Press release: Packaging and print firm fined for turning river purple with hazardous waste

The case was brought by the Environment Agency.

On 20 April 2017 the Environment Agency received reports that the River Yeo had turned purple downstream of the Pen Mill Trading Estate, Yeovil. Concerned members of the public reported discolouration up to 4 kilometres downstream of the industrial estate.

Environment Agency staff traced the source of the pollution to Ablebox Ltd, a local company manufacturing cardboard boxes and operating its own printing works at a premises in Buckland Road, Yeovil.

The next day officers returned to the premises and saw waste ink being hosed into a drain. They also found inappropriately stored containers of waste ink and spill kits already full of soiled absorbents. Dye testing confirmed the waste ink had flowed through the site’s surface water system and directly into the River Yeo via a surface water outfall.

An employee was later found to have poured up to 50 buckets of waste ink down a drain over a 2 to 3 day period. He stated he’d done so on the instruction of management because there was no room left in the waste ink storage containers. Ablebox Ltd claimed the employee had taken it upon himself to dispose of the ink without the company’s knowledge.

Magistrates heard that Wessex Water had previously detected unauthorised discharges in the sewerage system and that Ablebox Ltd had been told they were improperly disposing of waste ink through the drain and sewers on at least two occasions. The company blamed the illegal discharges on one of their employees.

Oliver Hill, for the Environment Agency, said:

Businesses must never pour any waste down surface water drains as they are often connected to nearby streams or rivers. By disposing of waste in this way you are committing a criminal offence. This prosecution serves as a timely reminder for businesses to act responsibly. Where we have evidence, we won’t hestitate to prosecute offenders.

Appearing before Yeovil magistrates, the company was fined £6,000 and ordered to pay £1,281 legal costs after pleading guilty to causing or knowingly permitting a discharge of noxious or polluting matter into a controlled watercourse contrary to section 38(1)(a) of the Environmental Permitting Regulations.

The company was also ordered to pay investigation costs of £5,566 and a victim surcharge of £170. The case was heard on 7 November 2018.

Link: Press release: Packaging and print firm fined for turning river purple with hazardous waste
Source: Environment Agency

Press release: Faith Minister calls on religious communities to bridge divides

Faith Minister, Lord Bourne today (14 November 2018) urged people and faith groups across the country to reach out to one another and build local networks to support their communities and to bridge divides and extend understanding.

The call came as the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government published a new report to mark Inter Faith Week, championing the role faith groups play in their communities and highlighting the valuable inter faith work taking place around the country.

The report, Belief in communities: bridging the divide, follows the Minister for Faith, Lord Bourne’s second national faith tour, which saw him visit places of worship around the country to better understand their role bringing people of different faiths and backgrounds together.

From Holy Island in Northumberland to Canvey Island in Essex, Lord Bourne travelled far and wide to witness the work many religious institutions do alongside other faith groups from their communities to support the most vulnerable, help make their areas safer and cleaner, and tackle social issue such as loneliness.

Minister for Faith Lord Bourne said:

Over the past year I have travelled across the country meeting many religious communities, which have established hugely impressive interfaith networks, where religious groups come together to bridge divides and raise awareness.

As we mark Inter Faith Week, there is no better time to celebrate faith groups around the country who are making a profound impact on their communities, and to encourage people of all faiths to support and lead inter faith activity in their area.

The report details how inter faith networks can encourage social mixing and play a key role in building strong, resilient communities. Reflecting on this evidence, Lord Bourne issued a call for individuals and religious institutions around the country to:

  • recognise the valuable contribution of faith and belief institutions
  • remain open to understanding those of other faiths and beliefs within your community
  • reach and establish partnerships with other organisations
  • encourage your faith institutions to join a local interfaith network
  • establish interfaith networks in those areas where they don’t already exist

Further information

Read the full report, Belief in communities: bridging the divide.

To see where Lord Bourne visited use #FaithTour2 on Twitter.

Lord Bourne visited approximately 55 places of worship/faith projects during Faith Tour 2 – see below for a full list.

Islamic

  • London – Muslim Association of Nigeria (MANUK)
  • North West – Khirza Mosque
  • North East – Razia Jamia Mosque
  • North East – Abu Bakr Mosque and Community Centre
  • West Midlands – Bahu Trust
  • West Midlands – Abrahamic Foundation
  • Luton – Ali-Hira Centre
  • Luton – Al-Hikmah School Madrasahs Bury Park site
  • Leicester – Baitul Ikram Mosque
  • Leicester – Masjid al Husayn
  • North West – Islamic High School for Girls

Multifaith

  • Manchester Multifaith Centre
  • Bristol Cathedral (Multifaith)
  • Solihull Faith Forum
  • Birmingham Council of Faiths

Hindu

  • Hindu Cultural Society of Bradford
  • Manchester – Gita Bhavan Hindu Temple
  • Luton – Hindu Mandir
  • Leicester – BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir

Jewish

  • Kent – Moses Montefiore Synagogue and Mausoleum
  • London – Bevis Marks Synagogue
  • Manchester – Jewish Museum
  • Canvey Island
  • Bristol and West Progressive
  • Progressive Synagogue Newcastle
  • Luton United Synagogue

Church of England

  • Bath Abbey

Sikh

  • Manchester – Sikh Gurdwara
  • West Mids – Sikh Council UK
  • Luton – Sikh Temple

Other Christian

  • Kent – Greek Orthodox Church and Community
  • Hull – Seventh-Day Adventist Church
  • Essex – Mountain of God, Calvary Church of God in Christ
  • Bristo l- Methodist New Room
  • Bath Moravian Church
  • Lindisfarne Priory / The Parish Church of St. Mary the Virgin/ St.Cuthbert’s Centre / St.Aidan’s Roman Catholic Church
  • West Midlands – Lozells Methodist Centre & Church
  • London – Newington Green Unitarian Church
  • London – Oasis Church and Hub (Baptist)

Krishna

  • West Midlands – Shree Krishna Temple

Faith Projects

  • Bradford – Thornbury centre
  • Bradford – Anchor Project (Near Neighbours)
  • North East – The Holy Biscuit
  • Open Door North East

Other

  • Kent – Global Generation Church
  • Manchester – Chinese Buddhist Temple
  • Kent – Shrine of St Augustine
  • Luton – Roma Church
  • Leicester – Jain Centre
  • Leicester – Bahá’í Community
  • North Lincolnshire Museum (Gypsy/Roma Roundtable)
  • Wilberforce House Museum
  • London – Green Room St Mungos
  • Kent – Global Generation Church

Office address and general enquiries

2 Marsham Street

London

SW1P 4DF

Media enquiries

Link: Press release: Faith Minister calls on religious communities to bridge divides
Source: Gov Press Releases

Press release: Independent review calls for action to tackle serious and organised waste crime

Rogue waste crime operators could be slapped with new fines if they mislabel their waste to dodge tax rules, an independent review ordered by Environment Secretary Michael Gove has recommended.

The review also concluded that compulsory electronic tracking of waste could help clamp-down on illegal movements of waste at home and abroad, and that there should be financial penalties for producers if their waste is found to be deposited illegally.

The recommendations come from a major independent review ordered in June. It looked at the government’s approach to tackling waste crime, which cost the English economy more than £600 million in 2015. The recommendations of the review will now be considered and responded to in Defra’s forthcoming Resources and Waste Strategy.

The review found that the government should give the criminals responsible greater cause to fear the consequences of their actions.

Welcoming the findings, Environment Secretary Michael Gove said:

The threat to society from waste crime is real. Criminals are running illegal waste sites as a cover for theft, human trafficking, drug running and money laundering.

It is costing our economy millions of pounds each year, and blighting our communities.

I welcome today’s review. We are committed to clamping down on these unscrupulous groups and we will set out our next steps in our forthcoming Resources and Waste Strategy.

Other recommendations include:

  • A Joint Unit for Waste Crime (JUWC) led by the Environment Agency with the Police, Crime Commissioners, HMRC and waste industry representatives working together to tackle the most serious cases; and,
  • a national database of registered waste brokers to make it harder for unscrupulous operators to do businesses.

Lizzie Noel who chaired the review said:

In this report, we set out how we can modernise the structures, capabilities and powers to manage and reduce the problem of organised waste crime now and in the future.

Our intention must be to give the criminals responsible real cause to fear the consequences of their actions. Today that is not the case.

I would like to record my thanks to my review team, my advisory board, colleagues at Defra and the Environment Agency.

Between 2011 and 2017, the Environment Agency stopped the operation of 5411 illegal waste sites.

While an average of two illegal waste sites are shut down every day, they continue to create severe problems for local communities and business, particularly in rural areas, as well as posing a risk to key national infrastructure.

Since 2014, the Environment Agency has been given an extra £60million by the government towards enforcement work to tackle waste crime. The extra investment has shown a return of about £5 for every £1 extra spent.

Sir James Bevan, Chief Executive of the Environment Agency, said:

I welcome this review. Serious waste crime is the new narcotics – it damages the environment and harms local communities.

The review rightly recognises the dedication of Environment Agency officers who work tirelessly to bring the criminals to justice. In the last year, the Environment Agency has closed down over 800 illegal waste sites and brought almost 100 successful waste crime prosecutions.

But there is still more to be done. This report represents an opportunity to ensure we have the right powers, resources and coordination to win this fight.

The review builds on recent government measures to tackle waste crime, including new powers for the Environment Agency to lock the gates to problem waste sites to prevent waste illegally building up and powers to force operators to clear all the waste at problem sites, and extending landfill tax to include material disposed of at illegal waste sites. The government also recently announced a new pilot scheme that will make available up to £10 million to the Environment Agency to work with partners to clear the worst abandoned waste sites that blight local communities.

The recommendations of the review will now inform a strategic approach to waste crime, which will be published in the government’s forthcoming Resources and Waste Strategy later this year.

Further information:

  • Serious and organised crime is the planning, coordinating and committing serious offences, whether individually, in groups and/or as part of transnational networks.
  • The review was chaired by Lizzie Noel, who was supported by an advisory panel bringing a wide range of experience in serious organised crime, security, and waste. The panel comprises Julia Mulligan, Police and Crime Commissioner for North Yorkshire, Colin Church, former Chief Executive Officer at Chartered Institution of Wastes Management, and Craig Naylor, Deputy Chief Constable in Lincolnshire Police.
  • A study by the Home Office suggests that criminals may use waste management activities such as operating illegal waste sites as a cover for crimes such as theft, human trafficking, fraud, drugs supply, firearms supply and money laundering.
  • Examples of recent prosecutions for waste crimes include arrests made earlier this year in London for fraud and money laundering offences across the country, and enforcement action taken in April 2017 after the illegal dumping of 20,000 tonnes of waste at 17 sites across the Midlands, North West and North East.
  • Householders can check if a waste carrier is an approved carrier on the Environment Agency website.
  • For further information please contact Defra press office on 020 8225 7317 or out of hours on 0345 051 8486

The ten recommendations of the report are:

  • The Joint Unit for Waste Crime (JUWC) should be established.
  • Strategic relationships between the Environment Agency and PCCs should be established.
  • The Environment Agency should be equipped with the necessary tools and powers to pursue and disrupt organised crime.
  • Waste sector legislation should be amended to allow for more effective prevention and disruption of organised crime.
  • Mandatory electronic tracking of waste, and a national database of registered brokers, should be introduced at the earliest opportunity.
  • The Environment Agency should be granted full access to relevant police databases.
  • Registration and duty of care requirements for carriers, brokers and dealers should be reformed (including in relation to hazardous waste).
  • Waste producers should be held accountable for the end destination of their waste products.
  • Plans for additional 2018-22 Environment Agency funding should be reviewed to ensure consistency with plans for a Joint Unit for Waste Crime
  • Government should reform funding for the regulation and policing of the waste sector at the earliest opportunity.

Link: Press release: Independent review calls for action to tackle serious and organised waste crime
Source: Gov Press Releases

Press release: Commission announces Class Inquiry into two connected charities

The Charity Commission has today announced a class statutory inquiry into Idaara Maarif-E-Islam (506755) and The Voice of Truth (1094754).

Idaara Maarif-E-Islam’s objects include the advancement, preservation and welfare of Islam. The Voice of Truth, which is no longer in operation, had objects to promote the benefit of the community in Birmingham and the West Midlands in particular, but not exclusively, the Shia Muslim faith.

The Commission has concerns about financial irregularities linked to Gift Aid claims involving both charities. Further concerns include inconsistencies between the income and expenditure reported in The Voice of Truth accounts for the year ending 31 March 2016, and the charity’s bank records for the same time period.

The Commission’s records show significant connections between the two charities, as substantial payments have been transferred between them, and that at least one trustee of Idaara Maarif-E-Islam has also served as a trustee of The Voice of Truth. The inquiry will therefore seek to establish if this close relationship has been in the best interest of the charities and if any resulting conflicts of interest have been adequately managed by the trustees.

The Commission is also concerned about payments made by The Voice of Truth to individuals and a company who may be connected to the charity, and will seek to establish if these payments have been made in the best interests of the charity and if any conflicts of interests have been adequately managed by the trustees.

As a result of its concerns, the Commission opened a class statutory inquiry on 26 October 2017. The inquiry is examining:

  • The administration, governance and management of the charities with specific regard to the extent to which trustees have:

    • Responsibly managed the charities’ resources and financial affairs, in particular the adequacy of the charities’ financial controls.
    • Managed any conflicts of interest or loyalty arising between Idaara Maarif-E-Islam and The Voice of Truth and individuals connected to both charities, and ensured that any transactions between the two charities have served the charities’ best interest.
    • Adequately managed risks to the charities, their property and reputation.
    • Maintained an accurate record of the identity of the trustees on the register of charities.
  • The extent to which any weaknesses in the management and administration of the charities identified by the inquiry were a result of misconduct and/or mismanagement by the trustees.

With specific regard to trustees of The Voice of Truth, the inquiry will also examine the extent to which they have:

  • Ensured that the submission of accounting and returns information comply with statutory requirements.
  • Prudently managed Gift Aid claims.
  • Adequately processed sensitive data such as the personal details of individuals collected directly by Idaara Maarif-E-Islam or received from third parties pursuant to the relevant legislation at the time.
  • Properly authorised and monitored payments to connected persons and/or companies.

And, with regards to the trustees of Idaara Maarif-E-Islam, the extent to which they have:

  • Adequately protected sensitive data such as personal details of donors pursuant to the relevant legislation at the time.

In January 2018, The Voice of Truth was removed from the register of charities after the inquiry found that it had ceased to operate.

The Commission’s investigation continues. The inquiry intends to publish a report setting out its findings and conclusions on conclusion of the inquiry. Reports of previous inquiries are available on GOV.UK.

Notes to Editors

  1. The Charity Commission is the independent regulator of charities in England and Wales. To find out more about our work see the about us page on GOV.UK.
  2. Search for charities on our check charity tool.
  3. Under section 34 of the Charities Act 2011, the Commission has a duty to remove charities from the register that no longer exist or cease to operate.
  4. Section 46 of the Charities Act 2011 gives the Commission the power to institute inquiries. The opening of an inquiry gives the commission access to a range of investigative, protective and remedial legal powers.
  5. The opening of an inquiry is not in itself a finding of wrongdoing.

Press office

Link: Press release: Commission announces Class Inquiry into two connected charities
Source: Gov Press Releases