Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Rail giant using raft of measures to beat floods

- By JOHN GREENWOOD

WORK including improving railway track drainage is ongoing as part of flood alleviatio­n measures in the Calder Valley.

The increasing flood resilience works – being undertaken by Calderdale Flood Recovery and Resilience Programme Board – includes schemes across the YorkshireL­ancashire border by Network Rail.

Flooding impacts railway services in extreme weather events, in the past closing Walsden Station, while floodwater flowing off the tracks has added to flooding emergencie­s.

Much of the work is in the Calder Valley and includes joint work with the Environmen­t Agency (EA) at Walsden to reduce flooding from Ramsden Clough Reservoir.

Network Rail is also renewing track through Summit Tunnel to improve resilience and reliabilit­y of the track, and are completing a drain clearance through the tunnel.

Completed resilience work undertaken by Network Rail west of Stubbing Brink, Hebden Bridge, clearances under a key bridge, improved culvert work at Dobroyd, Todmorden, and major culverting work at Kitson Wood, Todmorden.

In the future Network Rail aims to increase trackside drainage at Stubbing Brink, repairing trackside drainage at Mytholmroy­d, Brearley and Sowerby Bridge, and working with the EA on ‘slow the flow’ schemes relating to Ramsden Clough.

East of Stubbing Brink major work to replace a failed culvert at Wood Lane overbridge, at Tenterfiel­ds Industrial Estate,

Luddenden Foot, minor works on the line at Brearley and Stubbing Brink, work to improve highway drainage beneath a railway bridge at Stainland Road, Elland, and developmen­t work to better protect neighbouri­ng houses at Mytholmroy­d will also be in progress.

Among other partners, Calderdale Council data collection work on the flood report into the Storm Ciara event in February 2020 is complete and consultant­s appointed to produce a report, but similar work on a report relating to a flood incident in March 2019 has still to be completed albeit with actions arising from it being taken forward.

Until the end of November 2021 the council was investigat­ing 101 reporting flooding sites of which just three still require a site visit.

Cameras and flow monitoring have been installed at Redwater Clough, Cornholme, Stoney Royd Lane, Todmorden, Nutclough, Hebden Bridge, Copley, Halifax, and Jumps Road, Todmorden.

The EA has £4 million of work nearing completion with three of 20 schemes still in progress, including retaining wall issues at Streamside, Mytholmroy­d, wall works at Callis Bridge, Hebden Bridge, and some repairs at Millwood, Todmorden.

Northern Powergrid is to replace or re-site power substation­s to make them more resilient to flooding.

 ?? ?? Flood water rages through Todmorden
Flood water rages through Todmorden

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