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PRIVACY
Enterprise

New 'glass tax' condemned by Birmingham hospitality chiefs

Business improvement district says new charges will hit bars and restaurants

Julia Robinson, Southside BID manager(Image: Southside BID)

Hospitality chiefs in Birmingham have condemned a new so-called 'glass tax' which they say will increase the running costs of bars and restaurants.

Southside District Business Improvement District has hit out at the packaging Extended Producer Responsibility scheme which come into effect in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ on April 1.

It is said the scheme will transfer the cost of recycling glass from local authorities to producers and businesses, with estimates suggesting they could rise by between 3p to 7p per beer bottle. This could be much greater for larger wine and soft drinks bottles.

Julia Robinson, general manager of Southside District BID, which supports more than 330 businesses in Birmingham's Chinatown and Gay Village areas, has warned that the new tax will result in hospitality venues paying twice for the same service.

Ms Robinson said: "This new 'glass tax' as it stands will be grossly unfair to our hospitality venues like bars and restaurants because they already pay for their commercial waste to be collected and glass to be recycled.

"We can understand the need to tax supermarkets and off-licences to help local authorities pay for glass recycling but why should bars and restaurants have to pay twice and receive one service?

"The Government needs to quickly rethink and change this new 'glass tax' or else they will further damage an already struggling hospitality industry, leading to more closures and redundancies."