BBC News, West Midlands

The Vice Primer Minister, Angela Rayner, urged Bin workers in Birmingham to accept a new agreement to end the dispute, which caused an angry response of the Chief of the Unite Union.
Rayner said that a “significantly improved” sacrifice had been made and that the City Council “had moved significantly to meet the demands of the workers so that we can see the end of this dispute.”
However, UNITE General Secretary Sharon Graham said the agreement represented “a partial agreement on salary protection for some” and that surprising BIN workers were “in the driving seat around what they want to accept.”
Total attacks in Birmingham extend on March 11 and have seen lots of garbage bags in many streets.
At the end of last month, the Council declared an important incident, citing approximately 17,000 tons of garbage throughout the city during the first four weeks of the strike.
There are also legs of legs in the House of Commons to invent the army to cleaning, amid reports of an increase in rats and groups on public health.

The dispute It focuses on the loss of a health and safety role.
Unite said it would affect about 150 employees and would mean a cut of up to £ 8,000 a year for some, and the loss of salary progression for the sinks of others.
However, the Birmingham City Council said it did not exist in other authorities and has played both the number of affected personnel and the sum of money involved.
Despite several rounds of negotiations, the two parties that seem may not also agree on the fundamental details.
The government has largely supported the local authority worked on Unite, which Until the general electoral campaign of last year He was one of the main party donors.
In a visit to a recycling center in Birmingham on Thursday, Rayner urged workers to accept the last agreement on the table.
She said she wanted to see “a fair resolution to this” and added: “He would urge Unite to suspend the action and accept the improved agreement.
“This dispute is causing misery and interruption to residents and the request for orders must be addressed rapidly to address public health risks.”

His direct attraction to the workers was with an angry response from Graham.
The Unite leader said: “While it is useful that the government has finally noticed after the week that they have a role in this dispute, constant attacks and information sessions against the thesis of low -payment garbage workers is frankly a misfortune.”
She said the new agreement “still leaves these workers worried about how they will pay their mortgages and rental payments in a few months.”
Mrs. Graham said the members would vote in another vote, which would close at the end of Monday and that their union continued to support them “100%.”
Rayner is not the only member of the Labor Government involved.
A day after the visit of last week by the local government minister, Jim McMahon, the officers changed their approach to monitor a picket line in the Tyseley deposit.
Unite members had previously been effective to delay Bin Lorries of being deployed, but as of April 4 they were told that their actions could be equivalent to the crimes of public orders.
Speaking on Thursday, McMahon said that 120 wagons had completed their rounds in the day, compared to approximately 20 one week.
The Lichfield district council is also helping to clear the stacked garbage in the streets.