Unless the bin is stolen from another property or not placed in the correct area even that the bin is considered to not belong there, especially when the bin is stolen and looks the same as the others and the address sticker is unreadable
I’ve seen of people around other cities here in New Zealand doing things like that, yeah if you’ve had trouble with them sometimes refusing to do your bin then you just take the stuff and dump it at the council
If the truck couldn’t lift it then it won’t be collected, if it falls into the trucks hopper during collection because the grippers didn’t work against your heavy bin then that’s it, there are rules against drivers entering the hopper because there is a compactor in the hopper, if a bin falls in it will be squished up and taken away
@@hamtrak_p42dcamtrak67 They technically could. But even new trucks have limits to how much they can lift, doesn't matter what type of truck it is, whether it's American or Australian. If the bin is so heavy that the truck simply can't lift it, the bin will not be emptied. Unless the driver has time to transfer material from your bin to someone else's to collect later, cool. This is the problem, especially for red and green bins, when people fill the bins with wet and really heavy waste, or overstuff the bin to the limit, and it makes the bin too heavy,
When I was a kid, I subscribed to a magazine but no longer remember the name, in one issue many articles were about the west becoming communist in the year 2000 while communist countries become capitalists, and sure enough the only wrong part was the year. This sounds like communism to me. Here is Canada, we will be getting soon some brown bins for organic matters such food and potato peels, watermelons, etc, I have no intention to participate in this charade, I built a sink outside my house and installed a food waste disposal unit to grind the stuff, I used to have composter but when I got the city letter, I got rid of my composter and would be sending everything down the drain.
@@DarkVoidIII I do not believe the hype of climate , I live in Canada and have been tabulating the weather since 1970, and sure enough, nothing changed, some years we have more snow, some years we have less, but it balance itself. people should not play with nature, now the trees in Alberta are so dry, that a forest fire in a province tat rarely has any, because the trees are so dry in the beginning of the summer, because they have no food, our ignorant P.M. is depriving the forest of Co2 which is the food for the trees, and when the forest die, nobody is going to bring him to trial.
@@davidronson8712 That's interesting. Do you have much rainfall in Canada where you are seeing the dried forests? We have a similar dry season in Australia in certain regions and it also starts forest fires. If it's away from inhabited regions they let it burn or try to control it. As for the Co2, does new growth appear after a fire ravages the area? Trees need not only Co2 they also need nutrients they can pull out of the ground with their roots to grow branches and leaves.
Exemptions on a case by case basis is a good idea. I do wonder at the cost of reading water meters yearly. Perhaps that would be more than the money collected for excess use.
“if your bin is not in the right adress” bruh, the owners will know what bin they have
Unless the bin is stolen from another property or not placed in the correct area even that the bin is considered to not belong there, especially when the bin is stolen and looks the same as the others and the address sticker is unreadable
Talk about micromanagement of a service that you pay for out of YOUR rates.
If they don't collect it, just push it over and let everything fall out. Eventually council contractors will come and clean it up.
Lol
I’ve seen of people around other cities here in New Zealand doing things like that, yeah if you’ve had trouble with them sometimes refusing to do your bin then you just take the stuff and dump it at the council
Oh thanks mate
Bruh doesn't get more picky than this
wdym
What is week1 and week2? The bin collection graphs are not clear.
so what if bin lid is not closed why dose it matter
When stuff spills out during windy days and when the truck attempts to pick it up,
because the waste is gonna fall out and they will need to be collecting them from the ground
@@Steve1766 well Ye
WHAT HAPENENS IF YOUR BIN IS HEAVY
If the truck couldn’t lift it then it won’t be collected, if it falls into the trucks hopper during collection because the grippers didn’t work against your heavy bin then that’s it, there are rules against drivers entering the hopper because there is a compactor in the hopper, if a bin falls in it will be squished up and taken away
Then they should get better trucks
@@hamtrak_p42dcamtrak67 They technically could. But even new trucks have limits to how much they can lift, doesn't matter what type of truck it is, whether it's American or Australian.
If the bin is so heavy that the truck simply can't lift it, the bin will not be emptied. Unless the driver has time to transfer material from your bin to someone else's to collect later, cool.
This is the problem, especially for red and green bins, when people fill the bins with wet and really heavy waste, or overstuff the bin to the limit, and it makes the bin too heavy,
will be left behind
Should of left it as it was rubbish bags
Bin and land fill management
When I was a kid, I subscribed to a magazine but no longer remember the name, in one issue many articles were about the west becoming communist in the year 2000 while communist countries become capitalists, and sure enough the only wrong part was the year. This sounds like communism to me. Here is Canada, we will be getting soon some brown bins for organic matters such food and potato peels, watermelons, etc, I have no intention to participate in this charade, I built a sink outside my house and installed a food waste disposal unit to grind the stuff, I used to have composter but when I got the city letter, I got rid of my composter and would be sending everything down the drain.
Why would you get rid of perfectly good compost? That makes no sense at all.
@@DarkVoidIII I do not believe the hype of climate , I live in Canada and have been tabulating the weather since 1970, and sure enough, nothing changed, some years we have more snow, some years we have less, but it balance itself. people should not play with nature, now the trees in Alberta are so dry, that a forest fire in a province tat rarely has any, because the trees are so dry in the beginning of the summer, because they have no food, our ignorant P.M. is depriving the forest of Co2 which is the food for the trees, and when the forest die, nobody is going to bring him to trial.
@@davidronson8712 That's interesting. Do you have much rainfall in Canada where you are seeing the dried forests? We have a similar dry season in Australia in certain regions and it also starts forest fires. If it's away from inhabited regions they let it burn or try to control it. As for the Co2, does new growth appear after a fire ravages the area? Trees need not only Co2 they also need nutrients they can pull out of the ground with their roots to grow branches and leaves.
No bio hazardous waste . Appliance batteries. Tubs too heavy.... Gloves medical ppe
Exemptions on a case by case basis is a good idea.
I do wonder at the cost of reading water meters yearly. Perhaps that would be more than the money collected for excess use.
😂
But why would you Tip you’re bin over
Check out BinStrap.com
No
whsy dau
Jgib