11/01/2006 - The director of an illegal waste transfer station
in Theale, Berkshire, sentenced to twelve months in prison
yesterday, 9 January 2006.
Hugh O’Donnell, 49, of The Nursery, Paices Hill, Aldermaston,
Hampshire, runs two skip hire companies, Reading Skips Ltd
and Abbey Reading Skips Ltd. Both companies operate out
of a site at The Hanger, Station Road, Theale, where waste
material in the skips is brought back to be sorted and then
sold on or sent away for disposal.
O’Donnell pleaded guilty to eleven charges under the Environmental
Protection Act 11000. The offences relate to breaches of
waste management licence conditions at the Station Road
site and, after the licence was revoked by the Environment
Agency, to the illegal depositing, keeping, treating and
burning of waste.
O’Donnell received two six-month sentences to run consecutively,
and was ordered to pay Environment Agency costs of £1500.
The manager of the site, Gary James Spencer, 34, of Three
Firs Way, Burghfield Common, Berkshire, also pleaded guilty
to four charges. He was given a two-year conditional discharge
and ordered to pay £500 costs.
The companies, Reading Skips Ltd and Abbey Reading Skips
Ltd, were also fined £3000 each for four offences,
with costs of £2000 each.
Newbury Magistrates’ Court heard that the Environment Agency
continued to closely monitor the site after huge piles of
waste were illegally burnt there in 2002 and 2003. These
fires caused widespread complaints from residents nearby
as well as the temporary closure of the M4 and resulted
in a successful prosecution of Hugh O’Donnell and Reading
Skips Ltd by the Environment Agency in July 2004.
Surveillance and site inspections carried out by the Environment
Agency between October and December 2004 revealed that the
site was still not being managed in accordance with the
requirements of its waste management licence.
Numerous breaches of licence conditions were found. These
included storing waste directly on the ground with no measures
in place to avoid contamination of soil, storing excessive
amounts of waste, storing oil in containers with no protection
against possible leaks and failing to properly maintain
the infrastructure of the site such as fencing and drainage.
Large piles of waste were also being regularly burned on
site once more, and an adjacent fishing lake was polluted
with litter and other debris.
Failure to deal with these breaches led to the Environment
Agency revoking the site’s licence in December 2004, but
ongoing surveillance revealed that waste continued to be
brought and stored on-site.
Rod Gould, the Environment Agency’s investigating officer
said: “O’Donnell is a persistent environmental offender.
In 2004 he and one of his companies were fined £20,000
for illegally keeping and burning waste at this same site.
But clearly, that wasn’t enough of an incentive for him
to establish his operation on a legitimate footing.
“Instead, he’s carried on with the same disregard for the
law as before, regularly failing to adhere to the requirements
of the site’s waste management licence, requirements that
ensure it poses no risk to the environment or to human health.
“Even when we withdrew the licence, O’Donnell didn’t stop,
despite knowing full well that from that point on he was
operating wholly outside of the law.
“But his arrogance has now earned him a spell in prison,
where he’ll have plenty of time to reflect on the recklessness
of his actions.”
New rules introduced in June 2005 have increased the penalties
that rogue operators like O’Donnell can now face. Rod Gould
explained: “It used to be a lot easier for crooked individuals
to run a ‘dirty’ waste business, if they were determined
enough. But offenders can now be arrested and now have plant,
machinery and vehicles seized. There is also a range of
charges they could face, each of which carries a fine of
up to £50,000 or a year in prison.
“At the same time, we’re putting more effort and resources
than ever before into tackling organised waste crime.
“So our message to any dodgy operators out there is clear:
get your house in order sharpish, or expect an expensive
day in court. And when you get your summons, take your toothbrush
with you, because you may be fined far more than you can
pay.”
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