Skip to main content
Work with the NEU
Ministers to tighten legal checks for waste handlers after cow received licence
WASTE MISMANAGEMENT: The ten-ft-high pile of waste from Watery Lane, on the outskirts of Lichfield in Staffordshire

MINISTERS are set to introduce stricter background checks for waste carriers after critics of the current system were proved right when a cow was legally approved to dispose of household rubbish.

The Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs said laws will be laid this week to require those who handle and transport waste to prove they are qualified to do so.

Operators found mishandling waste will face up to five years in prison under the new rules, part of a wider government crackdown on rogue waste operators and criminals after a recent surge in illegal dumping and flytipping.

Currently, waste carriers only need to register their information with the Environment Agency through a basic paper-based process with limited identity and background checks: a loophole that has allowed organised criminals, rogue operators and even animals to enter the system: the BBC recently reported that a cow called Beau Vine was successfully granted a licence.

The new system, due to come into force in 2027, will require applicants to undergo identity and criminal record checks and an online competency assessment before receiving a permit.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
The River Avon at Warwick Castle, Warwickshire
Environment / 18 August 2025
18 August 2025
President Donald Trump, center, speaks with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, left, during a group photo of NATO heads of state and government at the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, Wednesday, June 25, 2025
War Economy / 8 July 2025
8 July 2025

In an address to the Communist Party’s executive at the weekend international secretary KEVAN NELSON explained why the communists’ watchwords must be Jobs not Bombs and Welfare not Warfare

ABORTION RIGHTS: Women’s rights campaigners in Westminster, London, after taking part in a march from the Royal Courts of Justice calling for the full decriminalisation of abortion, June 17 2023
Features / 23 May 2025
23 May 2025

Police guidelines suggesting home searches and digital checks for women who experience pregnancy loss under suspicion of having broken the outdated 1967 Abortion Act have sparked uproar, writes PEOPLES’ HEALTH DISPATCH