Fly-tipping 'spiralling out of control'

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Action must be taken now to protect the countryside from fly-tippers who are ruining Britain’s iconic landscape with giant piles of waste and rubbish costing farmers thousands to remove, the NFU warned today.

Large scale coordinated dumping continues to be a regular occurrence with many incidents involving clinical waste and rubbish from construction and demolition.

The NFU believes a joined-up approach is needed involving the Government, local authorities and police to help farmers battle the issue.
 
Under current rules farmers and landowners are left facing hefty bills to remove vast amounts of rubbish dumped illegally on their land.

NFU Deputy President Minette Batters said: “Fly-tipping really has become the scourge of the countryside. The rubbish can be costly and time consuming for farmers and landowners to remove, it’s dangerous to human health, harmful to wildlife and livestock and in some cases, fly-tipped waste pollutes watercourses and contaminates land.

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“While farmers and landowners do all they can to prevent fly-tippers, such as installing gates, barriers, warning signs and installing security cameras and lighting, in many cases we have found that deterrents do not work. These fly-tippers are people intent on breaking the law and they think nothing of cutting padlocks, breaking gates and smashing cameras.

“We need to clamp down on this huge and growing problem. The NFU wants to see Government pull together a national picture of fly-tipping and use it to coordinate all agencies to target and deter offenders.

“We believe better communication between Government, local authorities, police forces and the Environment Agency will give those impacted more confidence to report incidents that in turn will lead to investigation and prosecution.”

Fly-tipping statistics for England, 2016/17, can be found here.

The NFU is asking for:

Local authorities and the police assisting landowners in the clean-up and reporting of fly- tipped waste.

The NFU wants all parties (local authorities/police /landowners /the Environment Agency) to work together on the issue which means prevention, clean up and prosecution.

It should not be the sole responsibility of the landowner to deal with this crime and landowners are currently saddled with the cost of removing fly tipped waste.

Read the NFU rural crime report here.

View the NFU rural crime videos here.