KEEP BRITAIN TIDY NEWS RELEASE - Greener Communities awarded funding

East Ayrshire Council’s Greener Communities has been awarded funding to tackle the sticky issue of chewing gum on town centre streets. A grant from the Chewing Gum Task Force, administered by the environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy, will help Greener Communities clean up gum and reduce gum littering. 

Greener Communities is putting plans in place to remove the chewing gum that blights local streets after receiving a £21,500 grant to tackle the issue. The council is one of 52 across the country that have successfully applied to the Chewing Gum Task Force, now in its fourth year, for funds to clean gum off pavements and prevent it from being littered again. 

Established by Defra (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) and run by environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy, the Chewing Gum Task Force Grant Scheme is open to councils across the UK who wish to clean up gum in their local areas and invest in long-term behaviour change to prevent gum from being dropped in the first place. The Task Force is funded by major gum manufacturers including Mars Wrigley and Perfetti Van Melle, with an investment of up to £10 million spread over five years. 

Monitoring and evaluation carried out by Behaviour Change – a not-for-profit social enterprise - has shown that in areas that benefitted from the first and second year of funding, a reduced rate of gum littering of up to 80% was seen in the first two months - with reductions still being observed six months after targeted street cleansing and the installation of specially designed signage to encourage people to bin their gum. 

Estimates suggest the annual clean-up cost of chewing gum for councils in the UK is around £7 million, according to Keep Britain Tidy. In its third year the Task Force awarded 54 councils grants worth a total of £1.585 million, helping clean an estimated 500,000m2 of pavements. 

Allison Ogden-Newton OBE, Keep Britain Tidy’s chief executive, said: “Chewing gum continues to be an unsightly form of litter in our public spaces – though thankfully the scheme is leading to significant reductions. People need to remember that disposing irresponsibly of their gum causes harm to our environment as it takes years to decompose naturally – and, ultimately, costs the public purse to clean it up.” 

Councillor Jim McMahon, East Ayrshire Council’s Spokesperson for Housing, Transport and Communities said: “East Ayrshire Council welcomes the grant of £21,500 to tackle chewing gum on our streets. Greener Communities will purchase a chewing gum removal machine and will start work removing chewing gum for areas with the highest footfall like Cumnock and Kilmarnock Town Centres. Once that work is complete there will be an opportunity for community groups to access the machine too. This is going to have a really positive impact on our communities.”