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Siting of panels for solar water heating

In message , Andy Hall writes

On 2006-11-22 18:07:56 +0000, John Beardmore said:
Fortnightly bin collections are not acceptable. It isn't clever, or green, just cheapness and unacceptable. Well - that's your view. I wouldn't want to pay more for what you seem to regard as some minimal standard of service. Indeed. Some would rather pay for a monthly general bin collection. Would be fine for me, though I'm still not convinced that private contractors sound that great.
Those that want to put a bin out every week should not be subsidised by others, they should pay for the waste they generate. Hmmm... Given the tradition in this country has been weekly collections, I can see why people start from the assumption that this is the norm.
It is the norm and it is what these people are paid to do.

Your view of what they are paid to do seems to be about 10 years out of date.

If they want to reduce that for cost reasons, then fine, but then take that element out of the council tax, and I'll make my own arrangements with a private contractor.

I think there's more to it than saving money.

Of course, what *should* happen is that instead of spinning greenwashed rubbish and expecting people to be gullible enough to fall for it, there should be massive reductions in LA employees.

Well again, that's your view.
Cheers, J/. -- John Beardmore

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On 2006-11-22 23:14:15 +0000, John Beardmore said:

In message , Andy Hall writes On 2006-11-22 18:07:56 +0000, John Beardmore said:
Fortnightly bin collections are not acceptable. It isn't clever, or green, just cheapness and unacceptable. Well - that's your view. I wouldn't want to pay more for what you seem to regard as some minimal standard of service. Indeed. Some would rather pay for a monthly general bin collection. Would be fine for me, though I'm still not convinced that private contractors sound that great.
Those that want to put a bin out every week should not be subsidised by others, they should pay for the waste they generate. Hmmm... Given the tradition in this country has been weekly collections, I can see why people start from the assumption that this is the norm.
It is the norm and it is what these people are paid to do.
Your view of what they are paid to do seems to be about 10 years out of date.

No it isn't. I pay an ever increasing amount of money in council tax each year as does everybody else in the district. Nobody has asked for a reduction in service, so there is no reason for the supplier (i.e. the LA) to reduce it.


If they want to reduce that for cost reasons, then fine, but then take that element out of the council tax, and I'll make my own arrangements with a private contractor.
I think there's more to it than saving money.

Such as an excuse to hire more jobsworths for the gravy train. Basically, they are not adding any value, only cost. There is no reason or excuse for them to be in the supply chain. It would be far more effective for there to be a free market in collection and disposal in the same way as there is in the energy sector. People who want to pay the lowest price can buy from a supplier who offers that. Those who want to go for more of a tree hugging operator and pay more because it gives them a warm fuzzy can do that, and people who want to buy a value add service where the supplier comes, sorts and disposes of the rubbish in groups or whatever can have that.


Of course, what *should* happen is that instead of spinning greenwashed rubbish and expecting people to be gullible enough to fall for it, there should be massive reductions in LA employees.
Well again, that's your view.

It seems to be a fairly widely held one from what I read in the local press and from talking to councillors. People seem to be getting heartily sick of being talked down to, snowed with PC nonsense, attempts to pull the wool over their eyes and running their lives for them.
It's a shame really because the few worthwhile environmental activities are then tarred with the brush of the easily discredited.

Siting of panels for solar water heating

In message , Andy Hall writes

On 2006-11-22 23:14:15 +0000, John Beardmore said: In message , Andy Hall writes On 2006-11-22 18:07:56 +0000, John Beardmore wookie@wookie.demon.co.uk> said:
Your view of what they are paid to do seems to be about 10 years out of date.
No it isn't. I pay an ever increasing amount of money in council tax each year as does everybody else in the district. Nobody has asked for a reduction in service, so there is no reason for the supplier (i.e. the LA) to reduce it.

None the less, the statutory duties of LAs have changed, and there is widespread public support for recycling in may quarters.
Nobody has asked for a reduction in service, but the service they are required to give is no longer the same.
I know it's huge fun to rant and demean them, but your view of what they are paid to do still seems to be about 10 years out of date.

If they want to reduce that for cost reasons, then fine, but then take that element out of the council tax, and I'll make my own arrangements with a private contractor. I think there's more to it than saving money.
Such as an excuse to hire more jobsworths for the gravy train.

Such as a desire, and externally imposed requirement, to deliver better environmental performance, yet all your criticism of those to whom council tax is paid suggests that you are criticising LAs. Yet the framework in which they operate, and the targets imposed on them largely come from central government and indeed the EU.

Basically, they are not adding any value, only cost. There is no reason or excuse for them to be in the supply chain.

....that you perceive...

It would be far more effective for there to be a free market in collection and disposal in the same way as there is in the energy sector. People who want to pay the lowest price can buy from a supplier who offers that. Those who want to go for more of a tree hugging operator and pay more because it gives them a warm fuzzy can do that, and people who want to buy a value add service where the supplier comes, sorts and disposes of the rubbish in groups or whatever can have that.

I guess the point here is that LAs are obliged to implement recycling, and the minimum specification is not something they can alter. They will almost certainly then go through some sort of tendering process to get that service delivered at the lowest price.
If you want to change the way this is done, it's a matter for central government.

Of course, what *should* happen is that instead of spinning greenwashed rubbish and expecting people to be gullible enough to fall for it, there should be massive reductions in LA employees. Well again, that's your view.
It seems to be a fairly widely held one from what I read in the local press

It may be "widely held", but that doesn't make it 'well informed'.

and from talking to councillors.

Councillors can speak with forked tongues. They can join in the chorus of every rant in the hope of re-election, and still vote to carry out the most deranged of statutory duties and local policies in the council chamber.

People seem to be getting heartily sick of being talked down to, snowed with PC nonsense, attempts to pull the wool over their eyes and running their lives for them.

Well yes, but that doesn't mean that there isn't a benefit to recycling, or that fortnightly bin collections are not the least worst way to do it given the resources available, and the statutory framework in which LAs operate.

It's a shame really because the few worthwhile environmental activities are then tarred with the brush of the easily discredited.

Well possibly, and I'm not saying the situation is great or adequate, but so far you've given us hot air and opinion which amount to a counter proposal that I doubt would even be legal.
As such, you can't blame LAs for implementing a legal solution, and just how many "jobsworths for the gravy train" do you think this involves, and in which specific jobs ?
Cheers, J/. -- John Beardmore

Siting of panels for solar water heating

In message , Andy Hall writes

On 2006-11-22 14:44:27 +0000, David Hansen SENDdavidNOhSPAM@spidacom.co.uk> said:
The key is encouraging people to organise these bits of their lives. if they do get organised then things like fortnightly bin collections are no problem. This is complete and utter bullshit. Yawn. What a surprise, more aggressive language.
It isn't at all. Why on earth do you imagine, in your wildest dreams that people will want to organise their lives to support what is in reality a cost saving measure that will simply be an excuse to employ more bozos to run it.
If you thought that that was aggressive language, you haven't seen anything.

Oooo... Threats eh ? ;)
This is better than the Holy Grail !
Let's run away lest he taunt us a second time...

The simple fact is that these people are paid to deliver a service and now expect the customer to adjust their mode of use of that service to suit the supplier. It's complete and utter bullshit and frankly that is being very mild and kind about it.

Nurse, the screens !

If they don't want to deliver the service that the customer wants and is paying a great deal of money for, then that's fine. The quid-pro-quo is that the customer shops elsewhere.

Except to be pragmatic, they can't, and in this instance it isn't.
Unless you plan to set up the 'Alternative Bin Emptying Company'.
Cheers, J/. -- John Beardmore

Siting of panels for solar water heating

John Beardmore wrote:

In message , meow2222@care2.com writes John Beardmore wrote: In message , meow2222@care2.com writes
I wrote about / explained the money -energy connection in detail just recently, so I dont want to again.
http://periodpropertyshop.co.uk/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=6888&sid=5ca008e7 75816416ce3381a9440c4fc2 Relevant posts are mostly on the first few page and the last.
Well, they certainly restate your position, but they don't answer the points I raised when this first came up in this thread, or deal with the example I gave.
so you didnt read the linked pages.
Yes - I did, but they didn't address the example I gave, or for that matter, even slightly convince me you are right about this.

Since it did address it directly, I can only conclude you either didnt read it or ended up in the wrong place somehow.
NT

Siting of panels for solar water heating

In message , Andy Hall writes

On 2006-11-22 02:18:26 +0000, John Beardmore said:
In message , raden writes Feelgood factor If you insist, though you seem to using that phrase in a rather pejorative sense. I guess it feels good in the same way that social cohesion or public spirited acts do - as opposed to feeling good like simple hedonism.
The problem with that is that all but a very small proportion of people think with their pocket books first and being public spirited falls a long way down their agenda. I am not saying that this is good or bad, but in terms of achieving the objective of an improvement to the environment (in whatever scope you want to choose) it won't work if there are too small a number of adopters.

Well yes - though the reality is that the solar industry has never been busier, and fuel price trends seem to be the major contributor.

Most pf the available market does not buy on being public spirited, they buy on economic grounds. The two are only incompatible, if the economic value proposition is weak in the first place.

Agreed.

In essence, their behaviour illustrates how much they value the global commons and the resources they can save, by the amount of cash they are willing to spend protecting them. Introducing that term into the equation at least makes the use of a simplistic mathematical model to illustrate human behaviour look less broken. No, it just shows that they've been pulled in by the hype I can't agree. You only seem able to consider the financial angle. When you were "fairly neutral / sympathetic", was this on simple financial grounds ? Are you only capable of being sympathetic to financial objectives ?
I can't comment for Geoff, but had it been me, I would have had pretty much the same reaction. Normally I wouldn't have looked too seriously into this stuff because it is clear that there is not a strong reason to do so at the current price point of energy. It's an issue of what do I want to spend my time doing, and to be honest, there are more important things that have to be dealt with first.

Yes - you may well be right about that, and many other households may well be in the same situation.

However, had my parents been scammed in this way, I would have had the same reaction, because the sale was made on grounds that were a long way short of being honest.

Maybe. While in my view it was overpriced by maybe a factor of two to three, I can't say if they were honest, because I don't know what they said.
If you're upset about it, you could complain to the solar trade association, the Low Carbon Buildings Program, trading standards etc.

I have a simple rule in business transactions - that is that people do what they say they are going to do. If they do a little more, then I am very happy. If they do less, then I expect them to fix it, and quickly or I pay less. It's surprising how many suppliers of goods and services ar genuinely shocked when pulled up on this.

:) Seems fair.

This is an example where there was no chance at the outset that the supplier/technology could deliver on the customer's expectation or what the supplier had allowed the customer's expectation to become without reseting it. When the customer is relatively vulnerable for whatever reason as well. said supplier had better watch out. I would have become sensitised to the issue as well for much the same reasons. In this case, the customer was buyig on what he thought were economic grounds and the justification wasn't there.

Well again - we can assume that the customer hadn't thought through the economics, but equally we might assume that the customer valued the outcome in other ways.

Sorry, but laudable as you claim your actions to be, You are looking at having an insignificant effect Being laudable is for others to judge. Of course my effect is insignificant, but it is insignificant in a relatively good direction as opposed to a relatively bad one; moving towards a solution, at least in some areas, as opposed to moving towards bigger more urgent problems in those areas. Of course - I needn't do this. I could still be working as a software engineer, earning far more money, and contributing to more problems in more ways. I would still be just as insignificant. To grossly oversimplify - I'd rather be insignificant and doing the right thing, than insignificant and doing the wrong thing !
The problem is that unless you are doing what you perceive to be the right thing on a sound economic basis, on the small scale you won't be in business, so it becomes academic; and on the macro scale is effectively worthless because not enough people will adopt it to make a worthwhile difference. If, OTOH, you do something close to what you are doing that does pass the economic tests, then you have the ability to potentially make a difference.

Hmmm... Some people seem to violently oppose 'incrementalism', others to feel it is the only possible way to make progress.
I just think you do whatever you can whenever you can. Depends on the opportunities that present.

even worse, you feel you're making a difference - which is what I see as being dangerous I'm well aware of the scale of the problem and my size relative to it, but relative size doesn't alter the direction in which it is sensible to go, and certainly 'following the money' doesn't do it for >>me !
Don't expect to be in business for very long then.....

:)
If everybody was like you...
Meanwhile... ...Four and a half years and counting. Yes it's a micro business, but it's been through a minimum, come out the other side and seems to be growing.
I'm not complaining, and people seem to think we are some use.

If everyone donated the money they would have spent on a solar heating system to a "getting rid of George bush fund" it would be money far better spent Possibly, though the example I prefer is If you had a thousand quid and wanted to save the planet, would it be better to a) install a half a solar water heater or b) break into 10 of your friends attics and insulate them ? I tell this to our clients. Especially the ones without loft insulation !
or c) keeping the money invested until the point when spending it will actually achieve something. In that sense I would rather focus effort on the abolition of inheritance tax so that future generations can actually benefit from technology that is worthwhile in the future rather than wasting money on marginal stuff today. Unfortunately, not many people think laterally either....

:) That's one way to look at it, but we are doing harm to the environment now, and prevention is generally an order of magnitude or two cheaper than mitigation.
Further, you are opting to rely on technologies that might never exist. Nobody can predict the future, and you can't buck thermodynamics. There are risks either way,
Cheers, J/. -- John Beardmore

Siting of panels for solar water heating

John Beardmore wrote:

In message , Andy Hall writes
Basically, they are not adding any value, only cost. There is no reason or excuse for them to be in the supply chain.
...that you perceive...

Then tell us what valid reason there is for LAs to hold a monopoly on rubbish collection. And not only that, but to even charge the few people that dont use the council rubbish collection service at all, and prosecute them if they dont pay!
You say its all in the interest of recycling, but surely if the market became a bit more sensible, many would see the direct & immediate economic benefit to themselves of recycling, and compost heaps would become very popular, as would reduction in wanton waste.
As ever, the nanny system is counterproductive.
And of course many would reduce energy use by reducing collection frequency, just as many would not. We could all have the collection frequency we wanted.
The present dubious monopoly also eliminates any personal responsibility and reduces public knowledge of the subject, since it makes no difference to consumers what they do.

It would be far more effective for there to be a free market in collection and disposal in the same way as there is in the energy sector. People who want to pay the lowest price can buy from a supplier who offers that. Those who want to go for more of a tree hugging operator and pay more because it gives them a warm fuzzy can do that, and people who want to buy a value add service where the supplier comes, sorts and disposes of the rubbish in groups or whatever can have that.
I guess the point here is that LAs are obliged to implement recycling, and the minimum specification is not something they can alter.

The point is there is no justification for them to hold a monopoly in the first place, and its counterproductive all round.

They will almost certainly then go through some sort of tendering process to get that service delivered at the lowest price.

ha ha. You mean like garage insurance quotes? 'Is it an insurance job then?' 'Yes' 'OK, we can do it for 5x normal price, and we'll take the 50-50 chance of getting the job.' 'Thank you, youre the cheapest, I'll go with you.'

People seem to be getting heartily sick of being talked down to, snowed with PC nonsense, attempts to pull the wool over their eyes and running their lives for them.

People are getting more educated and aware, thanks to the net.
NT

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On 2006-11-23 07:22:41 +0000, John Beardmore said:

In message , Andy Hall writes On 2006-11-22 23:14:15 +0000, John Beardmore said: In message , Andy Hall writes On 2006-11-22 18:07:56 +0000, John Beardmore said:
Your view of what they are paid to do seems to be about 10 years out of date.
No it isn't. I pay an ever increasing amount of money in council tax each year as does everybody else in the district. Nobody has asked for a reduction in service, so there is no reason for the supplier (i.e. the LA) to reduce it.
None the less, the statutory duties of LAs have changed, and there is widespread public support for recycling in may quarters.

Not among the sentient. It might be OK if something were actually achieved in terms of the total lifetime impact of the items being thrown away. The trouble is that only partial views are taken and the true economic and environmental impacts not taken into account. This is always assuming that items genuinely are recycled as claimed and not just thrown in with the rest of the landfill. I still see instances of refuse collectors throwing what naive people have separated into their recycling bins in the back of the truck with the rest of the rubbish.

Nobody has asked for a reduction in service, but the service they are required to give is no longer the same.

That's pure marketing nonsense. Convince people that they no longer need something that you don't want to provide or to achieve some PC positioning. You may be impressed with that - I'm not. It should be exposed for what it is.

I know it's huge fun to rant and demean them, but your view of what they are paid to do still seems to be about 10 years out of date.

It's not fun at all. Actually it's rather serious because large amounts of money are being wasted by these people and there are not too many mechanisms to redress it other than exposure and bringing suitable pressure to bear when needed. When one has to resort to taking issues to the chief executive of the LA because of incompetence in his departments covered by people hiding behind statutes (e.g. "I can't do this because the law doesn't empower me to do it"), and middle management want to sit out a quiet life until their retirement; one becomes of the opinion that the organisation is long overdue for some wholesale sackings.
That isn't ranting about something - it's a statement of reality.
They are paid to provide a service. That's it. The measure is whether or not they are doing it.
I'll give you an example. My local authority used to collect bins etc. from anywhere at the front of the property. I in common with many of my neighbours have quite a long drive - mine longer than most. A couple of years ago, the LA wrote saying that they were changing the policy such that bins had to be placed at the edge of the property at the road. I didn't have a particular problem with that, other than the fact that they lied about the reason. The story was that it was for "health and safety" reasons - one of the great things to hide behind when you don't want to do something. Nobody really believed it, but several contacted the head of the department who assured us that this was the reason. We went one level up and spoke to an empty suit who wasn't interested; so following that it was letters to the chief exec. cc. to the MP and the local press. In the end, there was an admission that it was for cost reasons. When they had accepted contractor bids for the collection contract, they found that they could save money by the bin men not having to walk up drives to people's houses. That was the truth of the situation.
I would have had no problem with this apart from two things:
1) They lied about the reasons. In writing. Several times
2) They didn't ask their customers before implementing this whether they wanted collections conducted in this way.
With nonsense like this going on, I have a very hard time trusting anything they say about recycling arrangements. There may be *some* value in doing *some* recycling, but when the package and reasons are tainted with this and the PC arguments of "being seen to do the right thing", people become disillusioned with the whole thing.


If they want to reduce that for cost reasons, then fine, but then take that element out of the council tax, and I'll make my own arrangements with a private contractor. I think there's more to it than saving money.
Such as an excuse to hire more jobsworths for the gravy train.
Such as a desire, and externally imposed requirement, to deliver better environmental performance, yet all your criticism of those to whom council tax is paid suggests that you are criticising LAs. Yet the framework in which they operate, and the targets imposed on them largely come from central government and indeed the EU.

They do have the ability to implement things in different ways, but choose to lie and cheat. I wasn't singling out LAs for special treatment. The disease goes all the way to the top.


Basically, they are not adding any value, only cost. There is no reason or excuse for them to be in the supply chain.
...that you perceive...

It's hard to find evidence to support any other view given the way that they execute what they are supposed to do.


It would be far more effective for there to be a free market in collection and disposal in the same way as there is in the energy sector. People who want to pay the lowest price can buy from a supplier who offers that. Those who want to go for more of a tree hugging operator and pay more because it gives them a warm fuzzy can do that, and people who want to buy a value add service where the supplier comes, sorts and disposes of the rubbish in groups or whatever can have that.
I guess the point here is that LAs are obliged to implement recycling, and the minimum specification is not something they can alter. They will almost certainly then go through some sort of tendering process to get that service delivered at the lowest price.
If you want to change the way this is done, it's a matter for central government.

Absolutely. I'm directing some efforts there as well. This does need to be exposed for the scam it is.


Of course, what *should* happen is that instead of spinning greenwashed rubbish and expecting people to be gullible enough to fall for it, there should be massive reductions in LA employees. Well again, that's your view.
It seems to be a fairly widely held one from what I read in the local press
It may be "widely held", but that doesn't make it 'well informed'.

That depends on the source of the information. When the source is people in LAs who simply don't tell the truth, one has to be on one's guard to separate the truth from the lies.

and from talking to councillors.
Councillors can speak with forked tongues. They can join in the chorus of every rant in the hope of re-election, and still vote to carry out the most deranged of statutory duties and local policies in the council chamber.

I am fully aware of that and watch voting records on important issues very carefully.


People seem to be getting heartily sick of being talked down to, snowed with PC nonsense, attempts to pull the wool over their eyes and running their lives for them.
Well yes, but that doesn't mean that there isn't a benefit to recycling, or that fortnightly bin collections are not the least worst way to do it given the resources available, and the statutory framework in which LAs operate.

There *may* be *some* benefit to *some* recycling. At the point that I see honestly presented data with impartial and not greenwashed figures to support it, the matter can be taken seriously. Until that time, it is seriously discredited.


It's a shame really because the few worthwhile environmental activities are then tarred with the brush of the easily discredited.
Well possibly, and I'm not saying the situation is great or adequate, but so far you've given us hot air and opinion which amount to a counter proposal that I doubt would even be legal.

That depends. So often I have heard the excuse (phrase above) that "the law doesn't empower them to do something". If one asks the supplementary question of does it prevent them; then the answer is typically silence because either they don't know or they no full well that it doesn't prescribe particular methods of delivery of services.
All of that is before one looks at what can be done in terms of getting law changed to correct nonsenses like this.

As such, you can't blame LAs for implementing a legal solution, and just how many "jobsworths for the gravy train" do you think this involves, and in which specific jobs ?

I can always criticise LAs. Finding people who are competent, efficient and willing to take responsibility for their actions is becoming as rare as rocking horse shit in these organisations. I'll give you another example which is in the process of being exposed. The highways department of my LA has been undertaking a task to look at modifications to improve traffic flows in the district. This is a well staffed department which should, on paper, be well able and qualified to carry out the exercise. Instead of this, they have hired a firm of consultants to do some of the exercise. When questioned about it, nobody was able to give an answer as to why this could not have been achieved in house - they weren't short of staff. Again, the chief exec. wasn't even aware of this and the expenditure is substantial. He is now.
It is for these types of reason that there needs to be a massive cut back in the public sector at all levels and people put into gainful employment.

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On 2006-11-23 07:58:01 +0000, John Beardmore said:

In message , Andy Hall writes
If they don't want to deliver the service that the customer wants and is paying a great deal of money for, then that's fine. The quid-pro-quo is that the customer shops elsewhere.
Except to be pragmatic, they can't, and in this instance it isn't.

There is generally something rotten with a system that compels customers to take specific actions that suit the single supplier as opposed to what they want to buy. This is a prime example of it.

Unless you plan to set up the 'Alternative Bin Emptying Company'.

That would be very tempting.

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On 2006-11-23, Andy Hall wrote:

It is for these types of reason that there needs to be a massive cut back in the public sector at all levels and people put into gainful employment.

*Applause*
-- "Other people are not your property." [email me at huge [at] huge [dot] org [dot] uk]

Siting of panels for solar water heating

"Andy Hall" wrote in message

On 2006-11-23 07:22:41 +0000, John Beardmore <wookie@wookie.demon.co.uk said:
In message , Andy Hall writes On 2006-11-22 23:14:15 +0000, John Beardmore <wookie@wookie.demon.co.uk said: In message , Andy Hall writes On 2006-11-22 18:07:56 +0000, John Beardmore wookie@wookie.demon.co.uk> said:
None the less, the statutory duties of LAs have changed, and there is widespread public support for recycling in may quarters.
Not among the sentient.

99% of all household waste can be safely burnt to create energy. Isn't incendiary is aluminium and iron. The governments DEFRA web site gives the safe emissions of modern incineration plant. The reason re-cycling was introduced rather than burning was the toxic products of combustion of the burning waste. That is no longer the case.
It takes up more energy to recycle than burning the waste and creating electricity and heat reducing dependence on oil. The UK in 7 years will have run out of land fill. These land fills contaminate the land for many, many hundreds of years.
Re-cycling was pushed onto the UK by the EU from Brussels. It was pushed onto the EU by the German Green Part which is very powerful and just a bunch of tree huggers. Times have moved on, but the EU, prompted by the Germans because of political dogma now, doesn't move on.
It is a no brainer. Burn the stuff - all of it. Make heat and electricity, Combined Heat and Power (CHP)
We should tell Brussels where to go.

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On 23 Nov 2006 01:19:03 -0800, meow2222@care2.com wrote:

ha ha. You mean like garage insurance quotes? 'Is it an insurance job then?' 'Yes' 'OK, we can do it for 5x normal price, and we'll take the 50-50 chance of getting the job.' 'Thank you, youre the cheapest, I'll go with you.'

Maybe I'm misreading what you wrote but the labour rate for insurance related work is always lower than for retail customers walking in off the street, sometimes being about 1/2 - 1/3 of the usual rate, the profit for most insurance repair work is almost all in the parts supply
--

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 07:22:41 +0000, John Beardmore wrote:

As such, you can't blame LAs for implementing a legal solution, and just how many "jobsworths for the gravy train" do you think this involves, and in which specific jobs ?

Well around here the number of people ("Waste Development Officers") employed in managing "recycling" has more than doubled in the last 5 years. The number of binmen ("recycling operatives") has of course gone down slightly. A PR guru has been employed to alter the way recollect is printed to rECOllect so people know it's cool.
As part of a GBP1M grant two "waste advisors" were recruited to give "face to face" advice to residents. No one I can find seems to know who they are, where they are, or what they do even though they have apparently been in post for several years.
In a neighbouring area a "Waste Development Supervisor" and their assistant sometimes drive around before the bin lorry to vet the rubbish. This led to the bizarre situation of one person been given a "first formal warning, valid for one year" for including a yogurt pot in the recyclable plastics container and told if they did it again they would be fined. When they asked what would happen if they put all their rubbish in the black (landfill) bin they were told they couldn't be fined for this. So now to avoid the chance of a fine for another mistake they simply tip everything in the black bin, recycle nothing and are advising their neighbours to do likewise.
How ECO is it? Well they only collect what they can sell, not what can be recycled, so batteries won't be collected (you have to drive several miles to the local recycling centre (which is off all bus routes) to dump those. Paper is collected - but not cards, Card is collected for composting - but not cards.
Aluminium cans are OK, but a sheet of aluminium weighing as much as a hundred cans isn't nor are aluminium foil dishes, they have to be thrown away or driven to the dump.
Plastic bottles are OK, but plastic tubs are not (even if of the same plastic as the bottles). The plastic is shipped to China.
Waste paper (including Yellow Pages) can be put in a recycling box but Yellow Pages cannot be put in a waste paper collection station. The waste paper is driven to Kent and from there shipped to Sweden where it is reprocessed, the total energy cost is higher than using new wood pulp which the Swedes have a lot of and manage perfectly well.
Glass jars are OK, but glass drinking glasses are not. Much of the glass goes to landfill or overseas.
For composting, small branches are OK but dead woody matter isn't. How you tell the difference between a small branch (which is dead woody matter but allowed) and something which is dead woody matter and not allowed is interesting but could cost you a lot of money to get wrong.
Glass and Plastic bottles are supposed to be washed - which wastes water and energy.
Unsurprisingly this scheme is held up as a paragon of virtue by FOE and won an award.
-- Peter Parry. http://www.wpp.ltd.uk/

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 17:51:54 +0000 someone who may be Peter Parry wrote this:-

The worms in the wormery like to eat meat remains.
I'm sure they do, it's not of much interest to a flat dweller with no garden though.

Incorrect. A wormery can exist perfectly happily in the kitchen.

It is also illegal if you have a pet pig.

Do flat dwellers with no gardens have pet pigs?

The inside of a black bin isn't exactly sterile and councils are not allowed to treat any waste from a domestic kitchen as compostible (Animal By-Products Order 1999, as amended).

Incorrect. However, if they are to compost domestic kitchen waste then they have to use a special sort of composter. The more switched on councils have built or are building such composters. The less switched on councils simply state they cannot accept the waste, which is at best being economical with the truth.

-- David Hansen, Edinburgh I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54

Siting of panels for solar water heating

On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 20:41:54 -0000 someone who may be "Mary Fisher" wrote this:-

We don't have a tv.

www.itsnoteasybeinggreen.org may have some comments in their forums.
-- David Hansen, Edinburgh I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54


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