The Malta Independent 14 May 2024, Tuesday
View E-Paper

PA will give priority to direct action of illegal dumping of construction waste

Julian Bonnici Thursday, 12 July 2018, 08:53 Last update: about 7 years ago

The Planning Authority will be giving priority to direct action where illegal dumping of construction waste is the cause of environmental damage, a spokesperson has told The Malta Independent.

The PA was contacted by the newsroom after photos emerged on social media of suspected dumping of construction waste in the Taz-Zwejt area in San Gwann. The spokesperson clarified that the site is covered by a licence for an old batching plant which includes the recycling of construction material, however, the authority is carrying out further investigations to determine whether the licence conditions are being respected.

ADVERTISEMENT

For issue related to developments which took place after 2012, then the daily fines imposed are calculated in accordance with the Daily Penalties Schedule in Legal Notice 276 of 2012 and are applied according to the category of the infringement.

These range from a minor infringement with a fine amounting to  €4 daily for the first 50 days and rising to €25 daily after a year; or for a major infringement starting from €10 daily for the first 50 days and rising to €50 daily after a year.

The PA has the right to use the Emergency Enforcement Provisions if there is an imminent danger to the environment, and the ability to remove the illegal waste and charge the contravener all related charges.

Asked whether the PA planned to increase enforcement in the dumping of such as seen with construction illegalities and the Building Regulations Office, the spokesperson said that the PA has sought to address the cause of illegal dumping, the lack of space for legal disposal of construction work.

 “The PA has taken action to open a disused quarry in Siġġiewi to provide a site where construction waste can be legally disposed of. Nonetheless, the PA is also targeting cases where illegal dumping is the cause of environmental damage and direct action on such cases have been given priority.  Dumping and illegal scrap yards are always a priority for the Authority,” he said.

The Times of Malta recently reported how skip operators had begun to warn of a potential construction waste due to the reducing number of dumping sites. The Environment Ministry said it was working with the Environment Resource Authority to assess a number of interim measures to address the situation

  • don't miss