Thursday, 16 January 2020

Student area rubbish collection

Is there something a little odd about loud young voices demanding, in order to stop the climate changing and to protect the environment, that everyone [else?] should stop using plastics, don't create waste, avoid fossil fuel use, recycle & re-use? I would have thought there were enough concerned students to put pressure on the piggy minority to stop befouling their patch of the planet. Apparently not.



Solutions sought to student area issues




From Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/DunedinNewsUNCUT/?ref=nf_target&fref=nf
  • Lee Vandervis The DCC provides a wide range of services and facilities which the University and students use but Dunedin citizens pay for. Adding garbage collection to the list seems unfair to me.
    A figure of $8,500 for extra skips last month as in the pic below has been suggested, but who would know the full rate-paid costs?
    The claim that landlords are guilty of this mess could easily be proved or otherwise by the hundreds of street-video-cameras run by the University, but there is no hint of the University making anyone accountable...
    Why should they when it is ratepayers that pay?



  • Kat Leader The thing is that students pay a bond. The bond states the house is left in a fair and tidy condition. If students are simply leaving behind their furniture /rubbish, then it's up to the landlords to remove it and xharge it out from the bonds collected.
    Why the hell are the rest of us picking up the tab?

    How about Dcc does an inorganic collection? Across the whole city (I e. For ALL), like that done in other nz cities.


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