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#BINMAGEDDON: Veolia performance is worse under new deal

CROYDON IN CRISIS: The rubbish contractor handed a £40m eight-year contract by Mayor Jason Perry, just two years after he sacked them for underperforming, is now taking longer to clear fly-tips than under their old deal. NORA BERRY reports 

Down the pan: Veolia’s performance on fly-tips has got worse since April

Figures compiled by resident campaigners at Litter Free Norbury show that the performance of the council’s rubbish contractors, Veolia, has got much worse since Mayor Jason Perry handed them a new, £40million, eight-year deal in April.

Tony Hooker, of Litter Free Norbury, has studied publicly available figures for fly-tip clearances and says that Veolia’s performance has “taken a nosedive” since the start of the new contract, with the contractor managing to clear reported fly-tips in an average of under 24 hours only once in the past six months.

Hooker is still waiting for Croydon Council to respond to his repeated requests for sight of the revised Veolia contract, to allow him to check the updated performance indicators the contractors are expected to achieve.

But he has been able to check data to keep tabs on the fly-tip clear-up rates.

“We first noticed issues last December,” Hooker says of the pace of fly-tip clearance, “and it has felt like it hasn’t recovered. Indeed, has got a lot worse since the start of the new contract.”

Hooker’s analysis suggests that his patch of Croydon, Norbury, gets a less good service from Veolia than other wards in the borough. And Hooker also thinks that Veolia has been fiddling the figures, too.

“The figures don’t tell the whole story,” Hooker said. “The reality is worse.”

Hooker has found:

It is worth remembering that in 2023, Veolia were sacked for poor performance by Croydon and two other members of the South London Waste Partnership: Sutton and Merton councils.

Flawed performance: Litter Free Norbury’s Facebook page makes a point about Veolia’s erratic performance, such as clearing away a single bin bag (right) within two days, while leaving behind a festering pile just a few feet away that was first reported a week earlier

Croydon, Sutton and Merton all re-contracted Veolia this year, when no other contractor was able to match the uber-low quote for the work submitted by Veolia. Previous performance records appeared to have been forgotten when awarding the multi-million-pound contracts.

Hooker’s work raises the serious matter of what monitoring of Veolia’s performance is being undertaken by Croydon’s cash-strapped council, where there are significantly fewer staff to undertake such work than there were four or five years ago.

The lack of any sign of action on the matter on behalf of the public by the cabinet member responsible, the utterly useless Tory councillor Scott Roche, or by failed Mayor Perry, suggests that they are keeping their heads down ahead of the local elections next May, hoping no one notices.

The chart below provides analysis of the average completion times of fly-tipping reports across each month. Hooker has broken out the figure for the two Norbury wards to provide a direct comparison to the borough-wide figure.

Charted: Litter Free Norbury has crunched the council figures, both borough-wide (in green) and across Norbury’s two wards (purple). The clear-up rate has got worse since the new contract in April

Hooker says that previously, the average clean-up rate “reflected a good level of performance, often around 12 hours, and generally was under 24″.

But since the new contract began,” those figures have taken a nosedive”. Hooker said: “It is also noticeable that the Norbury completion time figure is generally always higher than across the rest of the borough. That gap has been widening over the past couple of months, with Norbury returning an average completion of 46.5 hours for October.”

“It is 100% clear that Veolia’s performance with regards to fly-tip removal has massively decreased since April 1,” Hooker said.

Hooker says that he wants Mayor Perry to conduct “an urgent review of what is going wrong with Veolia’s performance since the start of the new contract”.

Read more: Saga of Croydon’s vanished bins and the audit that never was
Read more: April Fools! £40m Veolia contract comes into force tomorrow
Read more: #BINMAGEDDON: Perry sneaks out charges for wheelie bins
Read more: Croydon and three other boroughs to bin Veolia rubbish deal


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