by Alex » Fri Nov 02, 2012 11:22 am
Hi Stephen,
Unfortunately the way flooding is dealth with in England and Wales is overly complicated (to say the least!), I work for Denbighshire, meaning your ground is outside 'my patch'. Also if the land is adjoined by a main river or 'central line' as they are called by the authorities it would be up to the Environment Agency more than the Local Authority who is responsible for tributaries to central lines and surface water flooding.
It's early days regarding all of this though, LFRMS's (local flood risk management strategies) aren't due for completion til 2015, and even then the full engagement of landowners might not be immediate. At present, I'm basically trying to piece together a picture of the county, getting to know who is responsible for what and where. A lot of times, it's a polite 'piss off' or 'why don't you refer to land registry' response. It's nightmare of a job, and as a small land owner myself fully understand their reluctance. Fortunately the council owns a lot of land, a few estate managers are open to discussion, and public bodies are inclined to provide information.
As for environmentally friendly flood management schemes, I'm not sure of the exact way in which local authorities could offer land owners any reasons for planting trees, creating small reservoirs, adding green roofing etc, of course there is the Glastir agro-environmental scheme, but at the heart of that is biodiversity rather than the issue of water/flood management, there might be a case in the future whereby if land after being assessed for suitability (e.g. is found to have significant run-off) there might be additional incentive for landowners through the Glastir scheme.
A lot of flood warnings out today from the Environment Agency, a few headline floods might do me favour! The ground is very saturated throughout the country at the moment, so look out!
Anyways thanks Stephen, I'll keep in touch on here.