You know your rubbish

Right Thing, Right Bin

Thanks for a huge effort from Lincolnshire residents, the county is putting the right things in the right bins and recycling more.

Lincolnshire County Council – working with district councils – began rolling out new purple-lidded bins for paper and cardboard in 2021 and launched its ‘Right Thing Right Bin’ campaign to help residents recycle more.

Four of the county’s seven districts now use the paper and cardboard bins. And residents in Boston, East Lindsey, West Lindsey and North Kesteven are such recycling experts that around 90% of all the rubbish put in residents’ recycling bins at home is exactly the right materials.

Cllr Daniel McNally, executive councillor for waste at Lincolnshire County Council, explains:

“We’ve seen such an incredible shift; residents have really got on board with the Right Thing Right Bin mantra and together we’ve cut contamination drastically.

“When there are too many items mixed in with recycling that shouldn’t be, it can lead to whole loads of perfectly recyclable materials being rejected and instead sent to our Energy from Waste plant. By simply putting the right things in the right bins, you’re helping recycle more, reduce our impact on the environment, and save money, which is invested right back into the waste service.

“Thank you to everyone for changing the way you do things and getting used to a new way of recycling at home. Now we just have to keep it up.”

Some of the most common things found in recycling bins and bags that shouldn’t be are:

  • Soft plastics like films and bags: these should instead be taken to a recycling point at your local supermarket or put in your general waste.
  • Electrical items and batteries: these can cause a fire if you just put them in the bin, please take them to a recycling centre or battery recycling point at supermarkets.
  • Textiles and clothes: why not donate these to a charity shop or take them to a clothes bank or recycling centre.
  • Takeaway boxes: the grease seeps into the fibres and affects the quality of the cardboard. Please put these in your general waste instead.

The county council’s waste team visit local shows, schools and community groups to provide advice about what you can and can’t recycle in your bins at home. If you’d like to book a visit by the waste team to your school or community, please get in touch on LCCWasteofficers@lincolnshire.gov.uk.

We continue to work with the remaining three districts on plans to introduce separate paper and cardboard recycling county-wide.

Don’t know if you can recycle something at home? If in doubt, leave it out, and check it out by visiting www.lincolnshire.gov.uk/waste, or your district council’s website.

Published: 27th June 2023