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Rutland Council struggles to recruit a flood officer while county experiences flooding from Storm Bert

By Sarah Ward - Local Democracy Reporter

25th Nov 2024 3:30 pm | Local News

(Updated: 2 Hours, 20 minutes ago)

The county has experienced repeated bouts of flooding (Photo: Nub News)
The county has experienced repeated bouts of flooding (Photo: Nub News)

Rutland County Council is struggling to recruit a flood officer, due to other authorities offering better pay. 

Over the weekend, Rutland was hit by torrential downpours and flooding affecting roads, including: the A6003 in Caldecott, A6003 at Manton Bridge, Stockerston Road in Uppingham and Stoke Road in Lyddington. 

Appointing a flood officer was one of the fourteen key recommendations from Rutland County Council's flooding evidence panel set up in January this year in the aftermath of that month's Storm Henk, with the intention of discovering what action agencies had taken and how a future flood response could be improved. 

However, cabinet member for environment, Cllr Christine Wise (Lib Dem), told the full council when they met on Thursday the authority was finding it hard to find a flooding officer to appoint. 

She said: "It is underway, the flood officer appointment, but we have struck difficulties. Unfortunately, we weren't the only area of Great Britain that had flooding, and all of those require section 19 reports. So, every consultancy in the country has been out appointing all the best flood officers at considerably more income than as a local authority we can offer. We have gone out to advertise again."  

The report of the flooding evidence panel was discussed at the meeting, with all councillors pleased about how it had been carried out and the recommendations that have come from it. 

Besides appointing a flooding officer, other recommendations include reviewing all policies that relate to flood management and emergency planning, that all parishes have their own emergency plan and that identified high risk areas have an enhanced inspection regime. 

Leader of the Conservative group Cllr Lucy Stephenson, who led the evidence panel, said the anecdotal evidence from members of the public who experienced Storm Henk had been 'at first glance' potentially alarming. 

She said: "We as a council worked together to make sure that we could find the evidence and I believe that in here [the report] there is an objective reflection on anecdotal evidence while also presenting hard facts about how things were handled, our duty in terms of handling those, and of course, ultimately, could we?  Could there be improvements? Could actions be taken to help manage flooding in the future?" 

She said all of the 14 recommendations made by the scrutiny evidence panel were achievable, adding: "There is no point putting in recommendations that there is neither funding for, not the capacity to deliver." 

Chairperson of the scrutiny committee, Cllr Ramsay Ross (Lab), said that as many other parts of the country, such as Lincolnshire, remained at greater risk of flooding damage, the government would probably prioritise that area for funding, and so it was important that the 'low cost' recommendations made by the evidence panel were adopted. 

Council leader Gale Waller (Lib Democrat) said the cabinet would come up with a way of reporting back to the full council when the full recommendations had been achieved. 

     

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