logo
Kent primary school children join litter-picking campaign

Kent primary school children join litter-picking campaign

BBC News27-03-2025

Pupils at a Kent primary school have played their part in a litter-picking campaign to help clean up local villages.There are twelve pop-up events planned in East Kent villages, including in Sandwich, Eastry and Tower Hamlets in Dover.On one pick, seventeen bags of rubbish were gathered in two hours by teachers and the 100 children from Eythorne and Elvington Primary School in their village.Items included a bicycle tyre, paint brush and roofing felt, as well as pizza boxes and other fast food debris.
The scheme is part of the Great British Spring Clean, which is organised by Keep Britain Tidy and now in its tenth year. Dover District Council has led the campaign locally.Rebecca Dyer, community development manager at the council, said the authority spent £1.5m each year on street cleaning."So we are trying to educate and engage people from a young age," she told BBC Radio Kent.
Kelly Taylor is the teaching assistant who encouraged the whole of Eythorne and Elvington Primary School to take part."I have been surprised how much rubbish there is when you start to look and pick," she said."There are lots of little pieces, but then whole chairs."
The campaign will end with a final pick at King George V Recreation Ground in St Margaret's at Cliffe on 6 April.Since 2016, Keep Britain Tidy says the the Great British Spring Clean has become the nation's biggest mass-action environmental campaign.Waste management company Veolia is also clearing roadsides over the next two weeks in Kent.The company cleared 23 tonnes (23,000kg) of litter from the road between the Duke of York and Whitfield roundabouts on the A2 in 2024 as part of a council initiative.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wyre Forest gets £27k to remove littered gum from streets
Wyre Forest gets £27k to remove littered gum from streets

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • BBC News

Wyre Forest gets £27k to remove littered gum from streets

A district council has received £27,500 to remove chewing gum from its Forest District councillor Ben Brookes said the funding meant the council could "get to work cleaning up and, just as importantly, help remind people to bin their gum rather than drop it".Keep Britain Tidy said the cost of cleaning up chewing gum was estimated at £7m a project, named the Chewing Gum Task Force, has been funded by a £10m investment from gum manufacturers, spread over five years. It has awarded 54 councils grants totalling £1.585 million, which could help clean an estimated 500,000m2 of of Wolverhampton Council had been awarded a grant of £20, Ogden-Newton OBE, Keep Britain Tidy's chief executive, said: "Chewing gum continues to be an unsightly form of litter in our public spaces. "People need to remember that disposing irresponsibly of their gum causes harm to our environment as it takes years to decompose naturally - and, ultimately, costs the public purse to clean it up."Brookes added that clearing up the gum would "make a big difference to how our district looks and feels". Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Heckmondwike and Marsden gum problem targeted by £26k grant
Heckmondwike and Marsden gum problem targeted by £26k grant

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • BBC News

Heckmondwike and Marsden gum problem targeted by £26k grant

Efforts to tackle the problem of chewing gum stuck to pavements in two West Yorkshire towns have been boosted with the award of a £26,450 clean-up money from the Chewing Gum Task Force would be spent on a one-off deep clean in Heckmondwike and Marsden town centres, according to Kirklees task force was established by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and is run by the Keep Britain Tidy charity, but is funded by chewing gum manufacturers. Last year, a total of 16,503 pieces of gum litter were removed from streets in Huddersfield and Dewsbury following a £25,500 investment from the task force. Kirklees Council is one of 52 local authorities across the country which successfully applied for a grant this year to help efforts to clean chewing gum off pavements. 'Think twice' Councillor Tyler Hawkins, cabinet member for highways and waste, said: "We are delighted to have been awarded further funding to help us tackle the problem of gum litter across our towns and villages in Kirklees."Removing chewing gum litter will get these areas looking their best and complement our ongoing programme of regeneration work within our town centres. "With this clean-up and new signage, we hope it will make potential litterbugs think twice and help keep our home tidy."According to Keep Britain Tidy, about 77% of England's streets and 99% of retail sites are stained with gum, while estimates have suggested the annual cost to UK councils of cleaning up chewing gum litter is about £ Ogden-Newton, Keep Britain Tidy's chief executive, said: "People need to remember that disposing irresponsibly of their gum causes harm to our environment as it takes years to decompose naturally – and, ultimately, costs the public purse to clean it up."Figures from Behaviour Change – a not-for-profit social enterprise – have shown that in areas which benefited from the first and second year of Chewing Gum Task Force funding, gum littering dropped by up to 80% in the first two months, the Local Democracy Reporting Service reductions were still being observed six months after targeted street cleansing and the installation of specially designed signage to encourage people to bin their gum. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store