping offences.

Last month two 45-gallon drums of industrial acid were dumped in a ditch on School Lane, costing the council £800 to remove. Flytippers can face a £50,000 fine and up to five years in prison if convicted.

Karen Sulway, Cannock Chase Council environmental protection officer, said: “Although the barrels once had a scrap value we are being told scrap merchants are now turning people away because the value is much less than it was and they have got a lot of scrap to process.”

Councillor Tony Williams, cabinet member for environment said: “The council will do all it can to to trace those responsible and prosecute them because these people are environmental criminals. I was actually in School Lane earlier this month to meet a resident there and during that visit we came across asbestos which had been dumped and I got that cleared up that day.”

The council is awaiting the granting of gating orders from the county council to close School Lane to all but farm traffic. Clearing up flytipping in Cannock cost the council more than £24,000 last year.


  1. 1
    James Hatefield

    It local authorities made it easier for people to dispose of refuse, instead of introducing bewilderingly complex rules and regulations governing recycling and refuse disposal and if the civic amenities sites actually accepted rubbish instead of changing their operating timesa and striking my guess is that there would be a lot less flytipping

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  2. 2
    Crumbdiddley

    Totally agree. Most refuse disposal sites are ridiculous these days. No vans or commercial vehicles of any type, no trailers..!! And 12 blokes all leaning on brushes doing sweet F.A.

    Typical really.

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  3. 3
    nos

    Crumbdummy,, 12 blokes leaning on brushes are there to retrive the items you place in the incorrect skips,lets recycle correctly!

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  4. 4
    chris g

    PERHAPS IT’S NOT FLY TIPPING BUT A WORK OF ART, IV’E SEEN WORSE.

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  5. 5
    Crumbdiddley

    Nos: As i’m the DUMMY here I am assuming you mean retrieve the items not retrive….muppett..!!

    As for recycling correctly, alot of items in recycle bins ends up in landfill anyway.!!

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  6. 6
    Rambo

    Don’t these things have a deposit on them? Even a scrap value?

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  7. 7
    Marge Simpson

    NOS – The guys who stand with the brushes’ tend to just watch, and fail to assist in any way shape or form… Many a time i have been and needed help and they wont lift a finger, but then moan when you drop a blade of grass NEAR the correct skip… Recycling is fine, but something’s just wont fit in those little blue tubs and brown bins you get supplied with – hence the trip to the refuse site…

    And with regards to the fly tippers leaving the barrels, then yes they should be found and fined, but im sure they will appeal, and end up paying 25p a week for the next 60 years. Plus side, at least they left them out of the road…

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  8. 8
    Crumbdiddley

    nos: I’m guessing you mean retrieve items.

    Bless you my fellow dummy friend. Good effort though.

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  9. 9
    Crumbdiddley

    nos: retrive or do you mean retrieve.

    Dummy

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  10. 10
    jeffb

    Heavy drinkers round there eh?

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  11. 11
    mr smug

    seems quite obvious to me, it has to be a registered company who act as an independent although order through the major chains. the vast majority of pubs would have their empties collected as part of the agreement, which rules them out… so may i suggest it to be a company who offer a “mobile” bar facility, and who would therefore buy from coors on an informal basis (i.e. not under a contract to buy x amount, and therefore coors wouldn’t collect their empties as part of a pre-defined agreement).. a quick search on yell.com comes up with 2 possible companies in a 30 mile radius.

    just a thought…

    Report abuse



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