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Crackdown on Illegal Dumping

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OVERVIEW OF THIS HANDBOOK

Councils play a crucial part in managing and preventing illegal dumping in their local areas. They are most familiar with local conditions and problems and bear significant illegal dumping clean-up costs.

Local government has a considerable capacity to prevent illegal dumping as a result of its multiple roles in the community. Councils not only regulate illegal dumping incidents after they have occurred, but also have a crucial role in preventing illegal dumping through environmental planning, community education, providing waste collection and disposal services and managing public land.

In 2004, the DEC researched illegal dumping and its effect on local government in NSW. The research identified the need for the DEC’s leadership and co-ordination and recommended it develop an illegal dumping prevention guidebook for local government. This recommendation, together with funding received through the City and Country Program, drove the development of the Crackdown on Illegal Dumping handbook.

This handbook draws upon research by University College London into fly tipping in England. It is the first step in working with local government in NSW to crack down on illegal dumping and reduce the subsequent environmental, social and financial costs associated with this criminal activity. The handbook encourages a framework for preventing the illegal dumping of solid waste that focuses on minimising opportunities that give rise to illegal dumping. The DEC has also produced a Multi-Unit Dwelling Illegal Dumping Prevention Campaign Council Resource Kit (2006) to assist urban councils with high density residential populations.

Councils are responding to illegal dumping using a variety of methods with varying degrees of effectiveness*. This handbook is designed to help local government crack down on illegal dumping and its particular causes. It suggests well-designed and wellfocused methods that reduce opportunities for illegal dumping by modifying the environment, improving regulatory action, focusing education messages and improving services. If councils incorporate these methods into their illegal dumping prevention programs they can substantially curtail the illegal dumping of solid waste.

The idea is to make illegal dumping harder and less attractive by using the following illegal dumping prevention mechanisms:

  1. Increase the effort: make access difficult.
  2. Increase the risks of getting caught.
  3. Reduce the rewards: deny financial benefits.
  4. Reduce provocations: don’t give them a reason to dump.
  5. Remove excuses: educate and inform the community.

The information contained in the handbook is advisory in nature, and readers are encouraged to use it to develop procedures and policies to prevent illegal dumping relevant to local circumstances. It is not intended to be read cover to cover but to instead be a guide whose sections can be referred to when needed.

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Solution to illegal dumping problem

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THE development order for future projects will include details on the construction of waste disposal sites to curb illegal dumping.

Kuala Lumpur mayor Datuk Seri Ahmad Phesal Talib said he would propose that the planning order requirement include this requirement at the next One-Stop Centre meeting.

“There are about 300 hotspots for illegal dumping in Kuala Lumpur and it will only get worse if we do not do something about it.

“The construction of the MRT, demolition of Pekeliling Flats and redevelopment of old buildings, among others, will see an expected increase in construction waste,” he said at the launch of the Sungai Kertas inert waste landfill in Gombak, Selangor.

The landfill is a project under EPP-9 Greater Kuala Lumpur/Klang Valley and the first construction and demolition waste material recovery facility plant in Malaysia. The plant is able to process 300 tonnes of waste in an hour.

Ahmad Phesal said Worldwide Holdings, which was managing the landfill, had invested RM3.5mil into the plant. It would recycle tyres, soil garden and other dry-leachable wastes into aggregate and other building materials.

“The plant is expected to process 10,800 tonnes of waste by the end of this year.

“It is a more sustainable method and Worldwide Holdings is willing to invest in plants in the two other inert waste landfills in Dengkil and Kuang, if there is a substantial amount of waste to process.

“The tipping fee for construction waste is RM20 per tonne, soil RM9 per tonne, garden waste RM34 per tonne and tyres at RM23 per tonne.

“We are also looking at the possibility of allowing small contractors to loan Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) lorries for waste-dumping,” he said.

Also present was Worldwide Holdings chief executive officer Norazlina Zakaria.

Ahmad Phesal also announced the closure of the inert landfill in Taman Danau Kota, Setapak

“All waste from the Taman Danau Kota landfill will be channelled to the Sungai Kertas inert waste landfill.

“We are planning to build a recreational park at the site of the Taman Danau Kota landfill and will be clearing the area.

“Several used car dealers are using part of the area and we have given them alternative places to relocate. If they fail to move within the stipulated period, action will be taken against them,” he said.

Solid Waste Management & Recycling Center

Modulo Solid Waste and Recycling

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The waste and recycling depot is a fixture of Canadian waste management, used for both non-hazardous and hazardous waste streams, They continue to evolve, from a few bins scattered around a muddy yard, to more organized, above grade, build facilities. As we start moving towards a more circular economy, it is important that their design is given considerable, easy to use, and importantly, will attract residents and businesses for return visits.

Solid Waste Disposal Centre
Solid Waste Management Recycling Center
Solid Waste Management Centre