Negotiations to end a bin strike in Birmingham have once again today failed to result in an agreement.
It means residents with growing piles of rubbish outside their homes are still without a solution to the massive mess.
Bin workers began their strike on 11 March and Birmingham City Council declared a major incident on 31 March, citing public health concerns.
Workers are striking due to a long-running dispute over the role of waste recycling and the removal of the collection officer (WRCO) role, which will leave about 150 members £8,000 worse off according to the Unite union.
The council – which denies the claim – has been meeting with representatives from the union.
On Tuesday morning, its leader told Sky News it is “very keen to get a resolution to the dispute” but another day has now passed without an agreement.
A Unite spokesperson told Sky News there have been “intensive talks but no resolution tonight”.
Meanwhile, a Birmingham city councillor today resigned from Labour over cuts and the bin issues, after 40 years of membership.
Sam Forsyth, representative for the Quinton Ward, told Sky News: “I can’t stomach the fact we’re in the middle of a bin strike where this is rubbish rotting in our streets and there are rats running around.
“I’ve raised this [issue] for three years and nobody has listened. Enough is enough.”
Read more:
Why workers are striking
Rats chase clean-up staff
‘Rat’ questions council
With rats “the size of cats” living amongst the rubbish bags piling up in the streets, one resident sported a rodent costume to question councillors over the crisis.
“By what date does the council think it will have reduced the backlog, reduced the rat population and returned our streets to an acceptable state?” he asked.
“Before I answer your question, you’re lucky that Brummie the Cat is no longer in residence at the council house,” a councillor replied.