Denbighshire County Council has appointed a private company to
tackle the blight of dog fouling and littering.
XFOR aims to clean up the streets with a crack team of
enforcement staff, kitted out with video cameras to patrol hotspot areas.
* A poster, designed by a local youngster, asking people to clear up after their dogs. |
“Not only is dog fouling a health hazard, it blights the
environment in communities across the authority and now is the time to tackle
the issue robustly.
“We will be looking to engage with communities, educate people
on the need to clear up after their dogs and make it much easier for people to
report through a freephone number and social media as well as the more
traditional methods of making a complaint.”
XFOR are already having enormous success in Blaenau Gwent and
Conwy is also considering using the firm to combat the problem.
Using XFOR for this purpose will not cost Denbighshire anything
but the firm will take a percentage of what they receive from issuing fixed
penalty notices.
In the coming weeks, the council will be producing flyers,
guides, posters and postcards to be distributed through all council reception
areas, libraries, schools, veterinary surgeries, supermarkets, town and community
councils, tenants associations, leisure centres and tourist information centres.
Councillor Smith added: “We hope residents will get fully behind
this campaign and help reduce this anti-social behaviour once and for all,
ensuring Denbighshire is one of the cleanest greenest counties in Wales.”
To report problems with dog fouling, telephone the council’s
Customer Contact Centre, on 01824 706100 (Welsh language) or 01824 706101.
Did you know?
Dog faeces can contain a parasitic worm which causes an illness
called Toxocariasis in humans, which can lead to blindness.
Research shows through random soil sampling that the majority of
the parks in the UK are contaminated with toxocara eggs and that a single dog
mess contains approximately one million microscopic eggs. If every owner
treated their dog for worms and cleared up after their dog, toxocariasis would
be virtually eradicated.
Failing to pick up immediately after a dog is an offence under
the Dogs Fouling of Land Act 1990 and Clean Neighbourhoods and Environment Act
2005.
Offenders can be issued with a £75 Fixed Penalty Notice and
non-payment may be referred to the council's Legal Team for consideration of a
prosecution. If prosecuted and found guilty the maximum fine is £1,000. Those
that bag the mess but don’t bin it (i.e. they dispose of bagged faeces in a
hedge or tree) can face a fine of up to £2,500 in court for the offence of
littering.
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