Yorkshire Post

Discounts offered for flood measures

Move part of Government plan to ‘build back better’

- GERALDINE SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: geraldine.scott@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @Geri_E_L_Scott

INSURANCE: Discounted insurance premiums could soon be on offer for householde­rs plagued by repeated floods if they install resilience measures.

Flood-hit communitie­s will be urged to take steps to protect their homes and Government proposals would see those who do rewarded with money off their insurance.

DISCOUNTED INSURANCE premiums could soon be on offer for householde­rs plagued by repeated floods if they install resilience measures in their homes.

Flood-hit communitie­s will be urged to take advantage of protection­s such as flood barriers, air brick covers, and flood resistant coatings on walls, and proposals put forward by the Government would see those who do rewarded with money off their insurance.

Under the new plans, insured households that experience flooding would not only claim money to cover the damage caused, but could also receive additional funds to build back better and make their homes more resilient.

The Government has also published a call for evidence to look at changes to the flood funding formula to benefit frequently flooded communitie­s, and ways to increase the up-take of property flood resilience measures so that homes and businesses are better protected.

In total there have been at least 23,000 publicly funded installati­on of property flood resilience measures since 2009.

However, the Government is seeking ways to increase uptake across the country, alongside providing record funding for new flood and coastal defences.

Properties in Yorkshire largely escaped widespread floodng when Storm Christoph hit earlier this month, but MPs have called on the Government to act quickly to deliver flood defences to communitie­s which are continuous­ly hit by deluges.

Announcing the plans, Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice said: “My thoughts are with all of those affected by Storms Bella and Christoph.

“In Northwich last week I saw for myself the impact that flooding has on homes, businesses and communitie­s.

“I am determined to get more support to people hit time and again by floods. These plans aim to give households in flood-hit areas additional support to protect their properties.”

Floods Minister Rebecca Pow said: “During Storm Christoph 49,000 properties were protected by our defences.

“I recognise that this is of little comfort to those who have been flooded and that there is more to do.

“The plans will give people in flood-hit areas more help to build back better and reduce the risk to homeowners in the future.

“Combined with a record £5.2bn Government investment over the next six years in new flood and coast defences, hundreds of thousands properties will be better protected.”

The consultati­on covers changes to the Flood Re scheme, a joint industry-government initiative, designed to reduce insurance costs for thousands of households by passing on the flood risk element of home insurance to Flood Re and charging a set premium to households based on council tax bands.

Since its launch in 2016, more than 300,000 households have benefited from Flood Re, with four out of five households with prior flood claims seeing reductions in their insurance premiums by more than half.

But the scheme has previously come under criticism as it can only be used for properties built before 2009.

Additional measures also being considered include reducing the cheapest subsidised premium for contents insurance provided for by Flood Re (£52), as evidence from the Amanda Blanc’s Independen­t Review of Insurance, commission­ed by the Government suggest these could still be too high for households on low incomes.

The call for evidence will explore how to strengthen the flood and coastal defence investment programme through better assessment of local circumstan­ces, including how potential changes to the funding formula could provide further benefit to frequently flooded communitie­s.

It will also looks at further ways to increase the up-take of property flood resilience measures to enable householde­rs and businesses to better prepare for flooding.

The plans will give people in flood-hit areas more help. Floods Minister Rebecca Pow.

FLOODING has caused immense economic damage and heartache across Yorkshire in recent years, wrecking both homes and businesses.

Yet despite the glaring need for adequate measures to protect both, the Government’s response has consistent­ly fallen short, leaving communitie­s large and small gripped by the fear of what might befall them every time there is heavy rainfall or a thaw after snowfall.

Today’s announceme­nt of further support for flood resilience measures is to be welcomed, focusing as it does on discounted insurance premiums, extra money for residents who install protection and funding for frequently inundated areas.

They are all moves in the right direction, yet Yorkshire residents and businesses will reserve judgement until they see the details of exactly what is on offer, because successive government­s have a long history of offering much, then delivering too little.

In particular, the call for evidence about how to protect frequently flooded areas jars with the Government’s failure to convene a region-wide summit on the issue, which this newspaper has called for consistent­ly for many years. Flood-hit communitie­s have a mass of evidence to offer, and are only too willing to pass it on, but by its reluctance to take a regional approach, the Government does not make the best use of the knowledge of those on the ground.

It is good news that the Government is acting to help flood-hit communitie­s, but if it is to win their confidence, it must demonstrat­e a willingnes­s to listen much more attentivel­y.

 ?? PICTURE: DANNY LAWSON/PA WIRE ?? UNDERWATER: Naburn near York was among the areas across the region that flooded after Storm Cristoph.
PICTURE: DANNY LAWSON/PA WIRE UNDERWATER: Naburn near York was among the areas across the region that flooded after Storm Cristoph.

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