00:00I'm Gary Hough and I live in Accrington in Lancashire. I've lived here for eight years.
00:06We've recently been plagued with pests. By that I mean seagulls, flies.
00:12This is all coming from a local landfill site that comes under Lancashire County Council's control.
00:20The site operators, Suez, basically fill in a new cell of landfill waste
00:26and the waste comes from multiple different boroughs around Lancashire.
00:30What we've started to see is, probably since October last year,
00:35was a rise in the number of seagulls that were starting to come over the houses.
00:40The volumes of gulls has just become significant. I mean, it's just incredible.
00:48If I was to say there was 2,000 to 3,000 gulls in the air at one time,
00:53especially when they're turning over the landfill site,
00:57at its peak, when you look up into the sky above our houses, you see thousands of seagulls.
01:03The best way I can describe it is if you see one of those desert films where you see a plague of locusts
01:09that just comes swooping in, it's a sight to behold, it really is.
01:13The gulls themselves are bringing in a number of different problems.
01:16I mean, the first is bird poop. It's pooping on people's cars,
01:21they're pooping on people's homes and driveways, they're pooping on washing.
01:26You can't sit out in your garden because of the poop.
01:29They're dropping food waste. We've had chicken bones.
01:32One of the residents recently put a massive slab of meat which had hit the kitchen window
01:39and it was lying in the back garden.
01:42Now, obviously, residents have got children, you've got animals,
01:46and dropping this kind of waste is pretty distressing, as you can imagine.
01:51It's affecting people in the community in a number of ways, really.
01:54The first is when the weather's good, as it has been recently,
01:57you can't have barbecues, constantly having to wash the vehicles.
02:01We're coming into school holiday season now, children playing out is affected.
02:05Some parents can't let their children out, they're worried about the impact of the gulls.
02:09They're worried about the gulls maybe coming down and starting to attack them.
02:12The children in the playgrounds with food waste, for example, or food in their hands.
02:16We have a landfill site that is being filled with attractive food waste,
02:21and for gulls, who are now nesting in the area as a result of this and breeding in huge numbers,
02:28that food waste is accessible.
02:32And it's accessible because the site operators sewage, as far as we can see,
02:37whilst they're working to try and minimise the disruption on the residents,
02:41it's what they tell us, we can visually see that in the evenings in particular,
02:47those piles of food waste aren't being covered up.
02:51The birds are just feeding on it, and it's seven days a week.
02:54We were told by sewage, or I was told by sewage,
02:57that they believe that it's because post-Covid the gulls aren't coming inland.
03:04Well, that's nonsense.
03:06It really is, because we've lived here, let's just say, eight years,
03:09but it's all through Covid we didn't see any gull activity.
03:13During Covid, or even immediately after it, it's only this last eight months
03:18that we started to see this infestation gathering momentum.
03:22So I set up a community group on Facebook to try and co-ordinate and centralise everything
03:28to get people not only aware of the situation,
03:31but to gather people's thoughts and views and videos and photographs
03:35to really give us some sort of evidence that we can go to sewage
03:39and the Environment Agency and Lancashire County Council
03:43to clearly demonstrate that this is having a massive impact.
03:46The campaign group that I set up on Facebook is called Tips Over the Edge,
03:50and within four weeks we went from two members to just over 650 and counting.
04:01Thanks for watching!
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