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Bin changeover a 'shambles' - Dublin Lord Mayor

Andrew Montague said that there had not been enough time given to the changeover.

Updated 13.15

DUBLIN CITY’S LORD Mayor has criticised the changeover to a new privatised bin service collection for the city calling it a ‘shambles’.

Andrew Montague said that the service had been “very poor” and blamed new provider Greyhound and Dublin City Council for not giving enough time for the preparation of the changeover.

The Mayor’s comments came a day after bin collection company Greyhound said that 18,000 customers face not having their rubbish collected this week unless they pay the upfront fee.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny, commenting on the situation in the Dail this morning, said that “common sense” should apply.

He urged Dublin City Council and Greyhound to “sit down and sort it out”.

On the €100 upfront charge, the Taoiseach told the Dáil: “In these times of economic challenge, there are people who can’t put up €100 like that, and I would have expected that the company would be flexible in this matter”.

Andrew Montague said that the 140,000 residents had not been given notice of the switchover until after it happened and that some bins haven’t been collected when they should have been

“Nobody could call what’s happened over the past month a first class job,” the Mayor said on RTE Radio One’s Morning Ireland programme this morning. “It has been a shambles”.

The Labour councillor said that more than 40 of Dublin City Council’s 52 councillors had been against the privatisation of the service and it had been “very unusual” for the City Manager to go against the will of the councillors so dramatically.

He called for an extension for another month of the free bin collection service.

Dublin city councillors held an emergency meeting at the end of January to discuss concerns over the changeover to private waste companies.

Greyhound took over waste collection services in Dublin city in January after it won the contract from Dublin City Council. The council had been responsible for collecting rubbish for over 100 years.

Greyhound warns 18,000 customers that bins will not be collected >

Data chiefs launch twin investigations into Greyhound bins transfer >

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    Mute Jason O'Leary
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    Apr 20th 2012, 9:13 PM

    Worldwide tax payer money being syphoned into a fund to pay off bankers and industrialists.

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    Mute cavanbythesea
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    Apr 21st 2012, 1:30 PM

    Seems a vicious circle, we need credit from banks to balance our books …

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    Mute Richard Fitzwell
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    Apr 20th 2012, 9:00 PM

    Are we heading in the direction of Bolivia back in the 90′s with the IMF co-running our country! Will they introduce water meters for the rain that falls on us?.. If Bolivia were the guinea pigs are we the text dummies?.. They had years of civil war from it.

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    Mute Hitthepotthomas
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    Apr 20th 2012, 9:16 PM

    I reckon war is inevitable after each country and the IMF begin to realise that everyones economy is phucked. Will i fight for this corrupt dive? HELL NO!

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    Mute Dirty Protest
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    Apr 20th 2012, 10:13 PM

    Guinea pigs are a delicacy in Ecuador after what happened there, by that reasoning we’ll all be doing our worshiping in cash for gold shops on Sunday mornings! Bring back Thomas Gear….

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    Mute HI SPRUIKER
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    Apr 20th 2012, 10:09 PM

    You better keep pumping guys.

    Thanks to you, it’s the only way out now.

    Can’t wait for those trillion euro notes to be printed.

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    Mute Jason O'Leary
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    Apr 21st 2012, 6:03 PM

    Closer fiscal union with shared sovereignty (according to Herman von Rumpy pumpy our unelected European president) and or hyper inflation, carbon taxes and indentured servitude for future generations as we pay off debts created for just such reasons.

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    Mute Sean Mac Gabhann
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    Apr 21st 2012, 4:34 PM

    Where is this going to stop.

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    Mute Creatively Maladjusted
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    Apr 21st 2012, 11:31 PM

    €150 billion for the *whole* Eurozone?…. pah… pocket change.
    We’re so rich our little country can afford to put €85 billion into our banks!

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