This is how much Birmingham City Council makes from cigarette butt fines and dog fouling

Almost 4,500 people received Fixed Penalty Notices for dropping cigarette ends where they shouldn’t - which is in stark contrast to dog fouling
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Birmingham City Council collected around £600,000 from fines for dropped cigarette butts between May 2021 and May 2022.

A total of 4,426 Fixed Penalty Notices (FPNs) were handed out to people caught dropping cigarettes and other smoking-related materials.

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This figure makes up over 98 per cent of FPNs issued for littering during this period. A total of 4,510 FPNs were handed out, meaning just 84 came from other forms of litter.

Only one FPN was issued by Birmingham City Council between May 2021 and May 2022 relating to dog fouling.

Animal Welfare Enforcement issued a further two fines for dog fouling during this time, the penalty for which is £100.

Yes, a cigarette butt is classed as litterYes, a cigarette butt is classed as litter
Yes, a cigarette butt is classed as litter

How much does a Fixed Penalty Notice cost?

Birmingham City Council’s website states that a fixed penalty of £150 can be issued by the council to someone who is caught littering on the spot. This can include incidents of dropped chewing gum, cigarette butts, and other smoking-related materials.

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The amount will not be reduced even if the fine is paid within 14 days and the only way to appeal is to take the matter to court. Failure to pay an FPN for littering will result in legal action and could land the offender with costs of up to £2,500.

In 2017/18, the average fine issued by the Courts in Birmingham relating to littering was £344.89. Last year, local litterers hauled to court were largely handed fines of £220.

In September 2021, ten people from across the West Midlands were fined £220 on the same day at Birmingham Magistrates Court for ‘throwing down, leaving or otherwise depositing litter, namely a cigarette’.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid leaves 10 Downing Street following a cabinet meeting on March 15, 2022 in London, England (Photo: Leon Neal/Getty Images)Health Secretary Sajid Javid leaves 10 Downing Street following a cabinet meeting on March 15, 2022 in London, England (Photo: Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Health Secretary Sajid Javid leaves 10 Downing Street following a cabinet meeting on March 15, 2022 in London, England (Photo: Leon Neal/Getty Images)

Are there plans to crackdown on smoking further?

The new data comes as a plan to raise the legal smoking age to 21 and place new taxes on tobacco companies was proposed in a review commissioned by Health Secretary Sajid Javid and carried out by Javed Khan, the former chief executive of kids charity Barnardo’s. The UK has set a target to cut smokers to just 5 per cent of the population by 2030.

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