Ward 56

Waste Bin Replacement & Waste Management in Ward 56

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Find information about waste bin replacements, refuse services, and keeping Ward 56 clean. Learn how to report stolen or damaged bins, track progress across suburbs, and access official City of Tshwane resources for waste management support.
Rubbish Collection

The Problem

Urban neighbourhoods across South Africa depend on reliable municipal waste services. In metropolitan areas like Tshwane, most households rely on the City’s refuse collection system to keep streets clean and prevent environmental health risks.

Statistics South Africa shows that in Tshwane, 79,6% of households receive refuse removal on a weekly basis, while a further 18,4% rely on communal collection points (9.1%) or their own refuse dumps (9.3%). (Figure 12.2, page 48 –  General Household Survey
2024) This means the vast majority of residents depend directly on municipal waste infrastructure to dispose of their household waste properly.

However, service reliability does not depend on collection alone. It also depends on households having access to functional refuse bins. When bins are stolen, damaged or unavailable, waste often accumulates, leading to littering and illegal dumping.

This challenge is reflected in national data, where 28,5% of households in Tshwane report experiencing problems with waste and litter in their communities. (Figure 13.2, page 50-  General Household Survey 2024).

What Residents Are Experiencing

One of the most common challenges is household bins being stolen or mistakenly taken on refuse collection days. In other cases, ageing bins crack or break, making them unusable for safe waste storage.

When households are left without bins, waste often accumulates and litter spreads into streets and pavements. 

Progress In Ward 56

An active ward-wide initiative is underway to restore reliable waste disposal services for residents.

More than 350 bin replacement requests have already been processed. To manage demand effectively, deliveries are being rolled out geographically to ensure fair distribution of resources.

Bailey’s Muckleneuk is nearing completion of all logged requests, while Nieuw Muckleneuk is approximately a quarter through its scheduled deliveries. Remaining suburbs will be attended to in the coming weeks.

In addition, public environment cleanliness has been strengthened through the installation of 16 new waste bins at key locations in and around public parks.

How to Report Bin Issues in Ward 56

If Your Bin Is Stolen, Damaged or Missing

Reliable waste services depend on accurate reporting. If your refuse bin has been stolen, damaged, or has not yet been replaced, residents of Ward 56 should report the issue through official City channels so it can be logged and scheduled for attention.

Reporting correctly ensures your request becomes part of the municipal service system and helps avoid unnecessary delays.

Report Stolen Bins and submit form
(Recommended for Ward 56 Residents)

If your bin was stolen or damaged, you must submit an affidavit together with your application.

Why Waste Management Requires Long-Term Planning

Waste management is part of a broader environmental and urban planning challenge faced by cities across South Africa.

As metropolitan areas grow, the volume of household waste increases, placing pressure on municipal infrastructure, landfill capacity and collection services. Even where regular refuse removal takes place, communities may still experience littering, illegal dumping and environmental degradation if supporting systems such as bin availability, public disposal points and community cooperation are inconsistent.

Local challenges such as stolen bins, damaged containers and uneven service delivery are often symptoms of these wider pressures. Addressing waste management therefore requires both immediate service responses and longer-term planning that improves infrastructure, strengthens municipal capacity and encourages responsible community behaviour.

Understanding the broader national picture helps place local initiatives into context. It shows that maintaining clean neighbourhoods is not just a ward-level concern, but part of a countrywide effort to improve environmental health, urban management and quality of life.

Waste & Litter Are Increasingly Affecting Communities

Waste management challenges are not isolated to one suburb or municipality. National data shows that refuse removal and littering are becoming increasingly common concerns for households

As reported by Statistics South Africa in their General Household Survey 2024 (Figure 13.1 – Page 49):

Percentage (%) distribution of households who experience specific kinds of environmental problems, 2003–2024

“Figure 13.1 reveals that waste removal problems and littering (40,5%), and land degradation and soil erosion (36,8%), were the two environmental problems that concerned the highest percentage of households in 2024. The proportion of households that felt that there were problems with littering and waste removal in their areas increased notably since 2009.”
— Statistics South Africa, General Household Survey 2024

This confirms that maintaining clean neighbourhoods is a growing national priority, reinforcing the importance of local waste management initiatives in Ward 56.

Help Improve This Issue Report

This page outlines an issue affecting residents in Ward 56. Community input can help uncover important details that assist the councillor and municipal departments in resolving the problem.

If you have seen this issue yourself, you may know useful information such as the exact location, how long it has been happening, or how often it occurs.

If you have additional information about this issue, please use the “Send Us an Update” form (on the right side) to share what you have observed. Your input helps strengthen the case when engaging with the municipality.

Send Us An Update