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The West London Waste Authority is the statutory body responsible for waste disposal in the London boroughs of Brent, Ealing, Harrow, Hillingdon, Hounslow and Richmond upon Thames. The authority was formed in 1986, taking over functions previously held by the Greater London Council , and is overseen by an elected councillor from each of the ...
The ODPM proposed in 2006, as part of other transfers of powers to the Greater London Authority, to give it a waste function.The Mayor of London has made repeated attempts to bring the different waste authorities together, to form a single waste authority in London similar to the Greater Manchester Waste Disposal Authority which deals with waste from all households in Greater Manchester.
WDAs are in charge of the use of funds from Council Tax to facilitate the disposal of municipal waste. WDAs must manage waste which is collected by local councils. In the case of unitary authorities waste disposal authorities are the same as the waste collection authority. WDAs are responsible for developing and implementing plans to deal with ...
A waste collection authority (WCA) is a local authority in the UK charged with the collection of municipal waste.There are 376 WCAs in England and Wales who are responsible for collecting waste from nearly 22 million homes and some businesses. [1]
Southern Waste Management Partnership; W. ... West London Waste Authority This page was last edited on 6 November 2018, at 08:05 (UTC). ...
North London Waste Authority Agency overview Formed 1 April 1986 Preceding agency Greater London Council Jurisdiction London boroughs of Barnet, Camden, Enfield, Hackney, Haringey, Islington, Waltham Forest Headquarters 1b Berol House, 25 Ashley Road, Tottenham Hale N17 9LJ Agency executive Councillor Clyde Loakes (Lab, Chair The North London Waste Authority (NLWA) is a waste disposal ...
The waste authority was established on 1 April 1986 as a joint arrangement under part II of the Local Government Act 1985. It replaced the Greater London Council in part of northeast London. The establishment of joint committees for this purpose was voluntary. The boroughs could have become individual waste disposal authorities.
Out of all of the waste that was from household, commercial and industrial waste, approximately 57% [5] of the waste was distributed to waste management sites. In addition some waste from sewage sludge, mining waste, and quarrying waste are moved to landfill sites. Landfill has been the most efficient way of disposal in the UK, as of in 1994 ...