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This policy was updated 4 July 2024.
Removed the references to commercial waste and replaced with business waste.
This document outlines the overarching Enforcement Policy of the Dorset Council and is to be used in conjunction with the related Enforcement Procedures and Guidelines document.
It provides information on:
Enforcement includes any formal or informal action taken by officers aimed at ensuring that businesses or individuals comply with the law.
These actions will range from offering information, advice, issuing written warnings, fixed penalty notices (FPN’s), simple cautions and instituting legal proceedings and prosecutions.
Enforcement decisions will be fair, impartial, independent and objective and will not be influenced by issues such as ethnicity or national origin, gender, religious beliefs, political views or the sexual orientation of the suspect, victim, witness or offender.
Decisions will not be influenced by improper or undue pressure from any source.
Dorset Council enforces various waste legislation throughout the county of Dorset.
This Enforcement Policy statement sets out the general principles and approach that Dorset Council will follow when enforcing waste legislation.
It will be used in conjunction with guidance issued from the Department for the Environment and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) and other professional bodies.
The Enforcement Policy, as set out in this document, refers to offences dealing with waste that can be refuse or rubbish including domestic, commercial and industrial waste and/or litter derived from the public either individually or from organised gatherings.
It also includes abandoned vehicles, fly tipped waste, poor management of waste including poor storage of waste, illegal dumping of waste, transfer of waste to unauthorised persons or without the correct documentation and placing waste out for collection too early.
All of the above offences can lead to a detrimental effect on the quality of the local environment and how an area is perceived.
The above will be achieved primarily by providing information, advice and education. Where it is deemed that an accumulation of non-compliance has not been averted by reason with an offender, evidenced in no change in attitude or behaviour by the individual/household or the seriousness of a single offence is such, only then would enforcement of regulations be considered.
Securing compliance with statutory requirements and using enforcement powers, including prosecution is an important part of this enforcement policy.
Dorset Council will ensure that all appointed officers are competent, authorised and are trained in the use of this policy.
Dorset Council will work with the other Local Authorities, professional bodies and DEFRA to ensure coherent regulation.
The Enforcement Policy has been produced having regard to three principal documents.
The Concordat is a Code of Practice between Government and local Councils. It sets out what businesses and others being regulated can expect from the Council’s enforcement services. Dorset Council as the host authority has signed the Concordat. This means all Services provided by the Dorset Council are committed to good enforcement practices and procedures.
The code for Crown Prosecutors sets out general principles to be applied when making decisions about prosecutions. As a regulatory body Dorset Council also follows the principles of the guide when considering enforcement action.
The Regulators’ Compliance Code (the Code) is made under Legislative and Regulatory Reform Act 2006. The code sets out that Regulators must have regard to the provisions of the Code when determining general policies and principles or when setting standards or giving general guidance about the exercise of general functions. It does not apply to the work of individual inspectors.
The Legislative and Regulatory Reform (Regulatory Functions) Order 2007 (specifically part 3) sets out those regulatory functions by local authorities to which the Code applies. This Enforcement Policy has included those aspects of the Code which are relevant to our activities. The intention of Dorset Council is to help to promote an efficient and effective approach to inspection and enforcement, which improve regulatory outcomes without imposing unnecessary burdens.
The aim of Dorset Council is to, above all, deter future non-compliance and in doing so prioritise and direct the regulatory effort proportionally and effectively.
Action will be primarily focused on breaches of the law or those directly responsible for the risk and who are best placed to control it.
Dorset Council will ensure that enforcement action is proportionate to the nature and seriousness of the offence, harm to the environment and risks involved, and that the sanctions applied are meaningful.
Dorset Council will be accountable for the efficiency and effectiveness of enforcement activities.
Dorset Council will treat all service users and businesses fairly. The Dorset Council will ensure that enforcement practices are consistent. This means the adoption of a similar approach in similar circumstances to achieve similar ends. Dorset Council will have regard to national guidelines in the decision-making processes.
Dorset Council is committed to the open provision of information and advice in a format that is accessible and easily understood. Dorset Council ensure that there is always a clear distinction between those actions necessary to comply with the law, and those which we recommend as best practice but which are not compulsory.
If there is a shared enforcement role with other agencies, e.g. the Environment Agency or the Police, Dorset Council will consider co-ordinating with these agencies to minimise unnecessary overlaps or time delays and to maximise overall effectiveness.
The range of enforcement options available are set out in the following.
Including referral to another authority or agency for information or action.
A verbal warning may be used where the offender complies with the direction they have been given but are resistant to the rationale behind it.
The offender should be aware of the possible seriousness of the offence and that they have been warned as to their future conduct and that repeating the behaviour may lead to more serious consequences.
Where a verbal warning has been given the details of the offender should be recorded and stored in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998. Should an offender show any signs of violence or aggression then the verbal warning shall be confirmed by a written warning.
Written warnings can be used where:
In cases where it is deemed that the offence is continual but not persistent or a moderately high serious nature, to deal with the offender quickly and simply avoiding unnecessary appearances in criminal courts, a simple caution may be appropriate.
A caution is an admission of guilt but it is not a form of sentence, nor is it a criminal conviction – although it may be cited in court in certain circumstances. A record of the caution will be sent to the Office of Fair Trading and to other bodies that are required to be notified.
A Fixed Penalty Notice (FPN) will be issued to persons who are alleged to have committed an offence where a prosecution is not appropriate. This gives the alleged offender the opportunity of discharging any liability to conviction for any offence by payment of a FPN.
It is essential for the issuing of a FPN that the authorised officer collects adequate evidence to support any legal proceedings if the notice is returned unpaid.
A prosecution will only be undertaken for persistent non-compliance and/or of a serious nature when the evidence passes the ‘Evidential Test’ and when it is in the public interest to do so. Dorset Council will have regard to the Crown Prosecution Service Code of Practice which is available at: https://www.cps.gov.uk/publications/docs/code_2013_accessible_english.pdf
Prosecution is more likely when:
Where it is necessary to carry out a full investigation, the case will be progressed without undue delay. All investigations into alleged breaches of legislation will be conducted in compliance with statutory powers and all other relevant legislation (and relevant Codes of Practice), including the requirements of:
As part of the investigation process, persons suspected of breaching legal requirements will, wherever possible:
Before a decision to prosecute is taken, the alleged offence(s) will be:
Dorset Council will take into account the views of any victim, injured party or relevant person to establish the nature and extent of the offence including potential harm and loss and its significance in making the decision to take formal action.
The Enforcement officers will engage with the public in a number of ways including telephone calls, letters, emails, requests for consumer and business advice and inspection of business premises.
Responses will be made in accordance with Dorset Councils customer service standards guide. Residents, complainants and businesses will be informed on unresolved issues at no longer than monthly intervals.
At all times, officers will:
Before any legal action is taken there will be an opportunity to discuss the case, although if we are considering a prosecution it will be a formal interview.
Where a right of appeal against a formal action exists other than through the courts, advice on the appeal mechanism will be clearly set out in writing at the time the action was taken.
The aim of this document is to determine good practice and to demonstrate clarity and consistency in the delivery of waste management enforcement duties and powers relevant to Dorset Council, in accordance with the Dorset Council Waste Management Enforcement Policy.
Enforcement is any formal or informal action taken to prevent or rectify infringements of legislation. The enforcement options may differ where different areas of legislation are used but the principles of application should remain constant and consistent.
Enforcement includes visits, inspections, verbal and written advice or information on legal requirements and good practice, assistance with compliance, written warnings, the serving of statutory notices, issuing fixed penalty notices, prosecution, seizure and detention and injunctions. Liaison and co-operation with other enforcement authorities and organisations will also occur where appropriate.
The details contained within this document will offer guidance and assistance to officers involved in enforcement activities in Waste Enforcement.
These core functions relate to enforcement for:
Dorset Council will routinely consult and work with other agencies including the Police, Environment Agency, DVLA and the Highways Agency.
Dorset Council has key legislative powers, under the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990), Clean Neighbourhoods and Environment Act 2005 (CNEA 2005) and other legislation relating to the environment.
These offer a wide range of powers to enable Dorset Council to fulfil the duties for which it is responsible.
All enforcement action taken by Dorset Council will be regarding the relevant statutory provisions and their amendments.
The key pieces of legislation include:
A definitive act for the structure and authority of waste management and the control of emissions in England, Wales and Scotland. Part 1 sets out the regulations whereby the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs can set limits on emissions into the environment.
Part 2 deals with regulations surrounding the controlled disposal of waste, either household, industrial or commercial, on land. It also addresses the regulations surrounding transportation, treatment, carrying and storage of waste.
The revised regulations came into force on 6 April 2012. These revoke and replace the Controlled Waste Regulations 1992. The regulations classify waste as household, industrial or business waste. They enable local authorities in England and Wales to charge for the collection and disposal of waste from non-domestic properties.
The Act provides local authorities with more effective powers to tackle poor environmental quality and anti-social behaviour. In particular the Act includes sections on nuisance and abandoned vehicles, graffiti, waste, noise and dogs. Many of the provisions relate to powers not duties.
States that local authorities have a duty under the Refuse Disposal (Amenity) Act 1978 to remove any vehicle abandoned on land in the open air or land part of a highway.
The Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 (c. 12) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which greatly expands law enforcement powers in addressing anti-social behaviour. It gives powers to issue community protection notices.
These community protection notices deal with unreasonable, ongoing problems or nuisances which negatively affect the community’s quality of life by targeting the person responsible.
The Deregulation Act 2015 came into force on 15 June 2015 and involves the decriminalisation of waste receptacle offences in England under section 46 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990. Local authorities are still able to issue FPNs under section 46A of the Environment Protection Act but the deregulated civil process is lengthier and gives those in receipt of a notice greater rights of appeal.
An offence is now committed only if there has been a failure, without reasonable excuse, to comply with requirements a local authority has made; and the failure to comply:
As the act ‘decriminalises’ waste receptacle offences, it is no longer possible in England to prosecute individuals for failure to comply with the Environmental Protection Act 1990. The FPN level of charge has also been reduced from £100 to a scale of between £60 and £80, with an early payment amount of no less than £40. Unpaid FPNs are recovered summarily as civil debt.
The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (c.23) (RIP or RIPA) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, regulating the powers of public bodies to carry out surveillance and investigation, and covering the interception of communications.
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) (1984 c. 60) is an Act of Parliament which instituted a legislative framework for the powers of police officers in England and Wales to combat crime, and provided codes of practice for the exercise of those powers. http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1984/60/contents.
The Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 is a piece of statutory legislation in the United Kingdom that regulates the procedures of investigating and prosecution of criminal offences. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/criminal-procedure-and-investigations-act-code-of practice.
Enforcement actions against offences, as set out in this document, will require authorised officers to follow set procedures and protocols. This will ensure consistency in the collection of evidence and the type of enforcement actions applied. Enforcement action should only be taken if there is compelling and complete evidence of an offence having taken place.
Dorset Council will use the following range of enforcement actions.
The first contact with a person reported to the Dorset Council or believed to be causing or permitting an offence, will be by advisory letter or verbal communication.
The enforcement officer’s role will be to inform, guide and support. If written observations, suggestions or requirements are appropriate, such written guidance will clearly identify the nature of the complaint or problem and any remedial works that are required.
Any requirements made verbally or in writing will clearly identify whether they are mandatory or advisory in nature.
If the requirements are mandatory, a timescale for compliance will be specified. Informal written warnings may be issued to make clear that it will view any further breaches of legislation to be treated seriously and that these may be subject to enforcement action.
Written warnings should only be used when there is evidence that shows beyond reasonable doubt that a person has committed an offence and it is considered to be inappropriate to issue a simple caution or Fixed Penalty Notice.
A written warning should contain the following information:
The decision whether to issue a simple caution, or higher level enforcement action, will relate to the nature of the offence and the attitude of the alleged offender.
As with all types of enforcement action, the alleged offender will be required to supply the officer with their personal details. These details cannot be used to issue any other type of enforcement action for that offence; however they can be used in conjunction with future enforcement action.
Persons alleged to have committed an offence will only be issued with one simple caution and this will be kept on record for 5 years. Dorset Council can issue simple cautions (previously known as ‘Formal Cautions’) as an alternative to prosecution for less serious offences and where a person admits an offence and accepts the simple caution.
If a simple caution is offered and declined prosecution will be considered. Simple cautions must contain the following information; date, time and location of the alleged offence, personal details of the alleged offender, the nature of the offence and relevant legislation. It must be signed and dated by an authorised officer and must be issued using a formal notice (appendix 16) which also includes the signature of the offender agreeing to accept a caution.
An FPN will be issued to persons who are alleged to have committed an offence where it is considered to be the most appropriate enforcement action.
This gives the alleged offender the opportunity of discharging any liability to conviction for the offence by payment of an FPN. It is essential for the issuing of an FPN that the authorised officer collects adequate evidence to support any legal proceedings if the notice is returned unpaid.
The FPN must contain the following information; date, time and location of the alleged offence, personal details of the alleged offender, the nature of the offence and relevant legislation, and be signed and dated upon issuing by an authorised officer. The notice will clearly state that by opting to pay the fixed penalty, Dorset Council will take no legal action for the prescribed offence.
When an FPN has been issued, the alleged offender has 14 days within which to make the full payment amount, or pay a discounted amount within 7 days.
After 14 days if an FPN has not been paid, the alleged offender will be sent a reminder letter. This letter will state the terms of the penalty payment, and the payment deadline.
If it remains unpaid for a period of 14 days after the payment deadline has passed, a file will be put together and court proceedings will be issued. Unpaid penalties will be followed up by prosecutions through the courts.
In certain cases, prosecution through the courts may be the most appropriate course of action, or where other enforcement actions have had no effect. Prosecution will likely follow when:
Where prosecution through the courts is appropriate, a full case file will be prepared by the Enforcement Officer and then reviewed and signed off by the Head of Strategy, Dorset Council. Once signed off, it will be passed to the Dorset County Council Legal Department for further scrutiny and to progress for prosecution if it is within the public interest.
Evidence is key to the enforcement procedure.
The recording and storage of this evidence must be carried out in a concise and consistent manner to ensure its admissibility in Court.
Evidence collected by authorised officers will come in various forms, from various sources and, dependant on its quality, could be used in a variety of enforcement actions.
Evidence that is obtained by an authorised officer ‘in the field’ will be recorded in a timely manner in ink in a PACE notebook. All entries must be clear and precise.
Evidence must be in the form of;
Evidence gathered in relation to an offence, can come in the form of an addressed document, which may relate to the person believed to have committed the offence (e.g. when household waste is found to be fly tipped, an authorised officer will search the waste for any documentation which may relate to the person responsible).
Where an authorised officer has witnessed an offence occurring, that officer will have to produce a witness statement.
If a member of the public has witnessed an offence, in order for the evidence to be of value, they must be willing to attend court to give evidence, if that becomes necessary.
Any statement made by a witness must be signed and dated by the witness and witnessed by the authorised officer at the time of taking the statement.
Statements will be recorded on an s9 witness statement form (Appendix 1)
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) Codes of Practice require any person interviewed regarding his involvement or suspected involvement in an offence must be under caution, otherwise the evidence will be inadmissible in court.
This caution must be carried out before any questions are put to him regarding the offence. PACE interviews (Appendix 2) will only be undertaken by authorised trained officers.
No juvenile (a person aged under 18) or mentally impaired person should be interviewed without an appropriate adult being present.
As a last resort, it may be necessary to try to interview the suspect by way of correspondence.
In this way it will be possible to write to the suspect under caution asking them relevant questions and giving them a time by which to reply.
In determining the sufficiency of evidence, consideration should be given to the following factors regarding the credibility of witnesses:
Where the case depends in part on admissions or confessions, consideration should be made to their admissibility and whether interviews, statements and other evidence have been obtained in compliance with relevant legislation.
In determining the admissibility of evidence, regard should be given to the requirements of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 and the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 and associated Codes of Practice.
Paragraph 4 of the Controlled Waste (England and Wales) Regulations 2012 can be used to impose a collection charge to cover the cost of collecting side waste and contaminated waste if the authority has already served a section 46 notice in relation to this issue. Any charges under this paragraph are not intended to be penal – they simply allow the authority to cover the cost of collecting waste which falls outside their usual service.
Authorised officers have the power to require the name and address of a person who they believe has committed an offence.
To avoid serving enforcement action using false details, the authorised officer will use all reasonable methods to confirm the details supplied by an alleged offender.
The initial method of confirmation will be through the Electoral Services Officer, where personal details can be checked against the electoral roll (but this will not include juveniles). Failing to supply personal details, or giving a false name and address to an authorised officer is an offence, and carries a fine of £1,000 upon conviction.
If a person fails to provide an authorised officer with personal details, the officer will take all reasonable steps to obtain information on that person.
Where a written warning has been issued on a previous occasion, and a further offence is committed on a separate occasion, no further informal warnings will be issued.
The next course of action will be to consider the use of an FPN, simple caution or prosecution.
Where a simple caution has been issued on a previous occasion, and a further offence is committed on a separate occasion, no further cautions will be issued. In these cases, the next likely course of action would be to go to prosecution.
A person may be issued with up to three FPNs in total. If found to have infringed the law on a fourth separate occasion, no further penalty notices will be served upon that person and court proceedings will be instigated.
When a juvenile is alleged to have committed an offence the name, address, age and date of birth of the suspected offender should be obtained, together with the name and address of his or her parent or legal guardian.
For offenders aged 16 or 17 years old, an FPN can be issued using the same procedure as for adults. For offenders between 10 and 15 years old, an FPN should not normally be issued.
If on enquiry it is found that an FPN is suitable, then the notice should be issued to the offender with an appropriate adult being present.
Dorset Council has the power to take enforcement action against persons that commit a variety of environmental crimes. The following are considered to be the core offences:
Under the Refuse Disposal (Amenity) Act 1978, a person commits an offence if, without lawful authority, abandons on any land in the open air, or on any land forming part of a highway, a motor vehicle or anything that has formed part of a motor vehicle. There is no legal definition of an abandoned vehicle.
Authorised officers must use their discretion when forming decisions on abandonment using guidance issued by DEFRA.
Authorised officers will normally only be able to arrange for the removal of a vehicle from a highway or public land. Abandoned vehicles will also only be investigated if the vehicle has no tax and no MOT, and is in the open air.
However, the MOT and tax status does not apply if the vehicle is a detriment to the environment i.e. it is vandalised or damaged.
Abandoned vehicles on private land can be removed at the request of the landowner or occupier. If the vehicle is on private land we require a request for removal from the land owner and a copy of the land registry deeds, clearly showing the red curtilage line of ownership.
If found guilty of abandoning a vehicle on a highway or on land in the open air, a person can be fined up to £2,500, or a term of not exceeding three months imprisonment, or both.
In lieu of prosecution, the DWP will issue an FPN of £200, reduced to £150 if paid within the first 7 days.
The Environment Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990) makes it an offence to deposit controlled waste, or knowingly cause or knowingly permit controlled waste, to be deposited in or on any land unless a waste management licence authorising the deposit is in force and/or the defence of an offender states that they are acting under his employer’s instructions.
The powers to deal with fly tipping incidents are shared between local authorities and the Environment Agency. The national fly tipping protocol (agreed between the Environment Agency - 9 - and LGA) gives guidance on which authority should take the lead in dealing with fly tips dependant on their size, composition and location.
Local councils have the discretion to choose whether to investigate such incidents on private land, but have no obligation to clear fly-tipped waste. Dorset Council will endeavour to investigate fly tipping incidents on private land where resources permit and the severity warrants investigation.
Where there is evidence that a landowner is ‘knowingly permitting’ unlawful waste activities on their land by failing to address them,Dorset Council may serve and enforce a notice under section 59 of the Environment Protection Act 1990 requiring the occupier of the land to remove material fly-tipped and/or reduce the consequences of the deposit of that fly-tipped material, i.e. secure the site.
Under section 59, Dorset Council may remove fly-tipped material and can seek to recover the necessary costs of doing so from the occupier of the land or any person who deposited, knowingly caused or knowingly permitted the deposit of the controlled waste.
The Clean Neighbourhoods and Environment Act 2005 applies a penalty for a person found guilty of a fly tipping offence to be a fine of up to £50,000 or 12 months imprisonment if convicted in a Magistrates Court. If convicted in a Crown Court, it is an unlimited fine, or a term not exceeding 5 years imprisonment for both hazardous and non-hazardous waste offences.
In lieu of prosecution for a fly tipping offence, Dorset Council can give an alleged offender the opportunity to pay an FPN of £400, reduced to £200 if paid within the first 7 days.
For every fly tipping investigation, the following information must be recorded:
Any evidence obtained needs to be recorded and stored as per the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 (section 23(1)) Code of Practice.
Try and establish:
This information can then be used to try and identify the offenders.
Interviewing witnesses:
Interviewing offenders.
The following details of the interview must be recorded on tape or in notebook:
The importance of the caution will be explained and/or that the person being interviewed fully understands the caution.
Decide on what enforcement action will be taken (i.e. written warning, simple caution, FPN and/or prosecution). If a prosecution is taken through the court, use the Dorset Council case file template (appendix 8).
Under the Control of Waste (Dealing with Seized Property) (England and Wales) Regulations 2015, Dorset Council can seize a vehicle, trailer or mobile plant and their contents if they think it is being or will be used in the waste crimes,
Dorset Council will only seize a vehicle if they suspect it is:
The procedure as quoted in the .gov website will be followed. Local authorities: seizing vehicles for suspected waste crime
The Environment Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990) section 87 makes it illegal to drop litter. This relates to places in the open air to which the public are entitled or permitted to have access without payment, including any covered place open to the air on at least one side and to which the public has access.
The Clean Neighbourhoods and Environment Act 2005 (CNEA 2005) extends the scope of that offence so that it becomes an offence to drop litter anywhere in the open air (including rivers and lakes) regardless of ownership, except in locations where the public does not have access or the owner of the land has given permission for the dropping of litter or a legal authorisation exists to do so.
The term litter refers to any discarded item/s that leads to the defacement of the area, including food and drink containers, sweet papers, cigarette ends, chewing gum etc. The absence of a litter bin is not an excuse to drop litter.
There is usually a litter bin within a reasonable walking distance and people have the option to take it home.
If found guilty of a litter offence under this legislation, the offender can be fined up to £2,500, or a term of not exceeding three months imprisonment, or both. In lieu of prosecution for a litter offence, Dorset Council can issue an FPN of £100 reduced to £75 if paid within the first 7 days.
Procedural guide – dropping litter, pedestrians:
Littering from vehicles can be dealt with using the Littering from Vehicles outside London (Keepers: Civil Penalties) Regulations 2018.
These regulations allow a civil penalty notice to be issued to the keeper of the vehicle from which litter is thrown. This removes the need to identify precisely who threw the litter before taking enforcement action.
Under these regulations, the penalty can be levied between £50 - £150, with a default level set at £100. The civil penalty charge must be at the same level as the fixed penalty charge for littering.
Therefore, Dorset Council will issue a civil penalty charge of £100, reduced to £75 if paid within 14 days, if the civil penalty is not paid within the 28-day payment period the fine level liable will double.
Any income from these civil penalties will only be used for functions relating to litter and refuse, graffiti and flyposting, controlling and enforcing against the unauthorised distribution of free literature.
Evidence will be gathered to be able to issue a civil penalty notice. This will include:
If there is sufficient evidence and either a S9 witness statement or a report from a council employee, then the DVLA WEE system will be accessed to obtain details of the registered keeper of the vehicle.
The civil penalty notice (appendix 8a) will be issued to the registered keeper of the vehicle unless it can be proven that the vehicle was ‘kept’ by someone else at that time.
Dorset Council will take enforcement action on the basis of evidence supplied by members of the public provided that the evidence is sufficient to meet the relevant standards of proof.
If Dorset Council use evidence from a recording device (such as a CCTV camera or dash-cam in one of our own vehicles) in appeal proceedings, we will produce the recording(s) and a certificate stating the circumstances in which the record was produced must be provided (signed by a person authorised to do so by the litter authority which installed the device).
When using recording devices, Dorset Council will ensure that we are compliant with other relevant legislation, such as the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, and the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. The recording devices must be able to produce a record of the presence of a particular vehicle on the litter authority’s land, and the date and time at which the vehicle is present.
The registered keeper of the vehicle has 28 days in which to either pay the civil penalty notice or submit an appeal (i.e. a written representation) to Dorset Council.
Dorset Council will respond to written representations within 56 days of receiving them. If we reject the written representation, the registered keeper has a right to appeal to an independent adjudicator within 28 days from the day the notice of rejection is given.
The independent adjudicator is the Traffic Penalty Tribunal and they operate an online appeals system (FOAM). If it can be proved which specific individual was responsible for littering from a vehicle, then the criminal proceedings will be followed under the Environment Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990) section 87.
The Community Protection Notice is intended to deal with unreasonable, on-going problems or nuisances which negatively affect the community’s quality of life by targeting the person responsible (Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014) (section 43(1)).
The notice can direct any individual over the age of 16, business or organisation responsible to stop causing the problem and it could also require the person responsible to take reasonable steps to ensure that it does not occur again (section 43(3)).
An authorised person may issue a community protection notice to an individual aged 16 or over, or a body, if satisfied on reasonable grounds that (i) the conduct of the individual or body is having a detrimental effect, of a persistent or continuing nature, on the quality of life of those in the locality; and (ii) the conduct is unreasonable.
A community protection notice may be issued by a constable, the relevant local authority, or a person designated by the relevant local authority for the purposes of this section. A community protection notice imposes any of the following requirements on the individual or body issued with it.
a) A requirement to stop doing specified things.
b) A requirement to do specified things.
c) A requirement to take reasonable steps to achieve specified results
A person issued with a community protection notice who fails to comply with it commits an offence. Breach of any requirement in the notice, without reasonable excuse, would be a criminal offence, subject to a fixed penalty notice (which attracts a penalty of £100) (section 52) or prosecution.
On summary conviction, an individual would be liable to a level 4 fine (currently up to £2,500). An organisation such as a company is liable to a fine not exceeding £20,000.
Procedural guide:
Sections 34 and 47 of the Environment Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990) places a 'Duty of Care' on all producers of business waste to ensure all such waste is stored and disposed of in a proper and safe manner.
Waste must be passed on to an authorised person and the producer must retain a waste transfer note that sets out certain details of the waste. These waste transfer notes must be kept for two years.
Under the EPA 1990 the DWP can request to see evidence of a waste collection from a licensed waste disposal company (i.e. Waste Transfer Notes). Regulation 35 of the Waste (England and Wales) Regulations 2011 imposes requirements in relation to the retention and furnishing of the waste transfer notes.
Regulation 35(6) states that the transferor and the transferee must keep the written information, or a copy of it, for at least 2 years and produce it to an officer of the appropriate body or of a waste collection authority on demand within 7 days.
If a person is not able to produce the relevant waste disposal documents, Dorset Council will allow that person 7 days within which to produce the documentation. Failure to produce any documentation after 7 days can result in a fixed penalty fine of £300 (reduced to £180 for early payment) or prosecution where the maximum fine is unlimited.
The maximum fine for illegally dumping waste is unlimited and/or a term of imprisonment not exceeding five years. Section 34A (2) of the Environment Protection Act 1990 also places a ‘Duty of Care’ on householders to ensure they reasonable steps to check that people removing waste from their premises are authorised and licensed to do so.
As with the commercial checks, Dorset Council can request to see evidence of a waste collection from a licensed waste disposal company (i.e. Waste Transfer Notes). A breach of the household duty of care would attract an unlimited fine if convicted. Section 5 of the Control of Pollution Act 1989 states that a waste carriers licence is required if a person:
Failure to produce documentation after 7 days can result in a fixed penalty fine of £300 (reduced to £180 for early payment) or prosecution where the maximum fine is £5,000.
Information regarding enforcement cases will kept in secure electronic folders and any hard copies will be kept in a locked cabinet in a secure room. Cases that result in an enforcement action will be kept for a maximum of 5 years. Where an investigation does not result in an enforcement action, the record will be for 3 years.
PACE interview procedure
Abandoned vehicle report sheet
Abandoned vehicle letter to registered keeper
R4D letters
Appendix 12 - Bins too heavy letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Bins too heavy letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Collection point for emptying containers and sacks letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Collection point for emptying containers and sacks letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Containers left on highway between collections letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Containers left on highway between collections letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Contaminated communal recycling bin letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Contaminated communal recycling bin letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Contaminated household recycling bin letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Contaminated household recycling bin letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Non Dorset Council sacks or containers letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Non Dorset Council sacks or containers letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Side waste letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Side waste letter 2.doc
Appendix 12 - Collection charge residential.doc
Appendix 12 - Collection charge communal.doc
Appendix 12 - Blocked in communal rubbish bins letter 1.doc
Appendix 12 - Blocked in communal rubbish bins letter 2.doc
Appendix 13 - S46 written warning
Appendix 14 - S46 Notice of intent
The next expected date for review is 2024.