
BBC News, in Birmingham

The garbage mountains are breaking the streets of the second largest city in the UK and ending a conflict that has been going on for weeks.
Wherever you stand on the argument of the Birmingham Birmingham strike, the reality will remain the same.
Almost every residential area is in trouble due to spilled baskets. The mice and other insects take over the streets and exploit the strike by throwing garbage in open places by throwing garbage.
More than a million people were affected. Some say the fate of a small number of waste collecters will be randomed. Others accuse the municipal council of kidnapping money from basic workers for their financial mismanagement.
“The flights are completely shocked,” said Dan O’Brien, who lives in the city center. “That’s such a terrible situation.
The 27-year-old said the dead mice that were cut in cars were common and said they had seen four in the morning.

Javid Haider, from Spark Hill, told me that he had seen a mouse around the basket bag and believed that he had become a “healthy health risk.
He added that there is a problem with flies.
“There are almost people coming out of their cars, throwing them away and leaving,” he said.
Student Milan Karki, who is originally from Nepal, but now lives in Balsal Hess, said he was afraid the current situation would cause health problems.
“Where people live, they must be clean,” he said.
Their experiences are not special and the BBC has heard from dozens of people who have similar stories.
Their message is often the same: things cannot continue like this.

More than 400 baskets who are members of the United Union have been attacked and killed since the beginning of the year.
The disagreement was over the plan of the Birmingham town council to reduce some of the employees and reduce their salaries as part of the extensive measures to increase the finances of the troubled regime.
That is, the neighborhoods go for several weeks without accumulation, sometimes 6FT bin Bag Stacks and “Burder in the size of cats” rush.
William Tims, owner of WJ Pest Solutions, he told the BBC He had 75% of the relationship increased.
“Musch in the front and back gardens and access to the effects because they leave the baskets, they receive,” he said.

A strong scent is now available in some areas because spring signs and temperatures begin to rise.
But despite the demands of the population, a compromise will be seen that a long way, with the last round of negotiations on Friday, ends without an agreement.
That is, the conflict does not end, which can prolong to the summer for a long time.
riot scenes
The city was here before.
In 2017 and 2019, there was a large rank between garbage workers and local authorities.
In both occasions, the lost collection and garbage have been spread on the streets of the city.
But some people told the BBC the current situation is so bad that they have seen it so far.
And this time, it seems that there is very little goodwill between the two sides.

On Friday, March 14, Ugly scenes in the Atlantic Dead of the Council in Tyceliin the southeast of the city.
A BBC reporter at the scene said five police vehicles and a police helicopter had been sent back after reports of prevention of remnants.
Interesting workers on the demonstration line insisted that they only believe that they would leave if they had safety concerns.

A few days earlier, there were different claims about being a worker being beaten by something.
Labor Council chairman John Cotton has condemned “violence on the demonstrations lines.
“People have the right to go to work without fear of intimidation, but the union accused the local authorities of trying to “post” the behavior of garbage workers.
Elsewhere in the city, there was a view that looks like Binmageddon when a mobile phone collection service got down into the turmoil After being disappointed by people in throwing their garbage.
A garbage truck from Mosselle traveled to a truck from Mosselle because he tried to travel along the Anderston Park road in Mosesly, a member of the local council was concerned about the safety of the police.
An officer at the scene told the BBC it was a waste of sources but said he understood people’s anger because they had to live in the area.
BBC coverage about The Birmingham Bin Strikes:
Liberal Democrat member Ezy Noles spoke to the BBC after the service was canceled two hours before the date.
“People went to the carts to put the garbage into themselves, which you should not do,” he said.
“Someone had to hurt.
At the weekend, special security was deployed in another collection service.

It is not only residents who express their concern about the effects of garbage and harmful powers on their health.
A statement issued by the West Mindland police said the suspension of waste collection was “a threat to public health and safety in society” and an issue for all public agencies, including police.
The language was reacted by a local labor MP Prit Gil, who said he was afraid of “public health results,” while Tori MP Wendy Morton said “blind blind mouses” could invade the near-cines.
Conservative leader Kimi Banouch, meanwhile, puts fingers on the Labor Council and uses the situation to attack the government before the local elections.
But a warning that may have been less interesting is the warning issued by the West Midlands Fire Service.
“There has been a “small increase” in the garbage fires in recent weeks, and fears that a huge fire outside a person’s home could have “surrounding” consequences.
“Our biggest concern in this course is the place where we see garbage gatherings outside the property of anyone,” he said.
crisis for crisis
The second city of Britain, run by the largest domestic power in Europe, has a long history as an industrial and economic force.
But in the past few years, Birmingham from a crisis to crisis to crisis, and the financial pain that has been evidenced from a long time They are in the heart of this conflict.
As part of the big savings, it wants to remove the role of recycling and collection officers (WRCO) waste, something that claims to be united is safe and costs £8,000 annually to influential staff.
The council counts the union statistics and claimed that only 17 employees would lose the maximum amount of about 6,000 pounds.
The local authorities insist that 80 percent of the labor force has already received alternative offers, including the promotion of drivers, voluntary excesses or transfers to street cleaning teams – only 41 times are not yet agreed upon.
Any way you cut the numbers, a solution does not get much out of his hand.