Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Letters: It's time for a tax rebate while bags lie uncollected

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 16 July 2009
OUR bins in the Westburn area of Wester Hailes have now not been collected for a period of two weeks, and when calling the Environmental Services Department within Edinburgh City Council I was told they might still not be collected for a further week.
I feel that this is now getting a bit out of hand, and considering that we pay for these services with our council tax, a discount should now be applied.

Why should people have to pay for something that they are not receiving?

You would not
expect to go into, Asda, for example and hand over cold, hard cash and not get anything for it.

Fair enough that the money pays for various services that the council provides, but surely when the council is doing its budgets it works out what everything costs and then divides the cost of each service up to find the amount that should be charged for the service that it is going to provide.

So what it would cost for the refuse collections on your council tax for refuse collections should then be divided by 52 weeks and then discounted for the number of weeks that you have not been getting the service.

I do agree that the binmen should not be having to take pay cuts, and it's about time the council realised how valuable the binmen are. I bet none of the so-called decision makers within the council would do the job.
Mr Salkeld, Westburn, Wester Hailes

Pay rise is not the aim for binmen
BINMEN do not want a pay rise, all they want is the same standard of living as they have now.

This wage drop also affects their pensions, there are a lot of men with over 30 years' service. What have they now got to look forward to on retiring?

The councillors are pulled up over their expenses, and they also gave the go-ahead to spend millions of pounds on a tram system that three quarters of us will never use and could do without, but I think we now realise just what a good job the binmen were doing before this came to a head.
Edinburgh binman, name and address supplied

Clearing up tram project confusion
IN response to George Ritchie's comments on the tough choices for the tram project (Letters, 14 July), I would like to clarify some misconceptions.

When InfraCo works commenced on Leith Walk in October last year a single proposal was presented to the Leith Business Association (LBA) which balanced the needs of the construction project and of the local residents and businesses. At that time both TIE and Edinburgh City Council had stated publicly that the tram project was on-time and on-budget. InfraCo works were suspended during the Christmas embargo and have not progressed since.

Infraco works are now intended to recommence in September, and this time two options were presented to the LBA: one was the original proposal and a second which would have seen greater restrictions, but ostensibly ran for a shorter period.

Before any further public consultation was undertaken however, TIE elected unilaterally to withdraw the new, second option.

InfraCo works will therefore re-commence on the original basis. It cannot be the reversion to this original option in itself which is causing a delay or incurring any additional costs, as when these works were factored in, the project was on-time and on-budget.
Alan D Rudland, Vice-Chairman, Leith Business Association

No level playing field for TV sports
I FEEL that the MSP who thinks there is too much cricket on TV (News, 14 July) has got the wrong issue.

Her main concern should be the lack of coverage of live Scottish sport on BBC TV.

If the BBC can find a reputed £40 million a year to bring Formula 1 motor racing to our screens and are about to start broadcasting live English Championship football (the old second division) at an estimated cost of £45m they could surely put in a bid for Scottish SPL football rights.

Once again Scottish licence fee payers are being short changed by the London-centric BBC.
Paul Cavanagh, Southhouse Square, Edinburgh

Bring the troops out of Afghanistan
ON successive days, our lamebrain prime minister, Gordon Brown, is reported to have made the following pronouncements regarding the Afghanistan confrontation: 1) the summer offensive in Helmand province is showing signs of success, and: 2) we have enough troops in the area, and they have sufficient equipment.

What planet does this fool inhabit? This campaign is characterised by a shameless loss of military lives brought about by scandalously substandard vehicles and personal armour, yet this mantra-muttering clown hypocritically sheds crocodile tears over the deaths of soldiers who have been literally sacrificed.

Brown himself has no idea why our troops are involved, beyond vaguely pious utterances about British security coupled with starkly irrelevant mumbo-jumbo about delivering "democracy" to the region.

We should leave Afghanistan's people to their own style of society. Let's have our troops home.
Robert Dow, Ormiston Road, Tranent





Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 16 July 2009 9:36 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Jim Taylor,

16/07/2009 12:15:06
Spot on Robert.

And if they choose a society that does get out of hand, then action can taken from an aeroplane.

While we're at it, isn't it certain that the Taliban are using the cash from poppy crops to fund their actions?

So, why haven't we laid the fields of poppies to waste. Dust cropped them. Agent Orange et al?



2

Road Raga,

EDINBURGH 16/07/2009 12:38:21
The Defence budget is MASSIVE and the blame for any failings in equipment should put on the military chiefs, not the government. They are the ones that spend the money, much of which incidently is spent on the VERY generous allowances paid to high ranking officers (no one seems to mention that).
It is a fact that alot of the equipment THEY choose to buy is substandard and expensive. They are to blame for the mess in the middle east.
3

Spathiphyllum,

16/07/2009 12:55:29
I don't think that someone who starts by describing anyone as a lamebrain should be heeded or conversed with.
4

Spathiphyllum,

16/07/2009 13:00:14
By the way, I pay taxes. I demand the services for which I've paid. Get it sorted.
5

PJ1970,

Edinburgh 16/07/2009 19:57:12
The binmen are getting a pay INCREASE. Just like the gravediggers and other manual workers.
Their basic pay is INCREASING! What's so hard to understand. It is just their unearned bonuses that are being scrapped. 50% extra per week just for turning up to work. Nonsense. Also most of them were geting £400 plus. For an unskilled labouring job.
If Fred Goodwin and the rest can be attacked for their greed then so can the workers who've been ripping us off for years.
Our bin has been waiting since last Friday to be emptied. Sack the lot of them.

They will be sacked anyway when they don't sign their new contracts. 90 days notice and then goodbye and good riddance.
6

CRAGman,

16/07/2009 23:26:07
Robert Dow is a loudmouth who should, even if you occasionally agree with him, not be given the oxygen of publicity. A little humility and humanity on his part would not go amiss.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.