Windsor & Eton Express

Questions over flood defence scheme flop

Borough: Panel looks at why RBWM has been left out of £635m scheme

- By Kieran Bell kieranb@baylismedi­a.co.uk @KieranB_BM

Questions were asked over the Royal Borough’s failure to contribute to a River Thames flood defence scheme at a scrutiny meeting this week.

Members at the infrastruc­ture overview and scrutiny panel learned what the council’s position was regarding the £635million Environmen­t Agency (EA) led project.

The Royal Borough’s contributi­on stood at £52.7million but, earlier this year, the council was advised by its finance chief that it could not commit fully to the scheme due to its precarious financial state.

‘Channel One’ of the three-section project is based on building a new channel at Datchet and continuing south through Horton and Wraysbury, reconnecti­ng with the River Thames at Runnymede, in Surrey.

The council’s head of commission­ing and infrastruc­ture, Ben Smith, said during the meeting on Wednesday that the borough has a shortfall in cash of about £40million.

The project is still commencing as planned, but not in ‘Channel One’ – the Royal Borough’s area.

In September 2017, the council approved £10million worth of funding for the scheme, in the hope that Government legislatio­n could be changed to allow the borough to fix a ‘flood levy’ to council tax.

Mr Smith said this ‘has never happened’ after previous ‘positive noises’ from Government.

Other local authoritie­s – including Surrey County Council – have committed to paying its share, and the project is now in a detailed design stage.

Mr Smith reassured members that the EA is 'working with' the council to see if there are ‘more local flood measures’ that can be progressed.

“We are yet to see those solutions or what the costs are, but there is certainly more funding available from the overall River Thames scheme budget, and our own approved budget,” Mr Smith said.

He added he was meeting with the EA in two weeks to discuss this fur ther.

Councillor­s questioned the borough’s role within the scheme, with Cllr Jon Davey (OWRA, Clewer & Dedworth West) accusing the council of ‘promising things based on fiction’.

“What I struggle with is that the council made a decision to proceed and do something based on a flood levy that was not in place,” Cllr Davey said.

“You can’t go around promising things based on fiction until it is a reality.

“It’s quite embarrassi­ng.”

Mr Smith responded by saying the council made its decision three years ago based on the informatio­n it had at the time.

Cllr Ewan Larcombe (National Flood Prevention Party, Datchet, Horton and Wraysbury) waded in on the debate, adding he was only made aware of the shortfall in funding in March.

“From my point of view, this is simply another chapter in the failure of the financial governance as exposed in the CIPFA (Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountanc­y) report,” Cllr Larcombe said.

“The result is that people at risk [of flooding] downstream of Maidenhead and Windsor are now denied the opportunit­y for effective flood defences.”

 ??  ?? The centre of Datchet was affected badly in the 2014 floods. Ref:118970-26
The centre of Datchet was affected badly in the 2014 floods. Ref:118970-26

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