Fly-tipping at highest ever level in Coventry
Fly tipping in Coventry has reached the worst level on record, at huge cost to the council.
The latest government figures have revealed there were 4,704 incidents of fly tipping recorded in the last year.
That’s up from 3,342 cases of people illegally dumping their waste in 2016/17 - and is the highest number seen since at least 2012/13, when the recording figures started.
Whilst the cost of clearing up the mess is no longer recorded, last year it was estimated that picking up after litter louts amounted to more than £119,646.
It means the total cost to Coventry council was likely even higher in 2017/18.
Warwick also saw incidents of fly tipping increase dramatically, from 835 cases in 2016/17 to 1,014 last year.
Stratford-on-Avon also saw a rise in incidents, from 291 cases to 328, as did North Warwickshire, from 900 cases of fly tipping to 972.
Only Rugby, and Nuneaton and Bedworth saw the situation improve over the same period, although both areas still saw hundreds of cases of rubbish being illegally dumped.
In most cases the rubbish was everyday household waste, but there were also 562 white goods, 39 tyres and three animal carcasses dumped across Coventry over the course of the year.
The waste was mainly left on highways and in back alleyways, but occasionally was also discarded on footpaths and railways.
People were prosecuted for fly tipping in Coventry on only ten occasions in 2017-18 - although that was up from just one prosecution the year before.
Meanwhile, despite the council also handing out 17 fixed penalty notices related to fly tipping over the course of the year, no one actually paid the penalty.
There were ten other types of fines paid, however, meaning Coventry council made around £4,884 in total - likely not enough to scratch the surface of fly- tipping costs.
