Bristol City Council's Green Party administration has abandoned controversial plans to collect black waste bins every four weeks following significant public backlash.
The proposal, which would have made Bristol the first major English city with monthly bin collections, faced overwhelming opposition from residents.
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Bristol currently collects black bins every two weeks
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The six-week consultation period ended on Monday.
Councillor Martin Fodor, chair of the environment committee, explained the decision to drop the proposal.
"The four-weekly option was put in the consultation as an outlier for modelling purposes and I made clear it was always unlikely to go ahead," he said.
"Based on what we've heard and the strength of feeling that this has generated across the city, the Greens will not be supporting any proposals put forward to move to four-weekly collections at this time."
He thanked residents for participating in the consultation.
"The Greens aim to be as collaborative and transparent in our decision making as possible," Fodor added.
"The views of Bristol will always be taken into account under this administration."
Labour leader on the council, Councillor Tom Renhard, welcomed the decision to abandon the four-weekly collection plan.
"It has been clear from the start that this policy is totally unworkable," he said.
Bristol's current recycling rate stands at around 45 percent
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"The Greens dropping it will be a relief to all, particularly those with larger families or newborns, who need fortnightly black bin collections."
He emphasised the importance of waste collection services to residents.
"Waste and recycling collection is the one service that every council tax payer uses and relies upon; it needs to be protected from their cuts," Renhard added.
The TaxPayers' Alliance also criticised the original proposal, saying: "Bristolians are sick to the back teeth of their council's hare-brained schemes."
The results of the public consultation will now be presented to a cross-party group of councillors who will decide on any changes to the city's waste and recycling services.
Bristol's current recycling rate stands at around 45 percent, with the Green Party previously pledging to increase this figure.
In 2024, recycling collected earned the council £4.5m in revenue, while disposing of it would have cost £8.3m to process.
Councillor James Crawford, who sits on the environment committee, said: "There are many changes that we need to make as a city to improve our recycling rate."
"I look forward to working cross-party on what measures we can take to improve recycling for Bristol."
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