logo
Will anyone miss a council flood committee?

Will anyone miss a council flood committee?

Yahoo27-05-2025

On its first day in charge of Lincolnshire County Council Reform UK abolished one of the authority's most important and powerful committees.
The Flood and Water Management Scrutiny Committee oversaw nearly every aspect of flood defence in a county that has been devastated by flooding in recent years.
Despite cross-party pleas to save it, Reform UK's new council leader Sean Matthews said he wanted to save money and "streamline" the authority.
But will scrapping the committee make any difference to the experiences of those who live with the threat of flooding?
Forget politics for a second. Let's start with geography.
When it comes to flooding, Lincolnshire is one of the most vulnerable places in Britain; this low-lying region is criss-crossed by a complexity of rivers and drains.
The county also has more than 50 miles (80km) of coastline and nearly all of this needs defending from the North Sea.
Every drop of rainfall that falls on Lincolnshire must be managed. This means either pumping it out to sea via the river and drainage network or diverting water and storing it.
And the flood risks are far from being theoretical. In recent years Lincolnshire has been battered by a succession of powerful weather systems.
Most notably Storm Babet and Storm Henk between October 2023 and February 2024, when 900 homes were flooded and 13 river defences were seriously damaged.
According to the Met Office, this part of the country recorded its wettest ever winter on record, experiencing a month's rain in just a 24 hour period.
No one ever lost sleep over the scrapping of council committee, right?
Well, drive through this watery landscape on a rainy November morning and you might see their point.
Conservative councillor Ian Carrington, who sat on the Committee said "it was very unfortunate" that it had been scrapped.
"The committee did not just listen and scrutinise, it took steps to improve the protection that the people of Lincolnshire enjoy from the scourge of flooding", he said.
Defending Lincolnshire from flooding involves a number of public bodies as well as specialist officers from the Council.
These include The Environment Agency, which plays a leading role in protecting people and property.
There are also at least 15 Internal Drainage Boards or IDBs.
These IDBs have specialist local knowledge and operate hundreds of pumping stations, sluices and flood gates.
There are lots of moving parts in a flood defence plan.
The Flood and Water Management Scrutiny Committee was there to try to make them all work together.
It made recommendations, including calls for more government money and it would hold to account the myriad private and public bodies.
The Flood and Water Scrutiny Committee met four times a year. It involved at least 18 councillors and dozens of other specialists.
These were drawn from the council itself, from the IDBs, The Environment Agency and private companies such as Anglian Water.
Conservative councillor Ian Carrington said the recent experiences of big storms in Lincolnshire demonstrated the need for the committee: "When you have been through the appalling experiences that many of our local residents have been through, any dilution of our ability to improve the situation has to be deeply worrying." he said.
But Reform UK scrapped the committee on its first day in charge of Lincolnshire County Council.
The new administration said the change would save money and simplify the council.
Reform UK Council leader Sean Matthews, said that flooding will now sit within the Environment Committee, which already deals with issues such as waste and pollution
Mr Matthews said: "I want there to be more meetings about flooding in the county and by moving it under the umbrella of Environment we get to talk about it more." he said.
"We will work longer and harder on flooding than ever before." he added.
Labour group leader Councillor Karen Lee described the change as "Reckless, foolhardy and wrong".
As the climate changes, as rain events become more frequent and more severe, it is clear that properties in Lincolnshire are under an increasing threat.
The immediate responses to flooding incidents are unlikely to change in the short term.
There are well-rehearsed protocols between the council, the fire service and the police.
Seasoned professionals who work hard to mitigate the worst of what nature throws at us.
But the longer-term strategies of defence, response and recovery will also need to function effectively; what we learn from flood events, whom we hold to account and where we spend the money to improve protection for communities.
All this against a backdrop of tightening budgets.
Even the government's Environment Secretary Emma Hardy has described the state of the UK's flood defences as being in the 'worst state on record'
Despite resounding criticism from its political rivals Reform UK is arguing that its "simplified" approach will better serve the thousands of vulnerable residents, some of whom look nervously to the skies every time the clouds darken.
Cllr Sean Matthews denied he was watering-down the council's role: "Absolutely not. We were elected on a mandate of reducing waste and simplifying the council, and this [decision] will do that."
Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.
New Reform council abolishes flood committee
Repairs 'to cost £45m' after storms hit county
'Do something for a change' - Flooded farmers
Lincolnshire County Council

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The number of homes the government built in Worcestershire last year
The number of homes the government built in Worcestershire last year

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The number of homes the government built in Worcestershire last year

NEARLY 500 homes funded by the government were built in Worcestershire in the last financial year. Figures from Homes England show 488 new homes were completed across the county between April 1, 2024 and March 31, 2025. Housing programmes delivered by Homes England - the government's housing and regeneration agency - also oversaw 487 new starts on sites in Worcestershire. So-called 'affordable homes' made up 338 of the homes started last year. This compares to 274 starts the year before. These included 42 available for social rent - all in Redditch, and two for intermediate rent - also in Redditch. 31 were for affordable home ownership schemes and the tenure is still to be confirmed for another 263 homes. Almost half of the affordable homes starts were in Wychavon (154) while just one was in Worcester. Eamonn Boylan, chief executive of Homes England, said: 'The statistics published today demonstrate the commitment and determination of the sector to build the new homes and communities the country needs. 'It also shows the importance of programmes like the Affordable Homes Programme to enable the delivery of these much-needed homes - and comes hot on the heels of the government committing a further £39 billion in funding to affordable homes over a 10 year period, giving confidence and certainty to the sector. Read more Reform UK's first council cabinet meeting lasts 20 minutes Why Worcester MP is not among Labour rebels joining benefit revolt Council workers in Unite union reject pay increase 'We'll be working closely with the government on the operationalisation of this funding over the coming months, alongside other new initiatives such as the creation of the National Housing Bank, whilst continuing to work closely with local leaders to understand local needs, and providers to ensure they have the support to meet that need.' Nationally, Homes England said there were 38,308 new houses starting on site and 36,872 new homes completed in the last financial year. This represents an increase in both starts (by five percent) and completions (by 12 percent) compared to the same period the previous year.

Councillor 'appalled and hurt' over cancer remarks
Councillor 'appalled and hurt' over cancer remarks

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Councillor 'appalled and hurt' over cancer remarks

A Labour councillor who is being treated for cancer has said she felt "appalled, hurt and upset" after a Reform councillor told a full council meeting she was unable to represent her constituents effectively. Carol Hyatt has non-Hodgkin lymphoma and due to her illness City of Wolverhampton Council has given her a dispensation to carry out her duties from home. At the meeting on Wednesday, councillor Anita Stanley said she did not feel Hyatt's arrangement was "very fair on the residents". "I'm immunocompromised, I can do everything, but I can't go out because then I'll get sepsis and could die, but I've done my very best still represent my ward," Hyatt told the BBC. Reform UK and Stanley have been contacted for comment. During a full council discussion about a proposed extension of Hyatt's dispensation to work from home, Stanley stood up and said: "I do not feel it is very fair on the residents not to have a political representative being able to speak up for them for the period of effectively one whole year. "It's not fair on taxpayers." Hyatt said: "The situation is not a party political thing so why would you treat any human being like that when they're fighting cancer and going through treatment? "I'm really hurt because she hadn't bothered to find out the truth and tell it." Hyatt attends council meetings virtually due to being immunocompromised. "I can't turn up in person, I would risk getting neutrophilic septicaemia "Although I'm expecting to be in full remission there's a possibility I might still have cancer again. "The extension is usually just automatically agreed on by all the councillors because Wolverhampton is a supportive council," Hyatt said. Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram. Council leader steps aside for cancer treatment Council leader reveals cancer diagnosis on radio show Charity funds £30m cancer research centre Dignity 'flushed away' in sanitary bin ban row City of Wolverhampton Council

UK PM Starmer's authority tested as domestic struggles overshadow summit diplomacy
UK PM Starmer's authority tested as domestic struggles overshadow summit diplomacy

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

UK PM Starmer's authority tested as domestic struggles overshadow summit diplomacy

By Andrew MacAskill and Elizabeth Piper LONDON (Reuters) -British Prime Minister Keir Starmer was asked in parliament on Thursday why he had not appeared in front of lawmakers for the past two weeks. His answer was simple - he had been busy with international affairs. The question underlines Starmer's awkward position - just a year after winning one of the biggest election victories in British history, his audience abroad is much less hostile than the one at home, where his party is divided over welfare reforms. With Starmer's Labour Party lagging behind Nigel Farage's right-wing Reform UK in opinion polls and the prime minister's own popularity tumbling, more than 100 of his lawmakers are threatening the biggest parliamentary rebellion of his premiership to kill off the government's plans to reform the welfare system at a vote due next week. On a trip to the NATO summit in The Hague this week, Starmer, 62, sat alongside U.S. President Donald Trump for talks and shared hugs and handshakes with other world leaders but was noticeably tetchy when asked if the rebellion brewing at home showed a lack of political judgment on his part. "I am comfortable with reading the room and delivering the change the country needs," he said as he vowed to lead his party into the next national election, which is not due until 2029. Downing Street officials say the vote is shaping up to be the biggest test of Starmer's authority to date. Were he to suffer his first parliamentary defeat, or were the government to pull the vote or make big compromises, his leadership would be undermined. More fundamentally, the officials say the reforms to save money and encourage more people back into work are an essential part of what Starmer sees as a decade-long project to fix Britain's problems. 'VERY, VERY UPSET' Annual spending on incapacity and disability benefits already exceeds the country's defence budget and is set to top 100 billion pounds ($137 billion) by 2030, according to official forecasts, up from 65 billion pounds now. Ministers are in talks with lawmakers to offer compromises to ensure the legislation is passed next Tuesday. One key area under discussion concerns the number of people who would lose access to benefits designed to cover disability-related costs. One of Starmer's ministers, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters he thought a deal to see off the rebellion would eventually be reached. But a Labour lawmaker, who also asked not to be named, said the government's best option would be to pause the legislation and rework it, adding that he would not vote for changes that could push tens of thousands of people into poverty. "People are very, very upset at the way the government has handled this," the lawmaker said. The decision to cut payments to some of the most vulnerable in society is particularly painful for politicians in the centre-left Labour Party, which founded the state-run National Health Service and traditionally sees itself as the protector of the country's welfare state built after World War Two. Rebels may have been encouraged after the government reversed another unpopular policy - cutting payments to millions of pensioners to help them pay energy bills each winter. Starmer told parliament on Thursday he wanted the "values of fairness" to be at the heart of his reforms and attempts to reach a consensus would continue over the coming days. ($1 = 0.7277 pounds)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store