
Critics say enforcement is focused to much on minor infractions by residents rather than more serious offenders
July 16, 2026
Fly-tipping in Hounslow has continued to increase since 2021 despite the introduction of a £1,000 fine for the offence.
Hounslow Council had set itself a target both in 2021 and in 2025 to reduce fly-tipping by 25 per cent across the borough, but in 2024, a numerical target of 4,642 fly-tips was set. Since then there has been no numerical target, rather a percentage decrease target aiming to see a 25 per cent reduction.
However, fly-tipping increased by 2.3 per cent in the year up to March 2026. In 2024/25, there was a total of 23,543 reported fly-tips – way off the 4,642 target. In 2025/26, there were 24,134 incidents – an increase of 591 reports.
Hounslow Council blames the “shortfall” on “population growth, an increase in unregistered Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs), a rise in short-term tenancies with fewer long-term residents, a decline in civic pride, and improved accessibility of fly-tipping reporting mechanisms within Hounslow.”
In response to the increasing numbers, the council set up an Enforcement Team in March 2026 to undertake borough-wide enforcement activity.
Reacting to the figures, Councillor Jack Emsley, Leader of the Hounslow Conservatives, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS): “We’re a year in to Hounslow Labour’s £1,000 fine policy, and the results are in. Far from the promised 25% reduction, our borough has actually seen an increase in fly-tipping under this administration.
“Instead of catching the industrial scale fly-tippers who are blighting our communities, the current enforcement policy looks to generate revenue from residents who put envelopes in the wrong bins – no wonder it’s not working. At the next borough council, local Conservatives will be putting forward an alternative policy and forcing a vote on Labour’s failure to get a grip on fly-tipping.”
The Hounslow Conservatives are not seeking a reduction in the £1,000 fine for fly-tipping, but Cllr Emsley says there needs to be a change in the enforcement strategy. He argues that there needs to be common sense in tackling the problem by going for industrial fly-tippers, and calls for the introduction of enforcement cameras in fly-tipping hotspots to “enforce and deter”.
In the council’s corporate plan for the next four years, the council has guaranteed a 24-hour response to reported fly-tipping and offensive graffiti.
At a meeting of full council on Tuesday, July 21, the Tories will propose their motion to tackle fly-tipping “effectively”. It notes that Hounslow still has the fifth highest rate of fly-tipping in London, and says: “The current system of £1,000 FPNs is heavy-handed and has not been effective at achieving the target of a 25 per cent reduction in fly-tipping.
“The current enforcement policy has led to numerous cases of unjust enforcement actions against residents and local businesses. Action against fly-tipping should be firm, fair and effective.”
The motion calls on the council to introduce new guidelines on the enforcement contractor including “warnings instead of fines for individual first-time offenders”.
Late last year, Loretta Alvarez, a single mum and NHS mental health nurse, was fined £1,000 for leaving an envelope next to her overflowing council bins. This was during the same time that the council missed 2,000 bin collections. This was her first offence, and one she said was a genuine mistake she did not realise constituted fly-tipping.
The motion goes on to say that the Cabinet should draw up alternative policies that “shift focus away from revenue generation and towards tackling the large-scale fly-tippers who blight our borough”.
Councillor Amy Croft, Cabinet Member for Infrastructure, Enforcement and Recycling at Hounslow Council, said: “Fly-tipping remains a national issue, with fly-tipping rates up 15% across England since 2022. Early indications for this year suggest our strengthened approach is beginning to have an impact and we’re seeing a year-on-year reduction in fly-tipping, whereas London as a whole has seen an increase of 9% year on year.
“Hounslow Council taxpayers should not have to shoulder the £4 million bill of cleaning up after those who dump rubbish on our streets.
“The £1,000 penalty is part of a wider programme of action that includes joint operations with the Metropolitan Police to target illegal waste carriers and ongoing enforcement action against large-scale fly-tippers.
“We are also making it easier for residents to dispose of waste responsibly through proactive, preventative measures such as free bulky waste collection and community pop up tips, for disposal, reuse and recycling.”
Philip James Lynch - Local Democracy Reporter
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