Runcorn & Widnes Weekly News

Concern grows as water levels continue to plunge

- BY OLIVER CLAY

NATURE lovers are reportedly taking matters into their own hands by moving fish and building dams in a bid to save wildlife amid fears a stretch of canal could dry up completely in the hot weather.

Water levels have plunged at the Sankey Canal at Spike Island in Widnes since May after a pump at Fiddler’s Ferry power station, that had kept it supplied, was switched off. This followed the decommissi­oning of the coal-fired plant in 2020.

Michael Heaton, 62, of Penketh, branded the situation “dire” and said pike have been found dead in the area and only two of four cygnets born on June 1 to a pair of swans at Spike Island have survived, with residents fearing the deaths are due to dwindling amounts of fresh water.

Mr Heaton said moorhens are ending up trapped in the mud.

Boats are also “marooned”, and pictures have been published on social media showing levels particular­ly low near Carter House Bridge towards Penketh, with one Facebook user branding picture of swans standing on exposed earth works “some of the saddest pictures I have seen for a while”.

There are fears animals are already suffering with worse to come as higher temperatur­es accelerate the drying of the canal bed.

Another risk, he said, is an imminent high Mersey tide expected to bring a flood of saltwater, that will spell death for freshwater wildlife.

Halton Borough Council has said it is “committed to the Sankey Canal”, but faced “no straightfo­rward solution” and had initiated tests to confirm fish were healthy enough to be moved to other watercours­es.

Mr Heaton said council workers were deployed to the area when the

“TV crews were down” but “they’ve just disappeare­d”.

He said desperate residents have taken matters into their own hands, creating dams to save water, pumping in oxygen and netting fish to deposit them in Spike Island’s square pond because of the “dire” situation.

He said: “There’s a lot of volunteers transferri­ng fish from the canal to the square pond at Spike Island.

“They’re oxygenatin­g the water with pumps and rescuing the fish.

“This is from the Sankey Canal, doing it themselves – netting them and putting them in the square pond. There’s even a lad who’s paid £200 out of his own pocket so they can get out.

“He’s sent a sample of water so they can source water from a stream somewhere near Runcorn [Mersey Gateway] bridge, and he’s paid for it out of his own pocket. The situation’s absolutely dire. Now God knows what it’s going to be like with the dry weather. Nothing’s changed.”

He continued: “People are doing their own things. They’ve built two dams, they were absolutely disgusted.”

Mr Heaton said: “It’s absolutely disgracefu­l that members of the public are having to do this when

Halton Council are responsibl­e.

“They could get stuck in the mud. It’s quite scary to be honest.”

The council has previously said the canal had been derelict on the Widnes stretch for around 40 years until being brought back into use in the early 1980s.

Sections of the canal had been filled in to the north, meaning a freshwater supply was needed, and Fiddler’s Ferry provided this until it was shut down, and any solution to the problem will “take time”.

In an updated statement issued on Tuesday, a council spokeswoma­n said: “We are aware of the loss of a number of cygnets.

“The birds are not nesting in the canal and we are unable to attribute the reasons for the loss.

“Council officers monitor the canal every day and we have not seen any dead pike or other animals.

“The high tide is this week and we have had two officers monitoring the river and lock gates each day at the time of the daytime high tide.

“This will continue throughout this week on the days when further high tides are expected. Individual­s should not be taking fish from the canal to the square pond.

“This activity requires a licence

 ?? ?? ● Falling water levels in the Sankey Canal at Spike Island in Widnes
● Concerns continue to mount over the falling water level in the Sankey Canal, including near Carter House Bridge.
● Falling water levels in the Sankey Canal at Spike Island in Widnes ● Concerns continue to mount over the falling water level in the Sankey Canal, including near Carter House Bridge.

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