ALL householders in South Lakeland that receive a recycling service will soon be able to recycle card and plastic.

The final two per cent of residents will be moved on to the expanded kerbside recycling collections this month – meaning South Lakeland District Council (SLDC) will have hit its target to get 100% of properties receiving plastic and card collections.

All parts of the district have been getting plastic and card collections for over a year. But a small number of properties had yet to receive the collections, because they were in more remote locations. Recycling vehicles could not easily reach them and some individual properties had ‘narrow access’ issues.

The council’s waste and recycling teams have been working hard to find bespoke solutions for these remaining ‘in-fill’ properties and are now in a position to expand the recycling service to include them. Smaller vehicles will be used on two specially created ‘hard-to-reach’ rounds.

It means that 100% of properties in South Lakeland that were on the glass, cans and paper recycling collections will soon be able to add plastic and cardboard to the recyclables collected from the kerbside.

Residents in the remaining properties will start receiving their new re-useable blue recycling bag for storing plastic bottles, pots, tubs and trays, as well as cans, from February 12.

An information leaflet about which container should be used for which material will also be delivered at the same time as the blue bags.

Residents can start using the new blue bag for storing plastic and cans as soon as they receive it and the blue bag will be picked up, along with the blue boxes and green waste, on the next recycling collection date on their calendars.

Figures show that tonnages of recycling are increasing as the additional kerbside recycling is rolled out and residents embrace the new service.

Almost 60 tonnes more recycling was collected from the kerbside in December last year than three years ago (531 tonnes in 2017 compared to 473 tonnes in the same month in 2014).

Cllr David Fletcher, SLDC’s portfolio holder for the environment, said: “This has been a huge project for the council and I’m delighted that all properties getting a recycling service will soon be getting the new plastic and card kerbside collections.

“This has been a long and complex project for the council to undertake. We have had to revise rounds, introduce new vehicles and deliver the new bags and information to 53,000 properties.

“We managed to stay on track with the project despite the service having to cope with the additional demands of the flood waste clean-up operation in 2016 and all areas had been moved onto plastic and card by March last year.

“Now that solutions have been found for these few remaining properties we can see the end of the project in sight.

“We introduced this expanded kerbside service in direct response to our residents’ wishes and this is a key step in our Council Plan commitment to increase the range of recyclables that we collect from the kerbside as we look to increase the amount of household waste sent for recycling.

“Further to some recent national media reports, which suggested some local authorities are burning recycling collected from households, we'd also like to reassure our residents that none of the recycling we collect is burnt or goes to landfill. If you sort it, we recycle it.

“Even the waste from your grey bin is re-used, it is sent to a plant at Barrow where it is treated to produce a fuel product.’’

The council’s website has useful guides and videos about which container to use for which recycling materials and what happens to your plastic after collection: www.southlakeland.gov.uk/bins-and-recycling