A swelling army of enormous rats fattening themselves on a growing pile of leftover refuse sounds like the story of horror movie nightmares – but it’s all too real for the people of Birmingham who say their cash-strapped Labour-run council is to blame.
Residents of the Midlands city have said ongoing bin strikes, an increase in fly-tipping and HS2 building work has sparked an invasion of pesky rats and mice, as they continue to find rodents tucked behind wheelie bins and nestling under car bonnets.
Rats plaguing the city have been described by locals as being the size of ‘small cats’ and claim that their homes are being overran by the vermin.
It’s not just homes suffering the problem with residents also saying that their cars are being gnawed at and that their overflowing bins are becoming a perfect feeding zone with one local blasting the problem as being a ’embarrassing situation for a major city’.
As part of more painful budget plans, the cash-strapped council which was declared effectively bankrupt in 2023, want to increase the ‘rat tax’, charging for pest control in the rodent-ridden city – a service which was previously free.
The £24 per call out charge has already outraged locals, as the council plan to up prices once again to £26.40.
Rebel councillor Sam Forsyth has since slammed the Labour-run council, telling BirminghamLive she had ‘no choice’ but to vote against their budget proposals as increased ‘rat tax’ would hit the city’s poorest the hardest.
And as if the situation wasn’t dire enough, more bin strikes are on the horizon with bin workers in a bitter clash with the bankrupt council over pay and working conditions from March 11.
It comes shortly after weeks of bin chaos in the city, as mountains of rubbish began to overflow on the streets and outside of homes as binmen took to the picket lines for several days in January and February.
And as the dirty vermin continue to make Birmingham their playground, locals have given insight to the skin-crawling scenes in their daily lives as they continue to frequently come face-to-face with the pests.
One frightened jet-setter was left on high-alert as she made her way through Birmingham airport, having spotted five rats in her brief walk to the lift.
Darting her gaze frantically in every direction, she: ‘I’m so scared. I’m at Birmingham airport and I can count how many rats I have seen.
‘I can’t even speak anymore. I’ve counted five rats in the station.’
Hastily pressing lift buttons in a bid to escape the vermin scurrying along the floor, she added: ‘What the hell, there is nothing good in this country man.’
In another clip from last September, two rats appear to be enjoying a spot of shopping in the city’s famed Bullring shopping centre after hours.
The brief – but hair-rising – 19-second video zooms in one rat staring directly back at the camera from behind the closed shopping centre doors, whilst another pesky accomplice casually strolls along the welcome mat.
Along with a song which comedically croons ‘Oh no’, the horrified local slowly walks away as one rat jets off back into the landmark mall.
‘Imagine how many rats are actually in the Bulling after [all] we know town is full of rats. I stopped eating in town years ago,’ the disgusted resident wrote.
Elsewhere at Birmingham International Station, one commuter joked that they had spotted ‘Ratatouille’ ‘off shift, as they followed zooming pests whilst another unsuspecting traveller was sat glued to his phone.
Mere weeks ago in February, one horrified shopper spotted a mouse – they had nicknamed Jerry – darting across the floor in Primark.
The brief ‘spot the mouse’ clip shows the rodent quickly scurrying in a blink of an eye across the front of a lift before burrowing itself behind a tall blue and white sign for the clothing store.
It comes shortly after Birmingham homeowners declared that the furry four-legged problem plaguing the city was getting ‘out of control’, laying blame on HS2 and reduced bin collections.
Residents of Drews Lane, in Washwood Heath said they were living in one of the areas worst hit by the rat plague due to nearby HS2 construction work.
‘The rats are huge,’ said Kim Blakeman. ‘They are like small cats and their tails are really chunky.
‘They are in and out of our recycling bins, and since HS2 has started across the road we’ve had more of an influx.
‘The council don’t bother litter picking our road anymore. People fly-tip, it’s a perfect nesting site and the rats come and feed in our bins.
‘We as neighbours collectively had to take our rubbish to the tip last week as the bin men won’t.
‘The litter from HS2 is blowing over the road into our gardens. They are moving so much dirt and it should be dampened down but it’s not. I refuse to clean my windows now because they keep getting dirty.
‘You can see rats jumping out of cars. I opened my bonnet last week and found a load of rat droppings inside.’
Another resident, who did not want to be named, said: ‘It’s getting grim, I see a rat pretty much daily now, they are absolutely everywhere.
‘They are eating through our cars, getting into our bins and it can’t be good for all the children around here. It’s a health hazard.
‘The fly-tipping is getting out of hand too, which doesn’t help the rat issue, it’s just an embarrassing situation for a major city.’
Louise Baker, 43, a mechanic who runs Womanic in nearby Tyseley, revealed homes weren’t the only places being overrun by rats – cars were also falling victim to vermin attacks.
‘When I started my business nearly 10 years ago we never saw problems like this,’ Ms Baker said: ‘But now I’m getting people come in with damage to their cars because of rats and it’s becoming more and more common.
‘A few weeks ago I had a lady with a two-year-old Audi who had her engine management light on. I picked it up and saw that a rat had eaten through all the wiring.’
‘And last week my parent’s neighbour was having a car collected. It had been sitting on their drive for three months.
‘When I opened the bonnet I saw the rats had taken over. They had chewed everything under the bonnet.
‘One customer even warned me to check for rats when opening their boot because they had been nesting in there.
‘They seem to be everywhere now – they will be catching the bus soon. The other day one ran over my foot.’
It comes as the council – which effectively declared itself bankrupt in September 2023 – announced a new budget, which would see savings of £149 million by slashing jobs and upping council tax by 7.49 percent.
The most recent budget was opposed by Councillor Sam Forsyth, representing Quinton, was the only Labour member in the council to defy the whip, arguing the ‘rat tax’ would impact the city’s most impoverished people.
Labour-run Birmingham City Council brought in a £24 charge for rat control visits last year, is reviewing plans to raise the charge to £26.40.
‘I thought it was an extremely bad, shortsighted idea, particularly as we are in the middle of a bin strike,’ Cllr Forsyth told BirminghamLive.
‘I didn’t come into politics to make life any harder for poor people, because I know what that is like.
‘That is what I experienced growing up. Maybe because I experienced rats around growing up, that is why this is so important to me.
‘Life is about compromise but this was one thing I couldn’t compromise on. Rats frighten people, they carry diseases, people are uncertain what to do, and it’s just not something we should be lax about.’
Whilst approving ‘brutal’ cut to services, councillors waved through inflation-busting pay rises for themselves, with council tax having increased by 17.5 per cent in the last two years.
The Labour-run authority also recently announced reduce bin collections in a bid to try and find millions in savings.
It comes after Unite union, representing bin workers in the city, said last Wednesday its employees would begin indefinite strike action across the city following a row over pay cuts last March 11.
The union’s workers had already gone on strike on certain days over the last few months.
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: ‘There is no justification for such huge pay cuts to workers’ wages.
‘Birmingham council cannot just ignore this situation and hope that it will go away.
‘It is a line in the sand for our members, who know more attacks will follow if they don’t fight back. Unite is with them 100 per cent.’
A council spokesperson said: ‘Whilst we acknowledge that industrial action is causing missed bin collections across the city we continue to ensure every household in the city receives at least one collection per week at this time.
‘If a reasonable amount of side waste is presented this will also be collected as long as it is bagged or bundled.
‘We would like to thank residents for their understanding and patience during this period of industrial action. We apologise for the inconvenience caused.
‘The council continues to treat for rats for a contributory fee, this is far less than the cost to deliver the service and that charged by some neighbouring local authorities.
‘People can also purchase and treat themselves, as supplies are readily available in shops and online.’
HS2’s Washwood Heath Depot will become the control hub for the whole HS2 network and the main maintenance and storage facility for its train fleet.
A spokesperson for HS2 previously said: ‘The health and safety of our workforce and the public is HS2’s number one priority.
‘As with all our sites, the Washwood Heath site is very well maintained by our contractor Balfour Beatty VINCI, with strict waste management processes and robust dust suppression and monitoring in place.
‘Enclosed waste skips are used for bagged waste and are emptied regularly, with weekly site inspections carried out to check waste management.
‘As part of our ongoing work to actively support the local community around the site, the team has recently cleared fly tipped rubbish and carried out regular litter picks in the local area.’
has approached HS2 for further comment
Birmingham City Council proposes to hike council tax by 9.99 per cent this year, with a further hike in 2025/26.
Budget papers detail how council services will face cuts this year and next even as bills rise for residents, as the authority seeks to plug a nine-figure hole in its finances.
Adult social care: -£76.57m
A scythe will be taken to care packages for vulnerable adults, including home care services and the council’s own care centres.
Children & families: -£115.45m
Among the services set to suffer are those supporting vulnerable children, school transport and the Birmingham Children’s Trust, which will lose £19m.
City housing: -£15.77m
Increased service charges, staff cuts and a reduction in new properties.
City operations: -£96.38m
Dimmed street lighting, huge cuts to road maintenance, fortnightly bin collections, increases to bereavement service fees and fewer cleaning staff.
Place, Prosperity and Sustainability: -£19.51m
Job cuts, the closure of council offices and an increase in planning fees.
Strategy, Equalities and Partnerships: -£5.04m
Job cuts and internal reorganisation.
Council management: -£40.91m
The end of crisis payments for food and energy bills, a clampdown on those behind on council tax bills, the addition of an automated voice system for customer services and job cuts.
Cross-cutting: -£6.21m
Other savings anticipated through overall hikes to service charges and cuts to external contracts.
Source: Birmingham City Council