13/02/2006
- A Bristol man was today ordered to pay £3,000 in
fines and costs for illegally storing and disposing of waste
in the Chew Valley. The Environment Agency sent an officer
to a site near Winford on June 28, 2005 after receiving
a tip-off from a member of the public who reported that
waste was being burnt in a field off Greatstone Lane.
The officer found an estimated 100 tonnes of brick, stone
and block. There were also heaps of various other waste
materials including black bags of refuse, builders waste
and empty containers.
In the field there was a large hole approximately four
metres deep containing other waste, much of it burnt. It
included tins, plastic, board, wood, a steel radiator, car
wheels, tyres, a washing machine, bicycle wheels, iron guttering
and a frying pan.
Colin Patch admitted he owned the field and brought waste
back to the site to store as part of his business. Magistrates
heard that the site also suffered from serious fly-tipping
and it was this material that was burnt by the defendant.
Colin Patch of Fossil Stowe, Tarnwell Lane, Stanton Drew,
Bristol was fined £2,500 and ordered to pay £500
costs by Flax Bourton magistrates after pleading guilty
to two offences under the Environmental Protection 11000,
that on or before June 29, 2005 he illegally deposited demolition
waste and subsoil on land at Greatstone Lane, near Winford
and that on the same date he treated, kept and disposed
of controlled waste at the same site.
'This was a sizeable quantity of waste and the defendant
should have known better. The removal of fly-tipped waste
is the responsibility of the landowner. He should have taken
it to a landfill for safe disposal instead of burning and
burying it,' said Chris Povey for the Environment Agency.
The Environment Agency’s free 24 hour hotline for reporting
environmental incidents is 0800 80 70 60. |