Yorkshire Post

FLOOD THAT HAUNTS A CITY

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IT WAS the summer when the rain just would not stop. In June and July 2007, massive flooding around the country resulted in 13 deaths, damage to 48,000 homes and 7,000 businesses and on one particular­ly awful day, what became the biggest rescue effort in peacetime Britain.

On that fateful day of June 25, one of the worst-affected cities was Sheffield where 68-year-old Peter Harding drowned under a railway bridge after the River Don burst its banks. Ryan Parry, aged just 14, was swept to his death in the River Sheaf as he made his way home from school.

People were airlifted to safety from office rooftops and rescued by dinghy from flooded shops, while others had to desperatel­y climb trees and lampposts to escape rapidly rising floodwater. Hundreds more had to be evacuated from their homes as a dam at a nearby reservoir came perilously close to bursting.

It led to promises that such an event could never be allowed to happen again. But while considerab­le progress has been made, years of more work – dependant securing tens of millions of pounds in extra Government funding – still lie ahead.

While flood defence work is under way on the Lower Don Valley where Mr Harding died, an intended scheme for the Sheaf in which Ryan Parry lost his life is yet to begin.

The ongoing impact of Sheffield’s vulnerabil­ity to flooding was highlighte­d last year when HS2 boss David Higgins suggested it was the central reason it was decided not to build a dedicated high-speed railway station in the city centre.

As the tenth anniversar­y arrives this weekend, there is renewed focus on securing the necessary funding from Government to install flood defences at key points across the city. It is currently estimated that work will cost £83m but the figure is likely to rise once more detailed plans are concluded.

But one area where there has been substantia­l progress is the Lower Don Valley, stretching from the outskirts of the city centre past hundreds of businesses up to the Meadowhall Shopping Centre.

A five-mile stretch of the River Don is seeing the constructi­on and installati­on of more than 60 new flood protection measures, including flood gates and higher new walls. It is hoped the work will be completed this year.

As part of the project, local volunteers have been assisting social enterprise the River Stewardshi­p Company with clearing debris such as overgrown vegetation, trees, litter and even traffic cones from the Don. Such debris was a key part in exacerbati­ng the devastatin­g flooding that occurred in 2007 by allowing water levels to rise more quickly.

Since the flood protection programme started, otter tracks have been found along the river, while kingfisher­s, herons and waxwings are frequently seen on the Don – signs that indicate improved water quality.

Local businesses have also played a vital part, voting for the creation of a Business Improvemen­t District in which they have paid extra taxes with the additional money ringfenced for spending on the flood improvemen­t programme. They are jointly contributi­ng £1.4m, with the rest of the £19m scheme being paid for by the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs and the Environmen­t Agency.

Clare Maguire, business manager for the Sheffield LDV BID project, says while the new scheme is yet to be completed, it is already making a difference. “The floods came as a real shock, we had not seen anything of that scale in Sheffield for several hundred years. Businesses are now much more aware of signing up for flood alerts and taking their own resistance measures to protect their buildings, as well as having business continuity plans.

“When we started the project the level of flood defence was prepared for a one-in-25 year event. Now it is going to be a one-in-100 year event. We can’t ever guarantee that no business will flood again but because we have increased the defences to such an extent that if we got an event of the same magnitude as 2007, the impact would be so much less. Businesses are much more protected and can feel much safer.”

One of the volunteers helping to clear the river each week is former BT worker Paul Winks, from Hillsborou­gh. The 64-year-old says it is good to be making a difference. “After heavy rain, the river runs off very quickly and within 24 hours it is back to normal.”

A few hundreds yards away from where the volunteers are working is The Wicker, one of the areas of the city most badly affected by the flooding. Jeanette Bramley, now 48, was working at the Wicker Mobility Store when flood water swept in. Along with colleagues, she had to be rescued by firefighte­rs in a dinghy after sheltering in the upper floor of the premises.

“We had put sandbags all along the front but all the water came out through Wicker Lane behind us and broke down the dispatch doors. The water came rushing in. The ring road outside was still being built and all the bollards were washed away. People were wading across and it was quite dangerous. It was pretty horrible afterwards, we had horrible silty stuff all over the floor.”

Another part of the city also being served by the scheme is Meadowhall Road, which runs parallel to the shopping centre which was flooded in 2007. One organisati­on to benefit is the Sheffield & Hallamshir­e County Football Associatio­n, which moved into offices in 2014. Secretary Roger Reade says the office, then occupied by the Transport and General Workers’ Union ended up with eight to 10ft of water inside in 2007 and cars floating out of the car park.

He says the FA were concerned about taking on the premises because of the flooding issue but after receiving reassuranc­es about the planned work, Mr Reade ended up as part of the steering group for the BID team.

“Bar a handful of businesses, people brought into it straight away. When you look at the total cost and what businesses are paying towards the total cost, it is like winning the lottery. The new defences will give us the security against a one-in-100 year flood. The problem is a one-in-200 year event, which is what happened in 2007. But we wouldn’t have wanted that anyway, you would be talking about a 10ft wall and it would be more like working in a prison!”

But the positive work being done in the Lower Don Valley is yet to come to happen elsewhere in the city.

While the Government has indicated it is willing to provide £23m towards five other projects, there is currently an estimated £41m funding gap.

A Sheffield Council spokesman said: “The council is working closely with Government to secure funds, so we can get on and build the defences. We look forward to progressin­g our plans further, once we have a funding commitment which can make the schemes a reality.”

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 ??  ?? Top, volunteers now regularly clear the River Don of debris in a bid to prevent a repeat of the devastatio­n of 2007, above.
Top, volunteers now regularly clear the River Don of debris in a bid to prevent a repeat of the devastatio­n of 2007, above.
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