Shopping trolley invasion in North East Lincolnshire
Street cleaners found more than 140 in eight weeks
People in North East Lincolnshire are being urged not to dump shopping trolleys across the Borough after more than 140 were collected in eight weeks.
Street cleaners are finding them everywhere from river banks and under bushes to street corners and car parks.
Usually, the trolleys are collected by a private contractor and returned to the retailers or used for spares, but if they're not collected, they're scrapped and the metal recycled can be used again.
Staff from the street cleansing team at the council are monitoring the numbers collected and stockpiled 143 at their depot in Grimsby in eight weeks. They say the problem has got worse recently.
Cllr Stewart Swinburn, portfolio holder for Environment and Transport at North East Lincolnshire Council, said:
“Our staff are picking up two or three trolleys every day.
“Not only do they look unsightly when they’re left on the streets or dumped in the river, where they can injure wildlife and block the flow of water.
“It’s an unnecessary burden on our staff to retrieve trolleys. We know most people use them responsibly, but sadly a small number of people choose to dump them and leave us to pick up the mess.”
When trolleys are dumped in rivers and water courses, they can collect other debris and cause blockages that could result in flooding.
It is also difficult to retrieve them from the water and mud.
Grimsby’s Canoe River Cleaner, James Elliott, often pull trolleys from the River Freshney, he said:
“As well as undermining civic pride shopping trolleys can alter the habit of our wildlife that call the river home.
“They can also pose a greater flood risk or algae build up as they act as anchor points for other litter and debris.
“I personally feel that supermarkets need to take personal responsibility and work with people such as myself and other volunteers to resolve this problem, or at least tackle it better.”