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£1,000 Fly-Tipping Fine Rescinded for Kind-Hearted Donor
26 Feb
Summary
- A mother was fined £1,000 for leaving clothes next to full charity bins.
- The fine was issued by council workers shortly after the donation.
- The £1,000 fine was eventually cancelled after an appeal.

A teacher from West Malling, Kent, was initially fined £1,000 for fly-tipping after leaving a bag of children's clothes beside full donation bins for The Salvation Army and Asda's Tickled Pink charity. The 57-year-old mother of four found herself penalized mere moments after dropping off her donations on January 26. She had successfully placed two bags into the bins but had to leave the third nearby.
Despite offering to take the bag back, council workers issued the hefty penalty, requiring payment within a fortnight. The mother appealed the fine through Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council and Kingdom Local Authority Support. After a stressful 29-day waiting period, she received confirmation that the fine had been cancelled.
Kingdom Local Authority Support confirmed that Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council decided to rescind the Fixed Penalty Notice. They noted that leaving items outside charity donation banks is classified as fly-tipping under national legislation, as charities do not collect them. However, the council apologized for the inconvenience and has instructed Kingdom to cease further enforcement in similar instances.




