Havant resident slapped with £400 fine for fly-tipping after claiming he paid man to get rid of rubbish
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The tip containing garden waste and household rubbish was found in Woodhouse Lane, an unlit rural road, on October 8.
East Hampshire District Council’s investigation led environmental enforcement officers to a resident in Havant who claimed they had paid £80 to a man who knocked on their door and offered to take it away.
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Hide AdBut they did not get a receipt, a waste transfer or check the person had a waste carrier’s licence. It meant they were not able identify the man in any way.
The resident was then slapped a £400 fixed penalty notice for failing to comply with the Environmental Protection Act 1990.
Councillor Ingrid Thomas, portfolio holder for neighbourhood quality, said: ‘Our enforcement officers work hard to examine fly-tips and follow the evidence trail to find the culprits.
‘This is another result of their excellent work and is also a reminder that everyone needs to take waste seriously.
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Hide Ad‘If you don’t check your paperwork properly when employing someone to take your waste away it could cost you more later on if it ends up in a fly-tip.
‘Fly-tipping is a blight on our environment and a danger to wildlife, motorists and visitors to our countryside. We all have our part to play protecting our environment.’
Last year The News reported that fly-tippers had cost taxpayers in Portsmouth and the surrounding areas more than £1.2m over five years in clean-up costs.
And this week we reported that litter-pickers in Leigh Park were left frustrated after they collected so much rubbish that Havant Borough Council’s contractor Norse did not collect it for more than a week – with the council saying that the job had been done so thoroughly that the collectors underestimated how big a van they would need.