b'(b)if requested by the person who controls a cesspool serving only one or more private dwellings in its area to empty the cesspool, to remove such of the contents of the cesspool as the authority considers appropriate on payment if the authority so requires of a reasonable charge. Some local authorities began introducing disposal charges for certain types of residential waste including demolition and construction waste such as soil and bricks, which became known in the media as the tip tax. DCLG responded with the Local Authorities (Prohibition of Charging Residents to Deposit Household Waste) Order 2015 (SI 2015/973) and the Local Government (Prohibition of Charges at Household Waste Recycling Centres) (England) Order 2015 (SI 2015/619) which now prevent charging for depositing waste at a household recycling centre. Under transitional provisions in the Orders, local authorities that began charging for these services immediately before the provisions came into force in April 2015 can continue to do so until 1 April 2020. Section 46 gives a waste collection authority a choice with regard to the provision of receptacles for household waste. They can: (a)determine that they be provided by the authority free of charge; (b)propose that they be provided, if the occupier agrees, by the authority on payment by him of such a single payment or such periodical payments as he agrees with the authority;(c)require the occupier to provide them if he does not enter into an) agreement under paragraph (b), above, within a specified period; or (d)require the occupier to provide them. Section 47 deals with receptacles for commercial or industrial waste which can be provided by a waste collection authority at the request of any person and upon a reasonable charge made by the authority for any receptacles supplied. Section 52 deals with payments for recycling and disposal of waste by a waste disposal authority to a waste collection authority. Section 52(1) has been amended by the Clean Neighbourhood and Environment Act 2005 to include that: (a)in the case of a waste disposal authority in England, of such amounts as may be determined in accordance with regulations made by the Secretary of State. See the Environmental Protection (Waste Recycling Payments) Regulations 2006 (SI 2006/743). Section 55 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 gives both waste disposal and waste collection authorities powers for the purposes of recycling waste. These include (for disposal authorities) to recycle waste or to use waste for the purposes of producing heating and electricity or both, or buying or otherwise acquiring waste with a view to it being recycled, or using, selling or otherwise disposing of waste, for which the authority has a duty under the Act. For collection authorities, the powers include buying or otherwise acquiring waste with a view to recycling it, and using or disposing of waste, by sale or otherwise to another person, belonging to the authority or anything produced from such waste. Contrary to popular belief, the recycling of waste materials is not a nineties phenomenon. An obscure, but nonetheless useful, statutory provision is contained in section 9 of the Agriculture 160'