Queues have built up outside rubbish tips as some were reopened this morning for the first time since lockdown, with pressure mounting on the government to lift restrictions.
In Manchester, household waste recycling centres reopened with social distancing measures in place to stop the spread of coronavirus, after research found fly-tipping had quadrupled in some areas of the UK during the lockdown.
Plans are also in place for other areas, with some tips in Northumberland and Yorkshire opening from Monday, and other local authorities such as Hertfordshire County Council making preparations, according to local media.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is due to reveal details next week of how the COVID-19 lockdown will be eased, allowing more people to go to work and children to return to school.
One potential plan includes people carrying out their own temperature checks at home before travelling on public transport, according to a report in The Times.
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Conservative Party donor Alexander Temerko has said the government must lift the lockdown next week for many small businesses – including restaurants and construction – and has called on Mr Johnson to rethink his Brexit timetable.
And former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith has said it is a balance between saving lives and also saving the economy – which is not "just about the money, it's about health and well-being" – while business leaders are "clamouring" to know when the lockdown will start to ease, according to the Institute of Directors.
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A sign of the start of measures lifting, albeit a very small one, is the sight of queues at tips today – although Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham has made it clear "this is not a return to normal".
Local Government Secretary Robert Jenrick has said councils should be confident to reopen tips "as soon as possible", although there are warnings that protective equipment for waste workers and proper social distancing plans must be in place.
At the waste centre in Reliance Street in Manchester, a queue of cars was already waiting by 7.30am, half an hour before it was scheduled to open.
In order to be allowed in, as part of a system to control the number of visitors, the last number on a car's registration plate had to be even, for example, 0, 2, 4 etc. It meant some drivers were turned away.
Residents also needed to show proof of address to access the sites and the centres were only accepting bagged general waste.
Mr Burnham said: "While we are reopening centres, this is not a return to normal.
"We would ask the public to limit their journeys and only travel to a household waste and recycling centre if it is absolutely essential to do so."
Mr Jenrick said reopening tips in a staged manner is "sensible" and the "right thing to do".
"The longer we delay it, the longer those queues are going to be when the waste sites reopen," he said.
Councillor David Renard, environment spokesman for the Local Government Association (LGA), said queues are "inevitable" and police will be needed to manage traffic flows.
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