The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Flooding misery for man residents

- By Stephen Briggs stephen.briggs@peterborou­ghtoday.co.uk Twitter: @PTstephenB

Anumber of roads in Peterborou­gh were flooded after storms struck.

After a week of hot, humid weather, there were a number of heavy downpours across the city on Thursday, leading to flash floods on a number of roads.

St Paul’s Road was left under water, while Bourges Boulevard was also flooded near the TK Maxx building.

There was a crash on the A47 in Peterborou­gh, which left a man in hospital, and a police spokesman said: “Following all of the rain, there is a lot of excess water around. Take care on the roads and drive to arrive.”

Trev Robbins Pratt, from Peterborou­gh Weather Watch said there had been a huge amount of rain falling: “Thursday (13)was the first rain I have recorded in 16 days, with a ‘huge’ total of 33.0mm as I write, with it being likely there is some more to come. The August average is around 62.0mm, so over half of that has fallen just today.

“Temperatur­e wise, August average maximum to this point in the month is around 22.8°C, but up to yesterday, the average maximum with me is a very high 26.2°C.”

Two days later there was more heavy rain.

One Peterborou­gh resident has called for action to be taken to stop flooding hitting his street in the future after householde­rs had to close their road as waters rose.

Thorpe Park Road in Peterborou­gh was left under water when the storms hit.

Resident Chris Judge said it was an ongoing problem.

He said: “The flooding on Sunday was the worst we have seen. The water was two inches above the pavement. Water came in and affected seven homes – gardens were like lakes.

“The road was impassable, so we had to block the road itself. The police wouldn’t come and close it.

“But cars kept on trying to come down – one person said they could come through as they were in a 4x4 – it just sent waves into homes.

“We got no support from anyone – police, fire and council would not come and help. It was a catastroph­e.”

A Cambridges­hire Fire and Rescue Service spokesman said across the county there had been 78 calls related to the flooding on Sunday.

The spokesman said: “We mobilised crews to five of these. Four were incidents where the electrics had been affected and crews isolated the supply to make it safe.

“At one of these incidents crews pumped water out of the property as the resident was elderly. We also attended an incident in Peterborou­gh where lightening had struck the property and affected electrics. Crews made the electrics safe.With flooding, we will attend if there is a risk to life.”

Cambridges­hire police said they received seven calls related to flooding.

The Fire and Rescue Service spokesman added:

“If the heavy rain across the county has caused flooding in your property, please call Floodline on 0345 988 1188.

“If you are in immediate danger, you should call 999 and ask for the fire service.”

A spokesman for Anglian Water said: “Following the exceptiona­l amount of rain that has fallen this weekend, our teams have been working with the local authoritie­s to respond to flooding on Thorpe Park Road in Peterborou­gh.

“Flooding is often an extremely complex issue with many different owners for the drainage network such as Highways, local councils and even private owners, as well as ourselves.

“Intense rainfall can cause standing water to build up, especially on hard surfaces because there’s nowhere for it to go, this causes surface water flooding. It’s a bit like a bath

plughole, and it takes time for the water to drain away.

“Our teams will this week carry out further investigat­ion work on the systems around Thorpe Park to ensure that our network is running as it should and can take this surface water away as quickly as possible.”

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Motorists struggled through flooded roads.
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The car that crashed on the A47.
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Bourges Boulevard under water.
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Singing in the rain in Peterborou­gh.
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