I used to work on the bins. Many years ago, for four months, I was on a wagon that served south Preston – Penwortham, Walton-le-dale, Bamber Bridge, Leyland. Once we even filled in as far as Chorley. Chorley! It was the days of over-the-shoulder bins. There was a four-man team, one to carry out from behind the houses, two to tip into the back, one of whom would carry back the empty, as sometimes did the bloke bringing them out, and the driver. That was the cushy job. He was the boss.
Initially, as I was the new boy, I had to fetch them. It was heavy, hard, dirty work. You’d have to run and carry all the time. But after a while, I got conditioned to it. Then, when more accepted, I’d be allowed to be the one taking the empties in. There were not a lot of niceties. I was called Ireland or Irish, and some other things. I was an agency worker but I found my way into it. Within three months they offered me a full-time job. I had other plans, but that still felt like an achievement.
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One thing that struck me and stayed with me was how they noticed things and looked out for people. It might be an old woman they’d stop at for a glass of diluting juice and a quick hello. If she wasn’t on the doorstep one week, they’d check to make sure she was OK. Or somebody who was vulnerable and alone and suddenly their bins weren’t as heavy as before. Or someone who mowed the lawn and would look forward to stopping for the briefest of chats.
The bin crew weren’t simply collecting rubbish – they were community wardens, bad-smelling community wardens, but a vital part of a network that laces around and protects. I think a lot of them, and others who quietly and sometimes invisibly, bring buoyancy, particularly at this time of year when council tax rises are discussed.
Many local authorities in England are getting as close as they can to the 5% rise permitted before they need a local referendum to go higher. Those with permission from the government to reach higher are taking it. Down around Bournemouth and Poole, for instance, the rise is 6.74%. There are similar financial pressures in Scotland.









