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West Midlands waste firm director disqualified

By 20/02/2017News

A former director of a West Midlands waste firm has been banned from running a company and fined after pleading guilty to operating an illegal waste facility.

At Wolverhampton Magistrates’ Court last week (16 February) Jaskaran Bhandal, director of Oakham Environmental Waste & Recycling Ltd, pleaded guilty to one count of operating a waste site without an authorised environmental permit and failing to remove waste from the site.

Waste deposited at the Oakham waste site. (Picture: Environment Agency)

The site in question which is based at Oak Farm, Kingswinford, and was operated as a waste transfer station. The company entered liquidation in September 2016.

Mr Bhandal was fined £1,332, ordered to pay £3,265 in costs and disqualified from being a company director for five years.

The charges were brought by the Environment Agency under Section 59(5) and 157 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 and contrary to Regulations 12(1)(a) and 38(1)(a) and 41 (1)(b) of the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2010.

Environment Agency Officers had been working with Oakham Environmental Waste & Recycling Ltd to bring the site into compliance under their environmental permit until it was revoked. This decision was upheld at an appeal made to the Planning Inspectorate, and the company was ordered to remove all the waste from the site by 2 July 2014 (see letsrecycle.com story).

Officers visited the site in November 2015 and claimed that significant amounts of new waste had been deposited at the site. The Agency said that officers made a number of enquires and determined that the waste had been deposited by Oakham Environmental Waste & Recycling Ltd, after their permit had been revoked.

Notice

Officers served a Notice to Oakham Environmental Waste & Recycling Ltd in May 2016 to remove all the illegally deposited waste by 19 November 2016. Officers visited the site on 22 November 2016 and said that some attempts had been made to remove the waste but the vast majority remained in situ.

Mr Bhandal was interviewed and admitted to knowing the site did not hold the relevant permits to carry out the work undertaken, he also accepted he was unable to comply with the notice served but this was due to financial reasons.

In mitigation, the court heard that the defendant had pleaded guilty at the first available opportunity, had co-operated with the Environment Agency during the interview and that he was sorry for the offences committed.

Speaking after the case, the Environment Agency officer in charge of the investigation said: “The successful prosecution of this case should send out a clear message that the Environment Agency is adopting a robust approach to ensuring those who flout the law are brought to justice. Despite extensive previous efforts to work with the company and seek compliance, it became apparent that prosecution remained the only option to deal with this matter appropriately.”

Mr Bhandal could not be reached for comment when contacted by letsrecycle.com.

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Source: letsrecycle.com Waste Managment