Liverpool set to take full control of key environmental services
Liverpool City Council is set to take full control of essential environmental services including waste collection, street cleansing and parks maintenance.
Since 2016, these front-line services have all been delivered by the Council-owned subsidiary company, Liverpool Streetscene Services Ltd (LSSL).
Now a report to the Council’s Cabinet, which meets on Tuesday 12 November, is recommending that staff from LSSL are brought back under the direct control of the Council to deliver a year-round environmental programme for residents and businesses.
Although this move will have no direct impact on the collection of household waste, it will be part of a wider drive to improve the city’s low recycling rates and to strengthen environmental enforcement action.
Once delivered, it is anticipated the City’s new approach to waste management will ensure services are joined up and working efficiently over the coming decade, as well as radically reducing the city’s domestic carbon emissions.
Next week’s recommendation has been heavily influenced by responses from the Council’s annual residents’ survey, in which the cleanliness of the City was identified as their number one priority.
The Council has already invested significantly based on this feedback, recruiting 18 new Streetscene staff to focus on litter this year, with more being hired to target enforcement on issues such as flytipping.
Liverpool, which has witnessed the installation of the biggest network of urban underground bins in the UK, is also currently piloting solar bins as the Council seeks to explore innovative ways to tackle environmental challenges.
The Council has also improved its weed management schedule in response to warmer and wetter winters and has continued its new green maintenance programme to encourage more biodiversity in the City’s parks and open spaces – both elements delivered by LSSL staff.
A number of factors have caused the Council to rethink the out-sourced model, such as upcoming national legislation on food recycling rates and the Council’s decision to invest in the introduction of a new Neighbourhood model.
Council Leader, Councillor Liam Robinson said:
“This recommendation is a clear example of Liverpool City Council listening to residents about what issues they most want to see sorted, and looking at ways to continually evolve and improve.
“Insourcing is not a decision we have taken lightly, but there is clear evidence that having all of our environmental services under one roof can create positive benefits and outcomes for the City’s residents.
“I want to be crystal clear that this is no reflection on the staff at LSSL, who have consistently delivered tremendous work.
“This move is about the Council prioritising and putting in place the right conditions to drive innovation and efficiency across our services, bringing direct benefits to the people of Liverpool who depend on them.”
The Council established a joint working group between LSSL, which employs more than 600 staff, and Council managers to establish a way forward, and together found that an insourcing arrangement would also enable stronger enforcement against environmental crime and anti-social behaviour.
The transfer of LSSL Staff, which will involve consultation with all stakeholders, will take place over the next year and is due to be completed by 31st October 2025.
WASTE FACT: Liverpool’s recycling rate is the second lowest in the country. Just 17.9% of household waste was re-used, composted, or recycled in 2022/23. This results in both high costs for disposal, and high levels of carbon emissions.
Work on a new recycling and waste strategy is currently taking place, to establish key improvement targets and to identify operational service improvements, resident awareness/education campaigns, and posts required to deliver the change.
It is anticipated this new strategy will be presented to Cabinet in early 2025.