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OK let me chuck in my personal preferred solution to all this (again). Maybe your area could be a pilot, as it's obviously not working for anyone.
No household bins. Big paladins on the road, every few houses. Green/black. Both emptied say 3x a week (or maybe more). Cost of collection is the same, as fewer tasks but more often. Like these, in Brighton, where the houses are five storeys
The bins are a bit overwhelmingly big but could be subject of a decorating contest, like previous mentions of the street phone box connection things - can add pics if required.
To be preceded by a blitz of information in the road - leaflets, door knocking, no house left behind. Warnings that if its not got right, there will be a return to the stinky old system.
The problem, really, is one of behaviour change. The only thing that stinks is food. Food belongs in the food bins (which need to be bigger). These are emptied weekly already. It's all about the training, and then the policing. It costs, but so do re-visits, and so does dysentery.
our food bins here have handles that lock them down - or maybe our foxes are more wimpy than the butch N6 ones. They do need to be bigger though, or have more of them.
Haringey will not enforce as they cannot tell which flat is responsible if used incorrectly.
Training, persuasion, door knocking, translation. It has to happen, everyone has to get used to this, globally not just in N6. We can't go on both burying our land in mountains of waste, and throwing away the stuff that can be recycled. The leftover rubbish is only where products are mixed, and is a small amount. If it's only one material, it can be recycled. Everyone knows this, even your most scummy neighbours.
I agree, it is a nuisance that people use the bins incorrectly. We also have a very active transient community which makes it harder to educate. I did ask Haringey to re leaflet but no joy.
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