Frequency of brown bin collections to change

Following a meeting of the full council, Councillors have voted to change the frequency of brown bin collections to a fortnightly service from next year.

Garden waste

Published 24 October 2024

The garden waste permit scheme, now in its fourth year of operation, currently provides permit-holders with 50 weekly collections of food and garden waste throughout the year for a one-off annual fee of £52.20. Food waste collection remains a statutory service and is collected from brown bins without the need for a permit.

Almost all local authorities in Scotland either charge for garden waste collection, which is a non-statutory service, or don't offer such collections. East Renfrewshire is the only council that continues to offer a weekly garden waste collection.

A report, discussed by councillors, detailed that the estimated cost of providing a weekly garden waste collection in 2025/26 is £1.9m and while around 22,800 permits were sold this year, the forecast income from permit sales is £1.2m, £700,000 less than what it costs to run the service.

In order to reduce the cost of heavily subsidising garden waste collections, the council has now agreed to change the frequency of brown bin collections to a fortnightly service from 2025/26, bringing it into line with neighbouring councils. This will provide permit-holders with 25 collections throughout the year and save the council around £350,000 which will contribute to the overall savings the council needs to make in the year ahead.

The report by officers says a decision had to be taken now to allow enough time for a fortnightly collection to be introduced from next May. Further information will be issued ahead of permit renewals in May. There will be no increase in the cost of permits for 2025/26 which will remain at £52.20.

It remains an opt-in permit system and anyone who doesn't require their garden waste to be collected can still use their brown bin for food waste. Residents also have the option of purchasing additional permits.

This decision comes after Council Leader Owen O'Donnell warned earlier this month that the council is facing significant financial challenges to close a projected Budget shortfall of £15m for 2025/26.

Councillor O'Donnell said cuts to services would be required to help close the Budget gap and this would impact the services the council delivers to the public

Read the report.

Last modified on 24 October 2024