Campaign reducing litter on our streets puts local personalities in the community at the heart of a new city centre clean up push
Residents, shopkeepers and business owners in Oxford Road and Oxford Street have joined forces with Manchester City Council to take action in one of the most littered areas of the city centre. 

The council, traders and residents will rally together in the Trash Talk Oxford Street anti-litter campaign which launches with a behaviour change project, My Street is Your Street, on Friday 10th June 2016.

The campaign, which has been developed by behavior change charity Hubbub will see the introduction of a ‘ballot bin’. The voting ashtray asks people to vote with their cigarette butts on questions displayed on the bin, nudging smokers to discard their butts in an ashtray, rather than on the floor.

Another feature of the campaign will be a series of large posters in shop windows and on railings, featuring local people and encouraging others to take pride in their high street, will be displayed on Oxford Road and Oxford Street – with local businesses and residents remaining closely involved as the campaign progresses.

Trash Talk has been made possible by a unique collaboration of wide ranging companies led by Hubbub, a charity which explores innovative ways to interest people in important sustainability issues. The partnership includes Manchester City Council and environmental charity Groundwork, along with local residents and shopkeepers from the Oxford Road and Oxford Street area and various sponsors.

By rallying together, the business community wants to fight against litter and to support each other.

General Manager of local restaurant Chilango Borja Monasterio says: “We all loathe litter but that’s not the only reason we want to stop this blight. Litter is bad for business but it’s really hard to stop people from doing it and quite frankly I don’t feel safe enough and don’t have the time to tell people to pick up their junk when they have just thrown it onto my doorstep.”

Recent research from Hubbub shows that people do not feel in a position to confront litter offenders – 57% said that they would be afraid to confront people who drop litter, while 45% say that they often end up clearing up other people’s litter.

Other results from the survey show that 81% of people in the north west say that seeing litter on the streets in their local area makes them feel angry and frustrated.

The Trash Talk anti-litter campaign will run from June until October 2016. This campaign is a proven anti-litter campaign which was trialed in a street in Westminster, London last year and reduced littering by 26%.

Trewin Restorick, Hubbub’s Founder and CEO, said: “The My Street is Your Street campaign will test innovative ways to prevent litter, trying new interventions for the first time in Manchester. We will introduce new ideas and best practice from around the world and we’re delighted to have brought together this unique collaboration of organisations to tackle this important issue.”

Every year, it costs Manchester City Council £7.5 million to deal with litter, fly-tipping and street cleansing, which equates to £14 per person.

Nigel Murphy, Manchester City Council’s Executive Member for Neighbourhoods said: “Littering is a very serious issue for all major cities and we dedicate considerable resources to tackling the problem. We know that city centre businesses share our desire to do even more and we’re confident that this new partnership will result in real change, using innovative ways of focusing city centre visitors’ attention on the impacts of littering.”

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