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Rutland flood report finds failing infrastructure caused some issues

By Sarah Ward - Local Democracy Reporter   8th Oct 2025

A new report has found that flooding issues in Rutland were caused in part by failing infrastructure (Image - Nub News)
A new report has found that flooding issues in Rutland were caused in part by failing infrastructure (Image - Nub News)

A report into flooding after three storms hit Rutland in quick succession has found failing infrastructure caused some issues.

Rutland County Council contracted a consultancy firm to carry out the statutory section 19 reports that must happen after significant flooding events.

Storms Babet, Henk and an unnamed storm, hit the county between mid October 2023 and early January 2024, flooding a total of 57 properties across six villages predominantly in the northwest of the county, which has a mudstone geology.

The report, which has been carried out by analysing rainfall, flooding incidents, infrastructure and emergency response, has made a number of recommendations. It found that in Whitwell, which is close to Rutland Water, collapsed pipes, broken gullies and pipework buried beneath private buildings caused the issues which led to six homes becoming flooded.

An analysis of the various flood incidents across the county over the three storms found: "Flooding was primarily the result of surface water runoff and high-water levels in local watercourses due to intense rainfall and saturated ground. Mechanisms varied by location, including overtopping of watercourses, highway flooding, and blocked drainage infrastructure."

A map showing the affected Rutland villages (Image - Nub News)

Storm Babet, which wreaked havoc in October 2023, saw the wettest three day period ever recorded in the Midlands. After a prolonged period of rain by the January storms the ground was saturated.

The report says: ". . . the rainfall figures alone do not explain the impacts observed. In January 2024 and 2025, catchments were already saturated from prolonged wet weather.

"As a result, soils, rivers and drains had almost no spare capacity, meaning that even relatively frequent rainfall events led to significant flooding. It was therefore the combination of saturated conditions and rainfall that caused the widespread impacts, rather than the rainfall totals in isolation.

"Comparable levels of catchment saturation in Rutland have only been recorded on a small number of occasions in recent decades, typically following extended periods of above-average rainfall that left soils and rivers with little available capacity."

Four of the six areas concentrated on in the report – Oakham, Barleythorpe, Langham, and Whissendine – are in the northwest of the county which has a predominantly mudstone geology.

The report produced by Arcadis Consulting says: "Mudstones generally have poor permeability so rainfall will not infiltrate into the ground effectively, which increases surface runoff. 

"Combined with the steep slopes in the west of the county, this can result in water levels in watercourses changing rapidly during periods of heavy rain. Sandstones and limestones have a higher permeability and therefore rainfall is more likely to infiltrate into the ground and reduce the risk surface water flooding and rapid changes in water levels."

A review of Oakham found the following circumstances and made the following key recommendation:

Oakham – 16 homes affected

  • Properties flooded as a result of surface water run-off, largely from rainfall to the west of the town and flowing down the natural topography to the east, causing flooding on highways and properties.
  • Key recommendation – Investigate options to reduce the flow path along Cold Overton Road.

The report has a list of 20 recommendations in total and a new strategy has also been produced by the council's flood risk officer. The report and proposed strategy will be discuss by the county's cabinet on Tuesday (October 14). 

The report says while there is no capital funding available, there is money from the revenue budget as well as external grant opportunities.

     

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Paul.m.coates

Can The General Public access this report?


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