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Waste Warriors to reduce food waste on Merseyside

The Waste Warriors programme is coming to Merseyside, with the aim of reducing food waste across the region. The programme will be run by the British Dietetic Association (BDA) thanks to a £20,000 investment from the Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority (MRWA) and Veolia Community Fund 2022-2023.

With the UK on average throwing away 4.5 million tonnes of edible food and drink each year, it’s crucial that the UK gets this under control. The numbers equate to 244 kilograms per household, excluding inedible parts, or £730 per average household with children, ending up in the bin! Wasting food creates carbon, which contributes to Climate Change.

As well as the environmental benefits, reducing food waste can also have a positive impact on household budgets and will help to reduce the cost of living, by buying less and making the best use of the food available.

The Waste Warriors programme, which is run by the BDA’s Let’s Get Cooking initiative, helps households reduce their waste via tips and skills to turn the most wasted food into something tasty. This is supported by the development of a new community composting scheme for household waste and support for people wanting to grow their own fruit and veg.

Let’s Get Cooking has been providing expert advice on waste reduction through its education programmes across Merseyside for more than three years. This year, with the additional funding, it’s getting even more practical with Waste Warriors.

Suzanne Mitchell, Let’s Get Cooking Lead says, “The opportunity to support a local community in such a circular way is a really powerful idea. We hope to inspire households struggling with the current cost of living to think about new ways to save money by reducing the amount of food they throw away and growing their own produce using a community garden. The waste reduction equates to 1.82 tonnes CO2 for the local area.”

300 Let’s Get Merseyside Saving packs will be distributed to households in Merseyside and Halton, and to participants taking part in community cooking sessions in the local network of Let’s Get Cooking clubs. The packs will support them reduce the amount of wasted food, have fun cooking the recipes and enjoy eating the meals.

Carl Beer, Chief Executive, Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority says, “MRWA is delighted to support the project and the production of this activity pack. The facts show that on average we throw away over 134,000 tonnes of food every year on Merseyside – that’s almost a third of the average general household waste bin. That includes millions of loaves of bread and litres of milk. The figures may be surprising, but by using this pack and using up leftovers people can help to reduce this waste and save money.”

The local Let’s Get Cooking clubs will also receive additional funding from the project to deliver 50 local cooking and food events this Autumn, impacting approximately 3000 beneficiaries.

In partnership with Compost Works, a Liverpool-based social enterprise with the mission of diverting food from being wasted, the project will also offer a community composting facility in Liverpool, once a suitable site has been identified. This will support and inspire people in the region to collect peelings, tea bags, egg shells and uncooked produce, as well as brown waste like paper. These can be brought to a central point in the community, providing a local source of compost for other growing projects.

Preventing food waste has the same benefit to the environment as taking 1 in 5 cars off the road – so with current concerns around inflation on food prices, helping households make the most of their shopping, while also supporting community growing, is a definite win for the people of Merseyside.

The programme is being launched to local residents from October 2022. Follow @BDAGetCooking for more updates.

Find out more about Let’s Get Cooking here: https://letsgetcooking.org.uk/

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Recycle Right – it matters

A new advertising campaign reminding people of what they can and should recycle, and why it matters, has launched across the Liverpool City Region.

Recycling Matters campaign adverts will be appearing on buses, trains, train stations and digital outdoor displays, as well as on local radio and on social media from September through to February.

The advertising is part of Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority’s Recycle Right campaign which was launched in 2018 to help increase awareness of recycling issues. This includes letting people know what can be recycled where, preventing bagged waste and unwanted materials being put into recycling bins, and highlighting what options people have when it comes to recycling and managing their household waste.

Carl Beer, Chief Executive at Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority (MRWA), said: “Recycle Right was launched to help highlight recycling options that people have and ultimately increase the region’s recycling rate. The campaign and all the messaging is a reminder to everyone about what they can recycle and where they can recycle it.

“A lot of us do the right things most of the time, but with the region’s recycling level at 35% there is more we can all do.”

Councillor Tony Concepcion, Chairperson of MRWA, said: “To put it simply, we need more people to recycle more things more often. Hopefully residents will see or hear these messages and taken them on board. We will continue to push recycling messages because managing materials and resources sustainably is key in the fight against climate change and having a local environment we can all be proud of.”

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Mersey community groups secure £165,000 funding to help reduce waste

Sixteen community groups have been awarded a share of £165,000 to help the Liverpool City Region reduce, reuse and recycle more.

The money has come from the Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority and Veolia Community Fund 22/23 which helps to support local waste prevention, re-use and recycling initiatives.

The sixteen organisations had to bid for the funding which will give them the financial resources to deliver waste-reducing behavioural change projects across the region.

Programmes include cookery lessons to reduce food waste, sewing classes and clothes repair clubs, upcycling and restoration of unwanted furniture and community composting, amongst other things.

Project applications had to tackle one or more of the four priority household waste materials which have been identified by MRWA as key, namely Food, Plastics, Textiles and Furniture. An analysis of waste in the Liverpool City Region highlighted that a greater amount of these materials could be reused or recycled. Projects can also include other household waste materials, for example paper, card and metals.

Chairperson of Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority (MRWA), Councillor Tony Concepcion, said: “There are a lot of communities understandably concerned about climate change and sustainable living. Our Community Fund – which has been running since 2006 – gives groups the opportunity to look after the environment, bringing benefits to all of us. I think in this day and age people appreciate items as valuable resources rather than something which might be just thrown away.

“Projects we have previously funded continue to deliver benefits beyond the first year, through their legacy and an ongoing impact on participants’ behaviour, and in many cases through new or continuing activities.

“I wish all our projects the best and look forward to seeing the impact they have.”

One organisation to receive funding is Farm Urban, who deliver education and innovative solutions to sustainable food growing in communities. Their Future Food Heroes project received £19,580 from the Community Fund 2021/22 to work with primary schools across the city region, teaching pupils about sustainable food growing and food waste, while setting up a food ecosystem in each class. They have been successful in clinching funding for 2022/23.

Paul Myers, Managing Director of Farm Urban, said: “Our previous project was all about getting pupils to engage with the problem of food waste and providing resources to help them develop their own solutions. This next stage is the evolution of that project and will continue spreading knowledge and messages through schools on how to combat food waste – we’re looking forward to getting started!”

The successful organisations have got until March 2023 to deliver their projects.

Video – round up of MRWA & Veolia Community Fund 2021/22:

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Note to editors

  • Image captions for previous Farm Urban Community Fund project, April 2022:

MRWA_FARM_2022A – (left to right) Paul Myers (Farm Urban) and Nikita Allt (Year 5 teacher, Smithdown Primary School) with pupils.

MRWA_FARM_2022B – Pupils at Smithdown Road Primary School, Liverpool

  • *The successful projects:

Love Wavertree – ReLoved Textiles, Love Wavertree will feature clothes sewing training sessions and community swapping events.

Bay Tree Cookery Academy CIC – Cook And Save will try to cut food waste with 18×2-day cookery/training courses.

Porchfield Community Association – Porchfield Community Association is a clothes and food waste project which will offer 3×10-week sewing training courses and 3×5-week cookery courses.

Liverpool Community Launderette Ltd/Kittys Launderette – Textile RRR at Kitty’s is a clothes waste project that will run mending and repurposing workshops, community clothes swapping events as well as setting up an unwanted-clothes redistribution network.

St Marys Church – St Marys Eco Garden will see improvements to the church outdoor area to support a ‘grow your own’ initiative, cooking and growing training, and activity sessions for primary schoolchildren.

Liverpool World Centre – The Great Clothes Swap: Fast Fashion And Individual Behaviour Change. This project will be promoted through 350 schools, host a teacher conference for 10 schools and four pupil U.N.-style conferences for 40 schools as well as supporting school ‘Great Swap’ clothes days.

Centre 63 – Remake Yourself Hub. The Kirkby-based project will hold swap days, litter picks, community walks, youth sessions as well as food waste and reduce/reuse/repairs sessions.

Farm Urban – Future Food Heroes 2.0. The next stage of the Future Food Heroes project will hold seven community events and 72 training sessions with six primary schools, as well as six celebration events and a regional finale at Farm Urban.

Wargrave House College – Not Too Shabby @ The Lyme@ Wood Learning Hub. This multi-material project will host workshops on food, furniture, textiles, wood and metals.

Groundwork Cheshire, Lancashire And Merseyside – Build Me Up, Fix Me Up. Another multi-material project which will host 20 workshops for textiles and furniture repair.

Knowsley Foodbank – Chloe Cooks. Knowsley Foodbank will hold 40 food/cookery training sessions to five groups over eight weeks.

Compost Works – Share Food And Compost The Rest will deliver 12 training sessions and 40 weekly support sessions for composting.

Mencap Liverpool And Sefton – Fix Up Look Sharp are looking to host ten litter pics, ten fix up fairs and 12 make do and mend, 12 artful artisan and 12 furniture upcycling workshops.

British Dietetic Association – Waste Warriors. The BDA is going to recruit 15 people from ten community cooking clubs to deliver 75 food waste cookery classes.

Croxteth And Gillmoss Community Federation – Croxteth Recycling. This clothes-upcycling scheme will hold 40 weekly sessions and one end-of-project community showcase.

Bootle Tool Shed – The Restoration Project. Bootle Tool Shed will be looking to rescue unwanted furniture with 40 upcycling/repair/refurbishment sessions.

  • Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority is responsible for the disposal of municipal waste on Merseyside. Established in 1986 following the abolition of Merseyside County Council, it is a statutory Authority that works with all the local authorities on Merseyside – Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. MRWA takes a lead in advocating recycling, waste minimisation and safe and effective disposal of waste for Merseyside residents.
  • MRWA operates (via a contract with resource management company Veolia) 14 Household Waste Recycling Centres (HWRC’s) for householders in the Merseyside area wishing to recycle and dispose of their own waste.
  • The MRWA and Veolia Community Fund 2022/23 has seen 16 community groups from Merseyside and Halton receive a funding boost to help make the region a cleaner and greener place. The financial support will see the groups help reduce household waste, encourage recycling and resource re-use, and prevent carbon emissions. Funding total is £164,999.38

Members of the media for more information please contact:

John Lally | Communications and Development Officer | 1 Mann Island, Liverpool, L3 1BP

Office: 0151 255 2568 | Email: john.lally@merseysidewda.gov.uk

Disclaimer: Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority

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£50,000 available for community groups in and around Kirkby

The 2022 Kirkby Neighbourhood Community Fund – a £50,000 community fund for projects in and around Kirkby – opens for applications on 06 June 2022. The Fund provides £50,000 each year for community groups, charities and projects operating in Northwood, Cherryfield, Shevington, Whitefield and Prescot North (Knowsley Village).

Community groups developing community, health and wellbeing and environmental projects closest to the Knowsley Rail Transfer Loading Station in Kirkby are eligible to apply for grants of anything between £1,000 and £20,000. Applications need to be in by 22 July 2022 and the winners will be announced in the autumn.

The Fund was set up as part of the agreement with Merseyside Energy Recovery Limited (MERL) who have been appointed by Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority (MRWA) to treat residual waste from across Merseyside and Halton. SUEZ recycling and recovery UK (SUEZ) is both one of the shareholders in MERL and the operator of the Rail Transfer Loading Station. Both MERL and SUEZ recognise that they have an important part to play in the local community and this Fund helps to fulfil their responsibilities as a good neighbour.

Last year, eight community groups were successful in applying for funds. These were:

Incredible Edibles Knowsley, who received £9,000 for a community food project
Pingwood Arts and Crafts Group, who received £5,000 to support the group in continuing to tackle social isolation
Prospective Theatre Company, who received £4,500 to devise, produce and present contemporary drama performances
Care Merseyside, who received £5,000 for their social prescribing online classes
Centre 63, who received £10,000 for their ‘Remake Yourself’ project
Tower Hill Amateur Boxing Club, who received £10,000 for their Healthy Communities Project
CELLS, who received £4,500 for their Mums Matter project
Southdene Community Association, who received £8,000 to continue their work

As COVID 19 restrictions precluded us holding a cheque presentation event last year for the successful groups a special video was produced to celebrate their achievements. You can view it on Facebook here: https://fb.watch/9JGuiX3mFy/

Victoria Crabtree, SUEZ’s Regional Manager, said: ‘I’m delighted to announce that the 2022 Kirkby Neighbourhood Community Fund is open for applications. I am new to the region and have been impressed with the range of projects we funded last year, hopefully the variety and quality of these projects will inspire others to come forward. If you have a great idea that could benefit your community, please apply.’

Further details about the fund, including application forms and application guidance notes, can be found at: www.suezmerseyside.co.uk/kirkbyfund.

Also, we welcome all community and residents’ groups from across Merseyside and Halton to come and discover first-hand what happens to their residual waste at the Knowsley Rail Transfer Loading Station Visitor Centre in Kirkby. To find out more, visit www.suezmerseyside.co.uk.

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A million get the message to Recycle Right

It is estimated that a campaign designed to help boost recycling across the Liverpool City Region has been seen over a million times.

Launched in October 2021 and run through into March 2022, Recycle Right adverts reminding people of what they can and should recycle have appeared throughout Liverpool City Region on buses, local radio and newspapers, outdoor telephone kiosks and digital outdoor displays, ASDA supermarkets, and on social media. It is estimated that the adverts have been seen and heard well over a million times*.

The advertising is part of Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority’s Recycle Right campaign which was launched in 2018 to help increase awareness of recycling issues. This includes letting people know what can be recycled where, preventing bagged waste and unwanted materials being put into recycling bins, and highlighting what options people have when it comes to recycling and managing their household waste.

Carl Beer, Chief Executive at Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority (MRWA), said: “Recycle Right was launched to help highlight recycling options that people have and ultimately increase the region’s recycling rate. The campaign and all the messaging is a reminder to everyone about what they can recycle and where they can recycle it.

“A lot of us do the right things most of the time, but with the region’s recycling level at 35% there is more we can all do.”

Councillor Tony Concepcion, Chairperson of MRWA, said: “We want more people to recycle more things more often. Hopefully residents have seen or heard these messages and taken them on board. Of course, we realise that not everyone will have come across an advert, and even if they have it won’t have changed everyone’s behaviour. However, we will continue to push recycling messages because managing materials and resources sustainably is key in the fight against climate change and having a local environment we can all be proud of.”

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Notes for editors

Image captions:

MRWA_RECYCLERIGHT_FEB 2022A & MRWA_RECYCLERIGHT_FEB 2022B – Recycle Right artwork at Liverpool Central train station, February 2022
MRWA_RECYCLERIGHT_MAY 2022 – Left to right- MRWA Development Manager Rebecca Haynes-McCoy, and MRWA Education and Campaigns Officer Danni Millar

* Campaign 1 (Oct to Nov 2021):
• RADIO ADVERT / DIGITAL INSTREAM: An advert to reach 548,000 people, who are estimated to hear the advert 13 times each either in real time on the radio or when listening online via a streaming service
• DIGITAL STREETHUBS: digital advert with 512,000 Impacts
• BUS REARS: poster advert with 1,175,940 Reach
• BUS INTERIORS: poster advert inside buses, with 889,000 users
• KIOSKS (PHONEBOOTHS): poster adverts, with 2.3 million impacts
• METRO NEWSPAPER: 3 newspaper adverts/advertorials, 39,000 readership per issue

Campaign 2 (Jan to Feb 2022):

• DIGITAL RADIO: 450,000 advert plays over geographically-local digital radio

Campaign 3 (Feb to March 2022):

• DIGITAL ROADSIDE ADVERTS / TRAIN STATION DIGITAL ADVERTS / ASDA DIGITAL SCREENS: 1,770,000 Impacts (no. of times advert seen)
All figures were accurate at the time of the campaign.

Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority is responsible for the disposal of municipal waste on Merseyside. Established in 1986 following the abolition of Merseyside County Council, it is a statutory Authority that works with all the local authorities on Merseyside – Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. MRWA takes a lead in advocating recycling, waste minimisation and safe and effective disposal of waste for Merseyside residents.

Members of the media for more information please contact:

John Lally | Communications and Development Officer | 1 Mann Island, Liverpool, L3 1BP
Office: 0151 255 2568 | Email: john.lally@merseysidewda.gov.uk

Categories

Liverpool community project on a mission to reduce rubbish

A Liverpool charity has spent the last year on a mission to stop clothes and textiles from being wasted – with the help of local youngsters.

The Recycle, Refashion, Recreate project has been developed by the Dovecot and Princess Drive Community Association, which provides breakfast, lunch clubs and other activities for children affected by poverty and deprivation.

The Finch Lane-based Association was awarded a grant of £5,640 by the Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority & Veolia Community Fund 2021/22 to help deliver the project which has provided local children and families access to sewing and craft clubs, and re-fashioning classes.

Joanne Kennedy, Community Development & Partnerships Manager at Dovecot and Princess Drive Community Association, said: “We know great strides have been taken in recent years to improve recycling habits but there is still a long way to go. Our project has helped to highlight the importance of recycling and the positive impact this will have on the planet for future generations.”

An estimated 20,000 tonnes* of textiles are discarded from households each year in the Liverpool City Region, a lot of which could still be used. It is this behaviour the project is hoping to change and itself will look to stop several tonnes of clothing material from going to waste.

Joanne Kennedy continued: “Our project has been educational, fun and engaging which we believe will lead to environmental improvements in our local area. The Refashioning element of the project has helped to prevent textile waste and bring back to life items of clothing that would have otherwise ended up going to waste.”

Recycle, Refashion, Recreate will be coming to an end this month, and the Dovecot and Princess Drive Community Association will have:

– ran two sewing classes for ten people each over six weeks,
– put on ‘refashioning’ classes with a fashion tutor for 10 people over eight weeks,
– engaged with 48 nursery-aged children and 270 schoolchildren to increase their knowledge about textiles and recycling, including a crafts session with local author Jude Lennon
– run 30 Family Sessions
– put on an end-of-project Fashion Show for project participants, friends and family.

Local writer Jude Lennon, author of That’s Our Home, a children’s book about the effects of waste on coastlines, held a crafts class at East Prescot Road Nursey School to help teach pupils about reuse and recycling. She said: “We all need to protect and care for our planet and children can help with this from a very early age. Reading books about the environment and looking after it can be a great starting point for children’s understanding of the world around them.

“Taking rubbish home from a picnic or using re-usable lunch boxes are water bottles are really easy ways for children to be involved. Children can also be brilliant advocates themselves. Whereas adults may not listen to other adults about concerns for the environment, they may listen to children and then do something to help. We all need a greener, healthier planet for future generations to enjoy.”

Councillor Tony Concepcion, Chairperson of Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority (MRWA), said: “Data shows that there are high quantities of textiles like clothes placed in recycling and household waste bins across kerbside collections in the Liverpool City Region. However, textiles shouldn’t go into bins. Instead, Recycling Centres, charities, local bring banks all accept clothes and textiles where they will go on to be recycled or reused.

“Projects like Recycle, Refashion, Recreate can help have a real positive influence to see textiles waste reduced.”

Joanne Kennedy continued: “This project isn’t just about waste, but also about the wellbeing of those who take part. We hope it has helped to bring the community together, reduce loneliness and social isolation as well as bridging the intergenerational divide. Participants are learning a life skill in sewing that we will encourage them to share with family members. This will save money, extend the life of garments and prevent clothing going to waste.

“We want to give young people the confidence to express themselves and give them an opportunity to showcase their work – increasing their confidence and boosting their self-esteem.”

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Note to editors

  • Image captions – Pupils at East Prescot Road Nursery School during a crafts class with local author Jude Lennon, April 2022. (Photographs taken by Alison Dodd Photography.) Permission granted by parents/guardians.
  • *Data from Merseyside Waste Composition Analysis 2015
  • Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority is responsible for the disposal of municipal waste on Merseyside. Established in 1986 following the abolition of Merseyside County Council, it is a statutory Authority that works with all the local authorities on Merseyside – Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. MRWA takes a lead in advocating recycling, waste minimisation and safe and effective disposal of waste for Merseyside residents.
  • The MRWA and Veolia Community Fund 2021/22 has seen 17 community groups from Merseyside and Halton receive a funding boost to help make the region a cleaner and greener place. The financial support will see the groups help reduce household waste, encourage recycling and resource re-use, and prevent carbon emissions. Funding total is £164,999.38
Categories

Meet the hero schoolkids helping to fight food waste

A social enterprise has been working with schoolchildren across Liverpool to help in the battle against waste and climate change.

Farm Urban – which delivers education and innovative solutions to sustainable food growing in communities – has been running the Future Food Heroes project since receiving a £19,580 grant from the Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority and Veolia Community Fund 2021/22.

The project has seen Farm Urban work with six primary schools from across the city region, teaching pupils in a dozen classes about sustainable food growing and food waste, while setting up a food ecosystem in each class.

According to national charity WRAP*, 70% of all food that’s thrown away in the UK comes from our homes, and 4.5million tonnes of edible food is thrown away each year by UK households. A lot of this could still be used and would save the average family around £700 a year in grocery costs. It is this behaviour the project is hoping to have an impact upon.

Paul Myers, Managing Director of Farm Urban, said: “This project has been about getting pupils to engage with the problem of food waste and providing resources to help them develop their own solutions.

“Supporting parents, guardians and family members to engage with the pupils in these projects will encourage them to continue the project once the initial activity has been completed. We hope we have been laying the groundwork for projects that will extend well beyond the end of our own.”

Future Food Heroes is nearing its completion, and by May Farm Urban will have:

– Delivered practical workshops introducing school pupils to key elements of an urban food ecosystem, including growing mushrooms using cardboard and spent coffee, and growing edible plants together with fish in an aquaponic system.

– Placed urban food ecosystems in classes across six schools to educate pupils about a zero-waste approach to food waste.

– Created Future Food Ambassadors who it’s hoped will influence family and friends by encouraging less wasteful food habits.

– Given 12-month access to an online 6-week learning programme, the Future Food Heroes Challenge, which includes guided experiments around the living labs in the classroom and activities for pupils.

– Prevented almost 15 tonnes of food from going to waste.

Carl Beer, Chief Executive of Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority, said: “The link between food waste and climate change is clear – 30% of global greenhouse gases are created from the production and distribution of food, whilst 81% of UK citizens are concerned about climate change, but only 32% see a link to food waste*. We must help people to recognise the relationship between waste and climate. This project is helping to do that by engaging with pupils and their families by giving them the knowledge and skills to make a difference.”

Smithdown Primary in Liverpool has been one of the schools involved in the project, and Year 5 Teacher Nikita Allt said: “The children have been really inspired and motivated by the project as it has provided them with ways in which they can be a force of change – it has been lovely to see!”

Jan, a pupil at Smithdown Primary pupils, said: “I really liked learning about the produce pod and watching the food grow. It was cool knowing that we are fighting climate change.”

Another Smithdown Primary pupil, Leema, said: “I didn’t know that food waste had such an impact on our carbon footprint so I have loved using the produce pod and learning more about how we can fight it.”

Paul Myers continued: “At the very core of urban farming is the aim of reducing the environmental impact of current food production, so the children who have participated on this programme will be contributing towards its goals. By establishing, inspiring and motivating young ambassadors, the wider environmental impacts of this project will have a long-lasting, positive effect on the environment for years to come, promoting systemic change in families to improve their sustainable lifestyles.”

ENDS

Notes to editors:

* Figures from Waste Resources Action Programme (WRAP) https://www.lovefoodhatewaste.com/article/wasting-food-feeds-climate-change / https://www.lovefoodhatewaste.com/it-all-adds-up/ 

Picture captions:

MRWA_FARM_2022A – (left to right) Paul Myers (Farm Urban) and Nikita Allt (Year 5 teacher, Smithdown Primary School) with pupils.

MRWA_FARM_2022B – Pupils at Smithdown Road Primary School, Liverpool

– The Merseyside Recycling & Waste Authority and Veolia Community Fund is open to community and voluntary sector groups, faith groups, not for profit social enterprises and schools in Merseyside and Halton.

– The impact of the 2020/21 Fund saw 13 projects divert 291 tonnes of material from disposal, 19,915 people directly engaged, participation of 12,125 volunteer hours, 85 events held, 451 training sessions take place, and a 541 tonnes reduction in CO2 equivalent emissions.

– Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority is responsible for the disposal of municipal waste on Merseyside. Established in 1986 following the abolition of Merseyside County Council, it is a statutory Authority that works with all the local authorities on Merseyside – Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. MRWA takes a lead in advocating recycling, waste minimisation and safe and effective disposal of waste for Merseyside residents.

– Farm Urban is a social enterprise established in 2014 that delivers innovative solutions to sustainable growing food in cities and educates communities on how to do this. In 2019 they installed Liverpool’s first vertical farm in the Baltic Triangle, continuing their mission to find more efficient and sustainable ways to produce food by systematically reducing food waste and plastic packaging, creating more circular urban food systems and driving bottom-up behaviour change to our food systems.

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Restrictions to access at Otterspool Recycling Centre, Jericho Lane, Liverpool

Restrictions to access at Otterspool Recycling Centre, Jericho Lane, Liverpool

Liverpool Half Marathon on Sunday 27 March 2022

There will be restrictions to the access at the Otterspool Recycling Centre during the Liverpool Half Marathon on Sunday 27th March 2022.

Access to and from Jericho Lane / Aigburth Road will be restricted between 9.00 am – 12.00 noon approx as runners pass from Sefton Park to Otterspool Park via the underpass and then across the top of Jericho Lane. The junction will be open as soon as the last runner passes into Otterspool Park.

To avoid disruption:

● Use Old Swan Recycling Centre, Cheadle Avenue, Old Swan, L13 3AF.
● Access via the Riverside Drive approach, by proceeding along Aigburth Road, Park Road left into Parliament Street, left into Sefton Street.

The road closure at the junction of Aigburth Road and Jericho Lane will be reopened when the last runner passes or at approximately 12.00pm.

For more detailed information on the half marathon and road closures please go to: www.btrliverpool.com

Download: Resident letter with route map with times.

For your nearest Recycling Centre click here.

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Defibrillators installed at Recycling Centres across Merseyside and Halton

Recycling Centres operated by Veolia on behalf of Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority now have emergency defibrillators on all sites.     

A total of 19 defibrillators are now in place at recycling facilities, including the 16 Household Waste Recycling Centres across the region.

With an annual footfall of over 1.5 million visitors, the sites will be set up to save lives should they ever be needed. The cost of the defibrillators has been shared equally by Veolia and Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority (MRWA).

All of the defibrillators are fully automatic – with visual and voice prompts to guide the rescuer through the entire resuscitation process, including CPR which is a key link in the chain of survival. The equipment analyses heart rhythm and automatically delivers a shock if needed.

Jeff Sears, Director of Veolia Merseyside and Halton, said: “Veolia are extremely proud to partner with MRWA to install defibrillators at key sites across the region. Our sites are visited by over 1.5 million residents every year, so having this vital equipment available to use in an emergency situation could help to save a life.”

Councillor Tony Concepcion, Chairperson of MRWA, said: “We have thousands of visitors to our Centres every week, so while we hope the defibrillators never have to be used it’s reassuring to know that they are there and can be accessed by staff quickly in an emergency.”

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Notes to the Editor

Photo caption (left to right): MRWA Chief Executive Carl Beer (left), MRWA Chairperson Councillor Tony Concepcion (centre), & Director of Veolia Merseyside & Halton Jeff Sears (right) at Huyton Household Waste Recycling Centre.

Full list of Household Waste Recycling Centres in Merseyside & Halton:

  • Bidston Recycling Centre, Wallasey Bridge Road, Birkenhead CH41 1EB
  • Clatterbridge Recycling Centre, Mount Road, Clatterbridge, Wirral, CH63 4JZ
  • Formby Recycling Centre Altcar Road, Formby, L37 8DL
  • Huyton Recycling Centre, Wilson Road, Huyton, L36 6AD
  • Johnsons Lane Recycling Centre, Johnsons Lane, Widnes, WA8 0SJ
  • Kirkby Recycling Centre, Depot Road, Knowsley industrial Park, L33 3AR
  • Newton Le Willows Recycling Centre, Junction Lane, Newton-le-Willows, WA12 8DN
  • Otterspool Recycling Centre, Jericho Lane, Liverpool L17 5AR
  • Old Swan Recycling Centre, Cheadle Avenue, Liverpool, L13 3AF
  • Picow Farm Recycling Centre, Picow Farm Road, Runcorn, WA7 4UD
  • Rainhill Recycling Centre, Tasker Terrace, Rainhill, L35 4NX
  • Ravenhead Recycling Centre, Burtonhead Road, St Helens, WA9 5EA
  • Sefton Meadows Recycling Centre, Sefton Lane, Maghull, L31 8BT
  • South Sefton Recycling Centre, Irlam Road, Bootle, L20 4AE
  • Southport Recycling Centre, Foul Lane, Southport, PR8 5LA
  • West Kirby Recycling Centre, Greenbank Road, West Kirby, CH48 5HL

About Veolia UK

Veolia group aims to be the benchmark company for ecological transformation. With nearly 179,000 employees worldwide, the Group designs and provides game-changing solutions that are both useful and practical for water, waste and energy management. Through its three complementary business activities, Veolia helps to develop access to resources, preserve available resources, and replenish them. In 2020, the Veolia group supplied 95 million people with drinking water and 62 million people with wastewater service, produced nearly 43 million megawatt hours of energy and treated 47 million metric tons of waste. Veolia Environnement (listed on Paris Euronext: VIE) recorded consolidated revenue of €26.010 billion in 2020. www.veolia.com

For more information visit us at www.veolia.co.uk or follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/veoliauk.

About MRWA

Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority is responsible for the disposal of municipal waste on Merseyside. Established in 1986 following the abolition of Merseyside County Council, it is a statutory Authority that works with all the local authorities on Merseyside – Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. MRWA takes a lead in advocating recycling, waste minimisation and safe and effective disposal of waste for Merseyside’s residents. www.merseysidewda.gov.uk 

 

Categories

Longer hours for Recycling Centres

Liverpool City Region residents will soon have the opportunity to recycle more as Household Waste Recycling Centres open for an extra three hours every day.

From Friday 1st April the region’s Centres will be open from 8.00am until 8.00pm*.

There are 14 Household Waste Recycling Centres in the region. They are operated by resource management company Veolia on behalf of Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority (MRWA).

Carl Beer, Chief Executive of MRWA, said: “The Recycling Centres accept a range of household materials for recycling, from batteries, cans and cardboard, through to garden clippings, glass bottles, wood, and white goods. They also accept lesser-known items such as food and drink cartons, clothes, hard plastics and electrical items. The lighter summer nights mean we can open for longer.”

Householders can check both www.recycleright.org.uk or www.merseysidewda.gov.uk for details of what can be accepted at their local site.

The Centres provide a popular service for residents and can become extremely busy at peak times so visits should be planned carefully.

There is a system in place for those who wish to visit in a van or with a large trailer. Bookings can be made at www.merseysidewda.gov.uk.

More information on what you can do with your household waste items can be found at www.recycleright.org.uk.

ENDS

NOTES TO EDITORS:

The picture attached is of a Merseyside Household Waste Recycling Centre.

From 1st April 2022 until 30th September 2022 Merseyside’s Household Waste Recycling Centres will be open from 8.00am until 8.00pm*. The Centres are located at:

Knowsley –
Huyton – Wilson Road – L36 6AD
Kirkby – Depot Road, Knowsley Industrial Park – L33 3AR

Liverpool –
Old Swan – Cheadle Avenue – L13 3AF
Otterspool – Jericho Lane, Aigburth – L17 5AR

Sefton –
Formby – Altcar Road, Formby – L37 8EG
Sefton Meadows – Sefton Lane, Maghull – L31 8BX
Southport – Foul Lane, Scarisbrick New Road – PR9 7RG
South Sefton – Irlam Road, Bootle – L20 4AE

St Helens –
Newton-le-Willows – Junction Lane – WA12 8DN
*Rainhill – Tasker Terrace, Rainhill – L35 4NX
Ravenhead – Burtonhead Road, St. Helens – WA9 5EA

Wirral –
Bidston – Wallasey Bridge Road, Birkenhead – CH41 1EB
Clatterbridge – Mount Road, Clatterbridge – CH63 4JZ
West Kirby – Greenbank Road – CH48 5HR

*NB:
Rainhill: Open 9.00am–6.00pm on Saturdays; 9.00am–3.00pm on Sundays