Changes to rubbish collections and other services over Christmas and New Year

Information about how the Christmas and New Year period affects Covid services, rubbish and recycling collections, tip opening times and bus timetables.

Contents:


Covid Advice, Testing and Vaccinations

Testing, vaccinations and advice remain available on many days over the Christmas and New Year period, although hours may be reduced:


Rubbish, recycling and garden waste collections

Your usual collection day may change due to the Bank Holidays over the coming weeks.

Details are below:

Rubbish and Recycling

Usual Collection DayRevised Collection Day
Friday 24 DecemberFriday 31 December*
Monday 27 DecemberMonday 3 January*
Tuesday 28 DecemberTuesday 4 January*
Wednesday 29 DecemberWednesday 29 December
Thursday 30 DecemberThursday 30 December
Friday 31 DecemberFriday 31 December
Monday 3 JanuaryMonday 3 January

* A refuse bin along with 3 black bags will be collected on double collection days.

Recycling will be collected from the brown lidded wheeled bin, any large cardboard should be flattened and left by the side of the recycling bin. Please remove any polystyrene, sticky tape or string from the cardboard before placing out for recycling.

Garden Waste

Usual Collection DayRevised Collection Day
Monday 27 DecemberWednesday 29 December
Tuesday 28 DecemberThursday 30 December
Wednesday 29 DecemberWednesday 29 December
Thursday 30 DecemberThursday 30 December
Friday 31 DecemberFriday 31 December
Monday 3 JanuaryMonday 3 January

Christmas Wrapping Paper, Cards and Real Christmas Trees

Plain Wrapping Paper can go in your recycling bin (green bin with a brown lid) as long as you remove gift tags, sticky tape, string, bows and ribbons. Please do not include shiny metallic and laminated paper, tissue/crepe paper, paper containing glitter and gift bags. These should all go in your general waste (black bin).

Real Christmas trees can go in your garden waste bin (if they fit), are accepted at the Oadby Tip (opening times below) or can be collected: please contact the Borough Council’s Customer Services on 0116 288 8961 or csc@oadby-wigston.gov.uk between 4th January and 31st January 2022 to arrange collection.

Like wrapping paper, plain Christmas Cards can be put in your recycle bin but those with glitter, embellishments and batteries should go in your black general waste bin. Where possible, take out the battery and recycle separately at the Oadby Tip or other collection sites.


Oadby Tip Opening Times

This time of year can mean that some households have more waste / recycling than normal and the Oadby Tip is an extra option to recycle or dispose of items like batteries that are harmful to the environment. A list of items accepted at the Tip are here.

The Tip is operated by Leicestershire County Council. They have said that the Tip is closed on Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day.

Please be aware that because of this, the Tip may be busier than normal and try to time your visit for when it may be usually less busy (we find that is sometimes shortly after opening).

As the Tip is normally closed on Thursdays and Fridays, we believe that this means that the revised Christmas and New Year opening times are:

Friday 24 DecemberCLOSED
Christmas Day – Saturday 25th DecemberCLOSED
Boxing Day – Sunday 26th DecemberCLOSED
Monday 27 DecemberOPEN 9am to 4pm
Tuesday 28 DecemberOPEN 9am to 4pm
Wednesday 29 DecemberOPEN 9am to 4pm
Thursday 30 DecemberCLOSED
New Year’s Eve – Friday 31 DecemberCLOSED
New Year’s Day- Saturday 1 JanuaryCLOSED
Sunday 2 JanuaryOPEN 9am to 4pm
Monday 3 JanuaryOPEN 9am to 4pm

Bus Services over Christmas and New Year

Arriva Buses (all buses except the X7 and 40 services)

Arriva will run to the following timetables:

DateService
Christmas EveSaturday service with early finish around 7pmView full Christmas Eve and New Years Eve timetables here
Christmas DayNo service
Boxing DayNo service
Bank Holiday 27th and 28th DecemberSunday service with early finish around 7pmView full Bank Holiday services here
29th and 30th DecemberSaturday services
New Year’s EveSaturday service with early finish around 7pmView full Christmas Eve and New Years Eve timetables here
New Year’s DayNo service
2nd and 3rd January 2022Sunday service with early finish around 7pmView full Bank Holiday services here

Normal service will resume on Tuesday 4th January 2022.

https://www.arrivabus.co.uk/seasonal-bus-times/christmas-and-new-year

X7 – Leicester – Market Harborough

https://www.stagecoachbus.com/routes/midlands/x7/leicester-market-harborough/xlbx007.i

40 – Circleline

Centrebus have their changes here, which can be summarised as

Christmas Eve – Friday 24th December 2021

Current Weekday timetables

Christmas Day & Boxing Day – Saturday 25th & Sunday 26th December 2021

No service.

Monday 27th& Tuesday 28th December 2021

Sunday timetable

Wednesday 29th to Friday 31st December (New Year’s Eve) 2021

Saturday timetable

New Years Day – Saturday 1st January 2022

No Service.

Sunday 2nd & Monday 3rd January 2022

Sunday timetable.

From Tuesday 4th January 2022

Services return to their current or temporary timetables.

Conservative “Missing Millions” has led to Car park Charges

by Ian Ridley

Costs due to Covid-19, combined with years of cuts by central government, means that we’re faced with a choice between widening car park charges or the council being effectively declared bankrupt.

Update: please sign a petition the Conservative MP here to provide the money owed to Oadby and Wigston.

Bringing in more car park charges is not something I wanted to do when I was first elected 2 years ago. Car parking is not “free” in Oadby and Wigston: you need a ticket if you stay for more than 3 hours and the car parks are heavily subsidised by local tax payers, whether they drive or not.

Thanks to sound financial management, Liberal Democrat Councillors have successfully fought for decades to keep short stay car parking free in Oadby and Wigston.

In the last decade this fight has become more difficult in the face of swinging cuts by the Conservative government: In 2010, Oadby and Wigston’s budget* was £8.4 million. In 2022 it will be £6.4 million, a fall of almost a third.

Councillors and Officers have worked to make savings so the council could afford to keep the free short-stay parking. Staffing has been reduced, technology more widely used and councillor allowances frozen or cut over the last 5 years.

One thing that surprised me after being elected was to discover that the rises in council tax don’t cover the cuts to money from the Conservatives in central government. Council tax rises are “capped” by law; they can’t rise by a certain amount each year.

This is a good thing in my view: Council tax is not a “fair” tax. It is purely done on the size of your home, not how many people live there or their ability to pay. Yet by capping how much councils can raise this way, the Conservatives have ensured that we have the worst of both worlds: more and more burden on local council tax payers whilst councils are still forced to cut services.

So even with these changes, extra money had to be found. That’s why garden waste charges came in and various other fees.

Covid: the last straw and a broken Conservative promise

The pandemic led to extra costs and lost income for several council services, such as the unplanned closures of Leisure centres and pools. The Conservative Minister promised us at the start that councils should do whatever it takes to get through the pandemic but a year later, the reality is that the government is keeping nearly a third of the money due to Oadby and Wigston.

And this is what has led to the relatively sudden problem in council funding and the stark choice presented to us by officers early this year: bring in car park charging, find an alternative or they would effectively declare the Borough out of money (known as issuing a section 114 notice).

Even then councillors and staff are working on alternatives: there are various proposals to move the council offices, possibly allowing some of a new site to bring in income from office space rental and generate income by other means. But these will take two or more years to happen and the budget problem is happening now.

Finally I and other Lib Dem councillors have suggested more free short stay parking or a resident parking permit for each household but we are told that the sums just don’t add up for these ideas to work.

In contrast Conservatve councillors have backed charging and called it for to be brought in over the years.

So unless additional money can be found very soon, car park charges are likely to happen. I ask all residents concerned about this to write to the Conservative MP here, asking his government to honour the promise to fully fund the costs of Covid and reverse the year on year cuts to local councils.

The Conservatives wasted £37 billion on a track and trace system that doesn’t work and more on dodgy contracts for PPE that often failed to deliver. And yet they can’t find £200,000 owed to Oadby and Wigston that would keep our car parking free.

Please sign the petition calling on the Conservative MP here and his Government to find the “missing millions” so Oadby and Wigston can keep short-stay parking free and safeguard key services.

*revenue budget from council papers

Old Oadby Pool Site & Oadby Youth Club

Ellis Park Oadby
The plans may provide funding for new play equipment and extra trees for Ellis Park.

Photo: cc-by-sa/2.0 – © David Hallam-Jones – geograph.org.uk/p/3290083

The budget papers for February’s Oadby and Wigston Borough Council meeting contained outline proposals for a new larger community building as a replacement for the current Bowls Club pavilion at Ellis Park.

The bowling club and green will stay, with the new building serving as both a pavilion and community centre. New tennis courts are planned elsewhere in Oadby, probably at Uplands Park or Brocks Hill Park.

A new community centre would allow the current sites for the elderly buildings of the Youth Club and Walter Charles Centre to be used for expanding the Oadby Cemetery (Youth Club site) and much-needed housing (Walter Charles).

The former Oadby Pool would also be redeveloped for housing. However, there are no plans to build over Ellis Park. In fact, some of these changes may enable the Borough to fund new play equipment and more trees for Ellis Park.

The council has strict government targets for house building due to the national and local shortage of housing. If the Borough Council does not meet these targets, the government can step in and ensure the targets are met, regardless of the views of local people. We hope to include affordable housing in this plan.

There is also a potential lack of civic cemetery provision in our area. Residents tell us that this is a service that they wish the council to continue to provide locally. Using services outside the Borough may not be what families want and can incur additional costs for council tax payers.

All nine Oadby Liberal Democrat Borough Councillors live in Oadby. Both I and Councillor David Carter live within the Oadby St. Peter’s ward that we are elected to represent. Between us, we have lived for over sixty years in the town. We or our families have benefitted from using the old Oadby Pool, Youth Club and attending events at the Walter Charles Centre.

The council meeting was the first step for these proposals. Affected clubs and groups were then contacted by the council. Next, we believe that detailed proposals will go out to consultation with interested groups and residents.

When I and Councillor Carter have these details, we will ensure residents and interested parties are kept informed through social media and Focus leaflets.