Streets up and down Britain are littered with rubbish just one week into lockdown, with bin men off sick, waste collections scaled back and families unable to eat all the food they stockpiled.
Several local authorities have stopped collecting food and garden waste because so many bin men are self-isolating.
Residents are being told to put everything in the same bins, with one council even asking families to store uncollected rubbish in their garden sheds.
But with Britons still panic-buying food, drink and toilet paper, thousands of bins have been left overflowing with trash leaking out onto the streets.
Families now fear it could result in a vermin problem, as bin bags mount up outside their front doors.
And rats and seagulls have been spotted attacking piled-up bags of rubbish.
Refuse workers are under huge pressure to pick up panic buyers’ excess waste and have spoken of their fears of catching coronavirus due to a lack of protective gear.
A street in Putney, south west London, is pictured with rubbish bags leaking outside people’s homes today after residents bought more food than they could eat
This area of south west London was overflowing with excess rubbish amid the UK stockpiling craze
Another street in Putney, south west London, is pictured covered in excess rubbish amid nationwide stockpiling and waste collection cuts
Today streets across Putney, south west London, were seen with dozens of rubbish bags outside each home after residents failed to consume all the food they bought.
Wandsworth Council told MailOnline its rubbish collection has not been scaled back and the bin bags were out to be collected as usual, but more rubbish is being thrown out due to more people being at home.
Yesterday bins in nearby Shepherds Bush were spotted overflowing with unusually large amounts of rubbish.
Among councils making cut backs is Rotherham City Council, which has suspended brown bin collections for food waste for the next six weeks after revealing a third of its workforce were at home.
Local authorities in Milton Keynes and Stockport are also no longer collecting green bins for cut flowers and garden waste, with residents urged to use their own compost heaps.
All glass collections have been suspended in Stirling, while in Dorset street and dog waste bins will be emptied less often to prioritise household collections.
Meanwhile, Brighton and Hove Council left residents furious after authorities told them to dispose of their own rubbish because bin collections had been missed ‘because of coronavirus’.
In West Berkshire, council bosses have shut household recycling centres and stopped household bulky waste collection.
They have urged residents to cut down on waste if possible and store it in their garden sheds if necessary.
One bin man, from the East Midlands, told The Daily Star about his coronavirus concerns: ‘The biggest problem we’ve had is social distancing – trying to keep two metres apart.
‘When you’re a bin man you tend to sit in the wagon with three guys, so obviously you can’t have a two- metre gap.’ He also complained that a request for face masks had been rejected.
Another waste collector described the difficulty of facing mountains of extra rubbish.
‘Our problem is the public at home, online shopping and panic buying,’ he said. ‘With staff shortages and extra waste we are very stretched.’
Homeowners could be vulnerable to a number of pest-related problems if rubbish is left out, including ant infestations and a bacterial infection called Weil’s disease.
Mice in the UK have also been known to carry a new US-born virus called hantavirus that has killed at least one person in China.
People who catch the virus can suffer a fever and even internal bleeding and organ damage.
Stuart Richards, from the GMB Union who represents binmen and women across the country said: ‘The picture is changing every day, but we are seeing a significant number of our members not being able to come into work (either through shielding, self-isolation or actual sickness).
A row of bins in Shepherds Bush, west London, are pictured overflowing yesterday
Panic-buying and an increase in waste from home deliveries has also led to more waste being thrown out. Pictured: Bins overflowing in the Docklands, east London yesterday
‘However, up to the end of last week, it seemed that the majority of councils and contractors have been able to continue without massive disruption.
‘Continuing staff absences and revised working practices to try and ensure safety (smaller crews, etc) are having an impact, though, and this is likely to have a cumulative effect over time.
‘From our perspective, GMB members are doing an amazing job and continuing to deliver vital front line services.’
Mr Richards said he was not aware of any domestic waste rounds being reduced yet.