The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Blood-suckers left stunned by work progress

ALMONDBANK: Protected fish removed as flood defence scheme proceeds apace

- PAUL REOCH preoch@thecourier.co.uk

Blood-sucking parasitic fish were humanely moved from one water course to another as work progresses on a £14 million flood defence scheme for a Perthshire village.

Several lampreys seen in the East Pow Burn, near Almondbank, were stunned yesterday using specialist equipment by staff from the Tay Salmon District Fisheries Board, as they are a protected species.

They were then moved to an undisclose­d water course as work progresses on the second stage of the flood defence scheme. Initial work to protect the village got under way last year.

A £14.7 million contract was awarded to Balfour Beatty to install new flood walls and embankment­s. Road and foot bridges along the River Almond and the East Pow Burn will also be raised as part of the scheme, which is scheduled to be completed by spring next year.

Two road bridges on the East Pow Burn will be replaced and a pumping station will be built at the nearby Vector Aerospace site on the outskirts of Almondbank.

On Friday, dignitarie­s visited the site to gauge its progress including Ian Miller, leader of Perth and Kinross Council, Alan Grant, convener of Perth and Kinross Council’s environmen­t committee, Jim Valentine, Perth and Kinross Council’s depute chief executive, and representa­tives from Balfour Beatty.

A council spokespers­on said: “Almondbank has experience­d a history of flooding from the River Almond and East Pow Burn, with serious flooding events taking place in 1993, 1999 and more recently in January 2011.

“In order to mitigate flooding in the area, the council commission­ed consultant­s to investigat­e the extent of the problem and develop potential solutions. The proposals comprise a series of flood defences along the River Almond and the East Pow Burn and a temporary flood storage area on the playing fields next to Main Street.”

The Scottish Government has contribute­d £11.7 million towards the flood defence scheme, with Perth and Kinross Council providing the remainder of the funding.

The proposals comprise a series of flood defences along the River Almond and the East Pow Burn...

 ?? Picture: Phil Hannah. ?? Tay District Salmon Fisheries board staff electro fish for lampreys in the East Pow Burn at Almondbank.
Picture: Phil Hannah. Tay District Salmon Fisheries board staff electro fish for lampreys in the East Pow Burn at Almondbank.

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