Take it Home - Argus launches anti-beach litter campaign

DON'T USE BEACH AS BIN: Litter strewn over Brighton beach DON'T USE BEACH AS BIN: Litter strewn over Brighton beach

Cleaning up litter in Brighton and Hove costs the city more than £5m a year. After the busiest weekend of the year so far residents were disgusted to wake up to a beach strewn with litter. Today The Argus launches its Take It Home campaign, urging tourists and locals alike to take their rubbish home with them and keep the county clean. Peter Truman reports.

Rubbish is a huge drain on council resources, with the authority employing 178 street cleaning staff across the city, at a cost of £5.2m a year.

Nearly 100 workers cover the central area, which includes the city’s biggest tourist attraction – the beach.

Patrols are out from 6am to 10pm seven days a week to try to keep it clean.

But the scale of the problem is huge, with almost a tonne of rubbish found on Sussex beaches in a single week.

Up to 100,000 visitors descended on Brighton and Hove at the weekend, but residents were horrified by the mess left behind.

Several readers contacted The Argus to complain of the beer bottles, barbecues and other detritus discarded on the beach.

Clive Andrews, who lives in Shoreham and works in Brighton, was one of those who was upset by the litter left after the sunny weekend.

The 36-year-old said: “Every day I cycle along the seafront and back. Most summer mornings it’s a real pleasure but this morning, the beach and lawns looked disgusting. I love Brighton and it really offends me to see the city being treated this way.”

Sonia Griffiths, of Hove, said the beach looked like a rubbish dump on Sunday morning after revellers had left their litter behind.

She said: “I always try to get down to the beach early on a sunny day to walk.

Disgusted “On Sunday I was absolutely aghast. The beach was festooned with rubbish and broken glass on the pebbles.

“I was so disgusted – there was barely a foot of beach without rubbish.

“If I dumped rubbish in the street I could be fined. We welcome holidaymakers and others but they need to take their rubbish with them. They think the beach is fair game.”

During the Marine Conservation Society’s recent Beachwatch Big Weekend, more than 950kg of junk was removed from Sussex beaches, with balloons and plastic bags containing dog mess among the most common items.

Volunteers on 18 Sussex beaches filled 150 sacks with waste, with the number of bags of dogs mess up by 11% from the year before.

Council street cleaners have discovered everything from tyres to a mannequin on the beach as they clear up.

The litter is a blight on a stretch of coastline which recently received Blue Flags for five of its beaches and is loved by tourists and locals alike.

The Argus’s latest campaign aims to raise awareness of the blight of litter and urge people to take their rubbish home with them.

All three of the city’s MPs have put their names behind our campaign to make sure people respect the environment while enjoying themselves.

The city council’s environment and sustainability committee chairman, Councillor Pete West, has backed our Take It Home campaign.

He said: “The seafront and our parks are among the city’s greatest assets and the recent glorious weather has been a wonderful opportunity for residents and visitors to enjoy them.

“However, we’ve received many complaints about a lack of respect for these areas over the weekend, with people leaving litter strewn across the beach despite public bins just yards away.

“The council is working hard to clear up and we will be putting out extra bins during the busiest times. But ultimately everyone should spare a few moments to tidy up after themselves and take some responsibility so that others can enjoy these spaces too.

“I hope this coming Jubilee weekend we’ll see everyone respecting one another and taking pride in our shared environment.

“Our thanks to The Argus for its awareness campaign.”

Comments(20)

OP8 says...
10:03am Tue 29 May 12

I hope it involves volunteers with megaphones patrolling the beach shouting at people they see leaving the beach & a patch of rubbish behind, shaming them into picking it up and putting it in the bin

NastyMrToms says...
10:09am Tue 29 May 12

I always feel the beach is a lot cleaner once 'erastus piggott' has returned back to her abode in south London ... lol.

leobrighton says...
11:11am Tue 29 May 12

I doubt if this will have any effect. Of all the items left on the beach not a single copy of The Argus was found.

billy goat-gruff says...
11:17am Tue 29 May 12

The council should increase the parking by the sea front so we attract the more refined visitor, not like these uncouth pigs who leave their disgusting litter and stink the place out with tinfoil barbecues

Funky Panda says...
11:19am Tue 29 May 12

The Council's environment spokesman thanks The Argus for its awareness campaign. Er, isn't that what the Council should be doing?

brightonandproud says...
11:34am Tue 29 May 12

Its not just the beaches, you wanna see preston park after the weekend, bins over flowing animals eaten half the leftovers. Why dont they get bigger bins for this type of situation, big communal bins in certain places around the park, instead of the little envelope slots you cant push a bag full of rubbish through. I used to work for parks and gardens. The park gardeners shouldnt have to pick this rubbish up.

CharlotteP says...
11:45am Tue 29 May 12

Surely this should read anti-litter rather than anti-beach

NickBtn says...
12:12pm Tue 29 May 12

Brighton beach was lovely on Sunday afternoon... apart from the rubbish littering both the beach and the sea. People were paddling and swimming surrounded by plastic bottles and other detritus left by fellow tourists

The amount of glass left, including broken bottles, was worrying. Alongside cans, paper cups etc etc.

Perhaps some double sided signs on the beach reminding people to take their litter as they go to beach and asking if they have taken litter (and reminding of fine) as they leave?

Apart from the litter we enjoyed a "little holiday" on a packed beach - good value ice creams on seafront too!

bug eye says...
12:27pm Tue 29 May 12

Firstly where are there any signs, surely big bold signs on the beach and tourist areas "keep brighton and hove tidy" this should be placed automatically on every single road sign and bin. on the way in and out of the a23 probably on the a23 roundabout a sign saying enjoy your visit, please remember to take your rubbish home or use bins provided, respect the residents and visitors and the environment. signs signs signs. fines fines fines. residents should take photos of anyone leaving the beach and not taking their beer cans wine bottles barbecues and sandwich wrappers etc. and report them.

bug eye says...
12:32pm Tue 29 May 12

where is the campaign? signs please, "do not use the beach as a bin, you will be fined".
"do not use the streets as a bin, you will be fined". "keep brighton and hove tidy" "respect the residents visitors and the environment". where are the signs to educate the uneducated underclass of all ages and types that clearly need it.

Falhawk66 says...
12:39pm Tue 29 May 12

Ban dogs, barbecues and public drinking from the beach, a lot of the problem solved.

Wiggsy says...
12:41pm Tue 29 May 12

brightonandproud wrote:
Its not just the beaches, you wanna see preston park after the weekend, bins over flowing animals eaten half the leftovers. Why dont they get bigger bins for this type of situation, big communal bins in certain places around the park, instead of the little envelope slots you cant push a bag full of rubbish through. I used to work for parks and gardens. The park gardeners shouldnt have to pick this rubbish up.
Agreed, I've lost count of the amount of times St Ann's Well Garden is left looking like someone emptied the contents of their bin - the campaign should directed at both the beach and gardens of B&H.

That said this Argus campaign will probably be as successful as their "Save Our Service" one of a couple of years ago.

brightonsparkle says...
1:02pm Tue 29 May 12

I thought BBQ's were banned on the beach because they are so dangerous yet I was surrounded by them on Sunday all on the ground, no stands, the stones underneath become boiling hot so when the BBQ is over some unsuspecting person gets 1st degree burns stepping on the stones. As others have said there should be larger signage and the people who patrol the beach on their big trikes should get a bucket of water and chuck it on any lit BBQ's

brightonbreezy says...
5:31pm Tue 29 May 12

Large litter bins placed at strategic points would be easier for council workers to collect - and how about supplying black bags for the mess makers to fill and carry to the bins?
Since parking near the beach is not encouraged, motorists could have a dirty task carrying armfuls of trailing litter to their vehicles; to say nothing of those travelling by bus.

uslot says...
5:52pm Tue 29 May 12

brightonsparkle wrote:
I thought BBQ's were banned on the beach because they are so dangerous yet I was surrounded by them on Sunday all on the ground, no stands, the stones underneath become boiling hot so when the BBQ is over some unsuspecting person gets 1st degree burns stepping on the stones. As others have said there should be larger signage and the people who patrol the beach on their big trikes should get a bucket of water and chuck it on any lit BBQ's
They are banned but there are no patrols to monitor the situations.
Unfortunatly,the exact situation you discribe happened to my 14 year old son on sunday,someone had a BBQ,they did remove that but did nothing about the burning hot stones it had been resting on,my son came out of the water,walked up the beach and ended up spending 3 hours in A+E with burns to his foot,he is having to go to the nurse every other day to have he blisters/burns drained and redressed and is in a lot of pain and discomfort all because of some one elses stupidity.

clarissabtn says...
9:53pm Tue 29 May 12

leobrighton wrote:
I doubt if this will have any effect. Of all the items left on the beach not a single copy of The Argus was found.
That made me laugh out loud, and yeah I agree that an awareness campaign in a local newspaper is hardly going to have much effect with visitors. Signs might be more effective, but who knows. People are pigs :(

SoniaR says...
10:23pm Tue 29 May 12

I'm glad people are getting behind this campaign. This is why I emailed the Argus on Sunday and sent them my pics which they printed one of in the paper this evening. I spoke to the man in the Seafront Office who told me that it is really the Police's jurisdiction to enforce people disposing of their litter. There are surprisingly few police around of an evening on the beach. Perhaps spot fines for littering may improve matters? Also the police and Council know full well that the hot weather will bring hundreds of extra people to Brighton. Perhaps an investment from our council tax into a fund for extra casual workers may allow for a more efficient clear-up. Or perhaps it may also be something that the Community Service Authorities can get involved with. Perhaps blatant littering should result in community service, clearing up the rubbish from the beach!

Juleyanne says...
7:34am Wed 30 May 12

People who discard their litter on the beach digust me. Why should someone else have to do their dirty work! Some fishermen are also culprits and leave fishing line and hooks on the beach which cause terrible injuries to wildlife.
I have picked up seabirds in the past totally tethered in fishing line and some with fish hooks stuck in their throats and many die as they are unable to feed it's horrible and I urge good people to remove any they see. Dumping of litter from boats at sea and oil also is a major problem and hurts wildlife. The human race is capable of such vulgarity, selfishness and disrespect. People who abuse beaches or countryside should be heavily fined and repeat offenders jailed!

brightonsparkle says...
2:07pm Wed 30 May 12

uslot wrote:
brightonsparkle wrote:
I thought BBQ's were banned on the beach because they are so dangerous yet I was surrounded by them on Sunday all on the ground, no stands, the stones underneath become boiling hot so when the BBQ is over some unsuspecting person gets 1st degree burns stepping on the stones. As others have said there should be larger signage and the people who patrol the beach on their big trikes should get a bucket of water and chuck it on any lit BBQ's
They are banned but there are no patrols to monitor the situations.
Unfortunatly,the exact situation you discribe happened to my 14 year old son on sunday,someone had a BBQ,they did remove that but did nothing about the burning hot stones it had been resting on,my son came out of the water,walked up the beach and ended up spending 3 hours in A+E with burns to his foot,he is having to go to the nurse every other day to have he blisters/burns drained and redressed and is in a lot of pain and discomfort all because of some one elses stupidity.
Oh I am really sorry to hear that, I do hope you complain to the council its is so dangerous, I wish your son a speedy recovery

DreamSculptor says...
5:22pm Wed 30 May 12

Oh my... 178 street cleaning staff across at a cost of £5.2m a year, does that mean they get paid an average of £29,213 a year. I'd like to ask one of the cleaners if that's what they actually get?

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