Councils across Britain are employing environmental enforcement officers with no qualifications to police their streets by handing out fines for littering and spitting.Workers are being sent out on daily foot patrols in an attempt to catch people and issue Fixed Penalty Notices under the Environmental Protection Act 1990.They are given the power to issue on-the-spot fines of up to £500 to those spotted dropping small items such as food wrappers, chewing gum and cigarette ends.Anyone failing to pay the amount within a specified period can face legal proceedings from the council, ending up with a fine of up to £2,500 at a magistrates' court.Officers earn from £30,000 to £46,000 a year - plus an average of £3,000 in extras such as bonuses, based on 2,200 salaries submitted to jobs website Glassdoor.Among the London councils currently advertising for environmental enforcement officers is Wandsworth Council, which has a full-time position at £14.80 per hour.Southwark Council has a similar full-time role paying £15.55 an hour or £34,365 a year; while Lambeth Council is offering a job at £16.25 an hour or £35,913 a year.Local authorities tend not to require specific qualifications for the role, although some ask for basic IT skills in report writing and say a driving licence is preferred. Unwell commuter Alberto Tandoi, 46, was fined £250 in May for allegedly spitting on the grass in public in Haringey, north London, on his way to work – despite insisting he was coughing Burcu Yesilyurt was stopped by three enforcement officers in Richmond, south-west London, and fined £150 after being caught pouring the remnants of her coffee into a drain last OctoberPeter Murray was issued with a £200 fine by an enforcement officer in Poole, Dorset, when he dropped a teabag from his McDonald's cup on the ground, earlier this month Others ask for strong communication skills and reliability as well as the ability to work independently and be 'comfortable working outdoors in all weather conditions'.The worker will sometimes have to prepare and submit relevant cases for trial and assist legal services in presenting cases to court and attending as a witness.They have the legal authority to require the full name and address of anyone they propose to fine under Section 88 (8A–8C) of the Environmental Protection Act.It is a separate criminal offence to refuse to give one of the officers your personal details under Section 8(A) of the act - with a maximum penalty of £1,000 possible.A police officer can arrest anyone who is stopped by an environmental enforcement officer and does not give them their name and address - or provides false details. Councils across the UK issued around 200,000 littering fines last year - bringing in about £48million in revenue, according to the campaign group Clean Up Britain.Responses to Freedom of Information requests sent to all 382 UK councils by the organisation found local authorities using private companies average 1,441 littering fines per year, while the figure was 117 for those relying solely on in-house teams.Councils using both approaches averaged nearly 3,800, while the average fine levied across all councils was £192. Labour-controlled councils issued 77 per cent of all fines, and the ten councils that issued the most fines were all controlled by the party.The number of councils employing private companies to issue fines for littering has been growing, with the latest total given as 76 in a 2023 report - up ten on 2022, according to FOI data collated by civil liberties campaign group the Manifesto Club. Roy Marsh, 86, was fined £250 for spitting out a leaf that blew into his mouth in Skegness Harrow Council sacked two enforcement officers filmed threatening and abusing a man
How environmental officers with no qualifications are policing streets
Workers are being sent out by councils on daily foot patrols in an attempt to catch people and issue Fixed Penalty Notices under the Environmental Protection Act 1990.








