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Recycling boss prosecuted for dumping more than 2,000 tonnes of rubbish at illegal site

Environment Agency said there were signs of plastic being burned and rubbish being blown around in the wind

Rubbish piled high at at Fen Lane in Long Bennington

A director at a recycling company has pleaded guilty to leaving more than 2,000 tonnes of waste piled up without being properly dealt with.

The Environment Agency said Samual Hussan, (61) of Bevercotes Close, Newark, wasn’t adequately separating waste, was allowing rubbish to be blown around in the wind, and allowed contaminated pools of water to accumulate.

Hussan is the director of Sammy Recycling Limited which, the agency said, ran the site at Fen Lane in Long Bennington on the Nottinghamshire-Lincolnshire border. The agency said it was not the first time he had failed to properly manage a site.

It said officers visited Fen Lane following complaints and found plastic waste being blown around and no fences to stop it.

It said he was warned about their concerns but a month later officers returned to find some of the waste not being separated properly, in breach of the rules for the site.

It said when Sammy Recycling Ltd left Fen Lane in early 2019 “huge” amounts of waste were left behind, creating pools of contaminated standing water.

It calculated that more than 2,000 tonnes of waste was there, including more than 1,600 tonnes of plastic and plastic shredded waste and 510 tonnes of carpet.

Although some of the waste was later sold the agency said there was evidence of attempts to burn some of the plastic – with bales of waste splitting open and broken fencing leaving the site open to possible arson attacks.