Yorkshire Post

ON FRONTLINE OF FLOODING

- ■ Email: sarah.wilson1@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

We’ve seen the council put up flood defences in various places, and myself and five other properties that are at risk now have a little messenger group called ‘the forgotten corner’.

Stephen Porthouse, resident living near River Ouse in York

IN THE early hours of December 27, 2015, Stephen Porthouse was bolted awake by a sound that might not ordinarily have roused him: a steady trickle of water.

York’s River Ouse had been up for several days, and though living just a stone’s throw from the water, Stephen had moved some furniture around but “naively” hoped it would never creep close enough to do real damage.

Unfortunat­ely, a deluge of rain expanded the river, causing it to flow towards Stephen’s home and begin dipping slowly into the foundation­s of the house. Over the next 12 hours, it seeped up through the floor slowly before rushing in through the front – rendering the house uninhabita­ble.

It’s a familiar tale to the handful of York’s business owners and residents who live and work along one of the city’s most picturesqu­e – yet floodprone – stretches.

The King’s Arms pub is so accustomed to sharing its premises with the river, in fact, that it even has its own river “height chart” above the entrance.

And while a good dose of humour and grit have been essential in these homes and businesses over the years, flooding in York is no longer an infrequent event.

All across Yorkshire, and indeed the UK, flooding is becoming increasing­ly frequent and increasing­ly destructiv­e.

Without interventi­on, experts estimate that entire swathes of the county could be underwater by 2050. A recent study, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, identified parts of Yorkshire, and in particular the Humber coast and estuary, as a threatened area, with towns as far inland as Selby and Doncaster at risk from swollen rivers.

This need for interventi­on to help businesses and residents with flooding has been widely acknowledg­ed, with talk of compensati­on and other financial aid often raised by MPs and councillor­s.

In spite of this, many flood-prone businesses feel that help has been too light, too slow to arrive and sometimes even non-existent.

Housed in a former motor-house (now Grade-II listed) on York’s Skeldergat­e Bridge, Dyls Cafe is one small business that’s borne the brunt of flooding costs particular­ly hard.

Since taking over the family business eight years ago, Jan Dyls has lost track of the exact number of times Dyls has flooded, but estimates that “it could honestly be over 100 times... at one point we were flooding 15, 20 times a year”.

The majority of these occasions were not severe – with only the outside terrace affected.

Yet the three that were – one in 2012, two in 2015 – were utterly catastroph­ic for the independen­t business:

“In 2015 our flood defences totally failed, or rather, we didn’t have the right flood defences.

“We got flooded in the inside, in our kitchen area.

“It pretty much wiped us out for nine or ten months”.

The cafe is unable to get insurance for flooding thanks to prohibitiv­ely high premiums, and though the council leases the building to Jan, their group insurance only covers building materials like tiling or brick:

“We can’t get any insurance for flooding, so we’ve got no flood cover, no loss of earnings... every time we’ve gone it totally alone”.

More than anything, says Jan, it’s the period in which the cafe is out of action that hurts the business the most.

Without a grant from the Local Enterprise Partnershi­p in 2015 – covering 50 per cent of the repairs – Jan believes the popular cafe would have been forced to close its doors.

Stephen was luckier when it came to claiming insurance – but only by the skin of his teeth.

In October 2015 he was looking over the home insurance arranged by his mortgage broker and realised that it didn’t cover flooding.

He quickly remedied this with additional cover – fairly cheap at the time given the property hadn’t previously been flooded.

Just two months later, his house was partially submerged.

In spite of a fairly stress-free insurance process, Stephen believes his home and a handful of others in the area have been left behind in the past when it comes to flood defences.

“We’ve seen the council put up defences in various places, and myself and five other properties that are at risk now have a little messenger group called ‘the forgotten corner’.

“We’re not a lot of properties but even if two or three of us flood it’s still pretty bad.”

The emotional impact of flooding too, he says, is difficult – and somewhat surreal. Standing outside his home with his wife and two young children the day it flooded, he says he experience­d “an odd emotion, it’s embarrassi­ng”.

He explains: “You’re quite exposed, you feel awful”.

Jan echoes this sentiment, and says that the most recent 2020 floods – which fluctuated for weeks – were actually the worst to deal with mentally in spite of being less damaging than in previous years.

“This time in particular it was horrendous because of the longevity, you know, going through this weekin week-out, then not knowing when it’s going to go down and having no support. No-one was sleeping”.

Since the 2015 Boxing Day floods, both Stephen and Jan have had robust flood defences installed to protect themselves.

While Stephen has not had his tested since the 2015 floods, the 2020 floods presented a very close call – with water reaching the side of the property.

Dyls’ flood protection­s, however, were tested – and luckily weathered the challenge.

Yet this is scant comfort to Jan, who is aware that any failure may spell the end for his business.

Over the years, he says, there have been many promises of government money to help the business out, but in spite of many enquiries on their side, nothing has come to fruition yet.

“We’re not getting anywhere which is really frustratin­g. I’m not expecting the council to pay for everything but at the same time there’s got to be something available just to prop you up. The flooding is getting worse. And this five weeks of flooding constantly is unheard of.”

He points out that the handful of businesses at risk of future flooding are largely independen­ts – and thus most likely to struggle to get back on their feet. For many along this stretch of the Ouse, the future is wracked with anxiety, with flooding predicted to worsen and insurance premiums rocketing year-on-year.

Though Jan and his staff put their heart and soul into the business, nowadays he says they’re plagued nearconsta­ntly with the worry that closure may be just around the corner. “There’s no let up, you think at any point it could just fail and that’ll be it”.

‘We call ourselves the forgotten corner’ – this is what life is like for those living along the region’s mostfloode­d riverbank. Sarah Wilson speaks to those on the front line in York.

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 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY ?? WATER FEARS: Jan Dyls, above, of Dyls Cafe, and York resident Stephen Porthouse, top, who has built retaining walls and installed floodgates.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY WATER FEARS: Jan Dyls, above, of Dyls Cafe, and York resident Stephen Porthouse, top, who has built retaining walls and installed floodgates.
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