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1 Vale of White Horse District Council LCLIP report February 2009 Prepared by Mark Kowal

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Vale of White Horse District Council

LCLIP report

February 2009 Prepared by Mark Kowal

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CONTENTS:

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3 ABBREVIATIONS 5

1. INTRODUCTION AND OUTLINE 6 1.1 REPORT PURPOSE 6 1.2 STRUCTURE OUTLINE 6

2. CONTEXT 8 2.1 HOW DO CLIMATE AND WEATHER DIFFER? 8 2.2 CLIMATE CHANGE 8 2.3 VULNERABILITY, IMPACTS, CONSEQUENCES AND ADAPTATION 10 2.4 NI188 AND THE COUNCIL’S CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGY 12 2.5 FUTURE CLIMATE - UKCIP 2008 HEADLINES 14

3. LCLIP FINDINGS 15 3.1 LOCAL CLIMATE IMPACTS PROFILE TOOL 15 3.2 WEATHER EVENTS OBSERVED - 2003 TO 2008 15 3.3 AWARENESS OF TRENDS IN WEATHER AND CLIMATE CHANGE 15 3.4 LIST OF PROPOSED PRIORITY ACTIONS WITH SUGGESTED PRIORITY LEVELS 15

4. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 26 4.1 SIGNIFICANT OPPORTUNITIES AND VULNERABILITIES 26 4.2 CONCLUSIONS 27 4.3 RECOMMENDATIONS 29

APPENDICES 31 APPENDIX 1: OXFORDSHIRE’S CLIMATE WITHIN GLOBAL CHANGE 31

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The Local Climate Impact Profile (LCLIP) tool was designed by the UK Climate Impacts Programme as a tool for assessing risks and opportunities to services, plans and estates under current climate. By gathering an evidence base from the last five years and identifying action priorities, the Profile contributes to VOWH’s climate change planning, and so prepare for future weather and climate. An overview of climate science contrasts the mitigation and adaptation agendas. This explains that the robust consensus within the science community about the gravity of climate threats, clearly justifies the increasing obligation of organisations to increase preparedness for altered weather. The distinction between weather and climate is made and the types of weather events listed. Data from various sources set out recent Oxfordshire climate trends and local headlines, set within Central England climate data. Recent changes in the length and intensity of all our season is an emerging issue not usually picked up by LCLIPs, which usually focus on extreme weather reports. The LCLIP data is appended with the title VOWH Weather Incidents Records Table. This is an easy-print Word database holding significant media reports of local weather events over the last 5 years. A definition is provided of the weather incidents, simply typed as Gales / Storms; Rain / Flood; Heat / Sun; Snow / Ice. Media stories covering wider responses and policy issues are also included. Local climate profile results are set out. River flooding is the highest weather risk for the Vale, while other types of extreme weather had a clearly marginal impact on VOWH services. Due to river watershed topography, VOWH as a geographical district is significantly less well-buffered against flood weather impacts than sister authority SODC. Altering seasonality may raise costs slightly for VOWH, as the summer season extends under occasionally very wet summers. Vale of White Horse is a well-buffered region with some adaptation actions already underway, both autonomously and planned under VOWH’s Climate Change Strategy. Flooding is the major high-risk type of weather currently affecting the District. Even so, UK and local trends show that, we must anticipate weather surprises as extreme events, shifting seasons and year-on-year warming. Adaptation action should follow certain principles and take advantage of partnerships with organisational allies. Overall, there are no cases of weather events overwhelming VOWH services and the direct costs of weather events are very limited. Autonomous adaptation by services is already occurring as part of good management and risk assessment. Staff have a good initial awareness of climate change issues, though this could be further built up through targeted actions. Even though coping with wilder weather is not yet raising costs or causing great difficulties, extreme events are trending upwards and will become an ever more serious concern. Even if we have yet to see large and consistent changes to the UK’s climate and weather, global temperatures will continue to rise, as will levels of atmospheric humidity and rainfall intensity. Biodiversity zones, species and habitats will move. In the medium-term, it is very likely that the impacts and consequences of more chaotic weather patterns and events will become more diverse and serious.

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National Indicator 188 sets out a clear adaptation planning route for LAs to follow and was adopted as a priority indicator in Oxfordshire’s LAA. This profiling exercise should become the basis for an internally-managed appraisal of vulnerabilities that could be tackled within an overall Adaptation Action Plan. Once LCLIP findings are incorporated into a wider evidence base during 2009 and 2010, VOWH services would then develop and implement a comprehensive VOWH climate adaptation programme, as set out for Level 3 of NI 188. To approach Level 2 of NI188 by the end FY 2010, a small number of breakthrough projects should be implemented to help VOWH develop experience about how ‘to do adaptation’. Projects should be of two kinds, internally for VOWH services; and secondly managed with LSP partners and chosen to build local resilience and broader adaptive capacity. An option would be to focus on heatwaves as a social risk issue with LSP partners alongside the PCT. Ten action priorities are selected using best judgement as the most relevant and useful candidates for initial action in the next two years. LCLIP data should be located in the context of future climate information by examining scenario data soon available through UKCIP. This can help identify key thresholds, based on Council risk appetite. By examining likely weather impacts expected for each service under UKCIP scenarios, the thresholds for particular weather variables can then be decided. These, once overtopped, would allow specific service reactions to kick-in, such as enhanced emergency responses or longer term Council, LSP or other local actions. Establishing thresholds and exceedance probabilities can help decide which specific adaptive capacities should be built-up, how to work with partners. It is recommended that county-wide OCC, VOWH, other Districts and other LSP members should design a relevant monitoring system for weather variables and impacts. This should cover the implications of gradual seasonal changes on biodiversity and for business planning. Benefits are emphasised of VOWH taking part in the evolving communities of practice, such as cross-council work already underway on sharing best practice in building Control and development Planning. This demonstrates that VOWH is already working at a high response level. VOWH is on track to reach and exceed Level 1 in 2008/9, Level 2 in 2008/10 and Level 3 in 2010/11, as planned. Going further, the guidance supplied suggests that VOWH’s action on climate change adaptation must not become a process for process's sake. This may be a risk if Council work is narrowly driven just by efforts to reach government and LAA performance targets. As the work evolves, a clearer idea will be generated as to the positive outcomes stemming from tackling adaptation, in terms of success for VOWH as an organisation, and as the LSP gets involved, for Vale of White Horse citizens and other stakeholders. VOWH champions, teams and managers should broaden the drivers of VOWH council action by engaging in LSP and county-wide actions. In the end, to be successful on the ground, climate change adaptation needs to become a lens through which local sustainable development is viewed. In this way, the adaptation approach will progressively become integrated within decision-making across the LSP, and by wider community stakeholders.

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ABBREVIATIONS

BACLIAT

BAP

Business Areas Climate Impacts Assessment Tool

Biodiversity Action Plan

CC

CET

CO2

CDC

CTAs

Climate Change

Central England Temperature

Carbon dioxide

Cherwell District Council

Conservation Target Areas

Defra Dept. for Rural Affairs and Agriculture

EA Environment Agency

ESCC Cherwell’s Environmental Strategy for a Changing Climate

GOSE Government Office for the South East

HPA Health Protection Authority

IdeA

IPCC

Improvement and Development Agency for Local Government

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

LAA Local Area Agreement

LAA2 Oxfordshire Local Area Agreement running 2008 - 2011

LCLIP Local Climate Impacts Profile

LSP Local Strategic Partnership

NI National Indicator

NDAP Nottingham Declaration Action Pack

OM & OT

OCC

Oxford Mail, Oxford Times

Oxfordshire County Council

PPS

ppm

PCT

Planning Policy Statement

parts per million

Primary Care Trust

SODC South Oxfordshire District Council

SEEDA

SPS

SUDS

South East Development Agency

Supplementary Planning Document

Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems

UKCIP UK Climate Impacts Programme

VOWH Vale of White Horse

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1. INTRODUCTION AND OUTLINE

1.1 REPORT PURPOSE

This report should assist VOWH to assess the risks and opportunities arising from a changing climate across the District, to determine priority needs, and further develop adaptation action plans. The purpose is two-fold: (i) To present an evidence base and resource for building awareness, that examines how the last

five years’ of extreme weather events has affected VOWH services. This is a response to the question - how does current weather under today’s climate poses risks for VOWH?

(ii) Contribute to VOWH’s approach to climate change adaptation planning, by underscoring the steadily growing importance of integrating Council adaptation actions, alongside mitigation.

At this stage, the report only presents an initial scoping of VOWH’s risks and vulnerabilities, using UKCIP’s Local Climate Impacts Profile tool (LCLIP). The VOWH Service Development Management will use the findings to develop VOWH’s strategy, jointly with Service Heads and team leaders. The LCLIP assessment covers current impacts of recent weather events, identifies the relationships of weather to service delivery, and establishes the prevalence of damaging impacts from weather on service delivery, staff resources, finances and reputation. The profile helps the local authority identify vulnerabilities and plan how to tackle them. As it makes use of media reports, the LCIP approach offers a simple entry point into what seems like complex data. A limitation of this report is that, if we only restricted ourselves to looking backwards, it would not be possible to explore fully the implications of climate change. LCLIP data needs to be examined alongside future climate change scenarios. This involves Council teams and managers making use of UKCIP information. This study will have achieved its purpose, once its findings are incorporated into a wider evidence base. That will happen once VOWH services consider actions based on both the historical weather record and taking into account future probabilities. Implementing this study’s recommendations will move VOWH, with LSP partners, through the performance levels of National Indicator 188. As part of that wider effort, the report has some implications for VOWH’s Local Strategic Partnership through the Sustainable Community Strategy.

1.2 STRUCTURE OUTLINE

The sections of this report are: Section two that sets out the context by defining how climate and weather differ, and provides an overview of climate science impacts studies and adaptation. A more in-depth review of the physical basis of climate change is set out in Appendix 1. Section 2.3 explains how mitigation differs from adaptation and explains the terms vulnerability, impacts and consequences, and that adaptation usually is carried out in two stages.

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Some comment is then provided on National Indicator 188 as a guide for the wider process that local authorities are expected to follow, as they scale the four performance levels. Mention is made of how VOWH’s current work fits within work with OCC and other Districts, as the Oxfordshire Strategic Partnership delivers NI 188. The UKCIP-developed Local Climate Impacts Profile Tool is presented as the scoping tool used for this report. The last part of Section 2 provides a summary of UKCIP headline messages about how the climate will likely alter in coming decades. Section 3 starts with an explanation of the LCLIP method, presents findings and analyzes these. Part 3.1 gives some information about frequencies of observed weather events. The data collected in the media trawl is set into a summary table with hyper-links to the events that happened as detailed in Appendix 2. This appendix is a Word table titled ‘VOWH Weather Incidents Table’, which holds the database of media reports - the evidence core of this study. Totals are given for the major kinds of weather events experienced over the last 5 years. Part 3.2 reports on in-depth findings from each service team interviewed. This makes up the bulk of this report. Each section concludes with some suggested action priorities. These have been carefully compared with Actions set out in VOWH’s Environmental Strategy for a Changing Climate. Further validated, these would become the subjects of risk analysis and prioritisation to check for suitability as ‘projects’ under an ‘VOWH adaptation programme’. Action priorities would be designed to plug significant vulnerabilities related to poorly-addressed weather / climate risks. Undertaking these is essential for Level 3 achievement of NI 188 titled – ‘Comprehensive action plan with prioritised action in priority areas’. Section 4 provides Conclusions and Recommendations. The chief suggestion is to use the findings from this LCLIP as the basis for a comprehensive adaptation action plan drawn up and implemented by in due course to deliver concrete benefits. The final section suggests some candidate key action priorities from the larger set supplied in Section 3, supplies some guidance and . Significant vulnerabilities are listed and further decision options for VOWH are established. Appendices supply the Interview Format used and the full table of weather incidents derived from the LCLIP media trawl. Appendix 3 sets out in a table what the typical impacts of extreme weather are for communities, businesses & environment, as well as consequences for services, plans and estates of a typical central England District Council. Appendix 1 provides a profile of Oxfordshire’s climate under UK and global change. This covers data from various sources, including the Met Office Oxford station and a detailed analysis taken from the Radcliffe Observatory. Data from these sources explains trends, which are set into the context of Central England analyses. Internet references are supplied.

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2. CONTEXT

2.1 HOW DO CLIMATE AND WEATHER DIFFER?

Adaptation responses address the impacts of weather events under ‘the climate’. The main difference between long-term climate and everyday weather, is summarised in the phrase "....climate is what you expect, weather is what you get....." Weather is the way the atmosphere is behaving and its effects upon life and human activities, in terms of local temperature, humidity, precipitation, cloudiness, brightness, visibility, windiness and atmospheric pressure. It consists of short-term (minutes to months) changes is the day-to-day state of the lower atmosphere and upper ocean. Weather variables are values of air temperature, precipitation, sunshine, days of frost and snow cover and air/vapour pressure. Climate is the description of the long-term patterns, averages and variations of the weather in a region over a long period. It is defined as long-term statistical information about the weather, describing the variation at a given place for a specified interval. The variables that decide our local climate zone include a location’s latitude, altitude, proportion of land to water, and distance to oceans and from mountains. Formally for the UK ‘it is the weather of a locality averaged over thirty years, plus statistics of weather extremes’, chosen as a period long enough to provide a reliable average that included the usual peaks and troughs of natural variability. The overall definition covers atmospheric and physical components - ocean circulation, the Earth’s surface reflectivity, atmospheric chemistry, terrestrial/marine biospheres, ice-cover and vegetation patterns. External influences on the climate system come from the effects of the Sun, volcanic emissions, and from human additions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and alterations of land surfaces.

Oxfordshire’s climate, within Central England and global climate, is described in detail in Appendix 1.

2.2 CLIMATE CHANGE

A solid scientific consensus holds that human emissions of GHGs have disrupted the Earth’s energy balance. There are unequivocal signs of warming over land, oceans and the atmosphere. The resulting climate change is altering the values of meteorological variables, trends and cycles of variability, over time scales of years or decades. These might be changes in wind patterns, monthly temperatures and precipitation. Trends and shorter-term cycles in these variables must be set within the bigger picture of longer-term, more permanent climate changes, looking back historically, or by using forecasts of future climates.

Global average temperature has risen by about 0.8 °C over the past 100 years, with 1998 and 2005 tying as the warmest years in the climate record. The period 2001 - 2007 is 0.21°C warmer than the 1991-2000 decade. Even while 2008 felt like a ‘cool year’, it was in fact 0.1°C warmer than the decade of the 1990s as a whole, and warmer than any year of the 20th century, besides 1998.

Points about Impacts, Vulnerability and Adaptation were made in 2007 by the IPCC working group that released the Adaptation Report and Summary:

� Evidence from many parts of the world show that people, plants and animals are being affected by regional climate changes, particularly temperature increases.

� Warming caused by human activities is likely discernible influencing plants and animals.

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� Impacts on water resources, ecosystems, agriculture and forestry, health and coastlines will likely be negative across most regions, with short-term positive benefits.

� It is very likely that all regions will experience rapid declines in any benefits, and great increases in costs, if global average temperatures warm much more than 2 degrees C.

� Risks of altering weather patterns can be reduced and the worst effects avoided, through a mix of adaptation (better preparing for and responding to climate change impacts) and mitigation (e.g. reducing greenhouse gas emissions).

Figure 1: Plot of global annual temperatures anomalies. This compares years in the historical record to 1961 – 1990 averages. The dominance of red bars shows that the ten warmest years on record have occurred since 1997. 2008, despite ‘cool’ conditions, was far warmer than most of the years, even compared to the very warm decade of the 1990’s. Source: Met Office.

The decade 2001 – 2009 will almost certainly be the hottest decade in at least 2000 years, consistent with the observed warming trend of 0.2 °C per decade. Under-developed countries exposed to weather hazards are not the only ones that will be affected - climate scientists tell us that a progressively-altering climate will become a key factor affecting UK economy and society, with severe effects are predicted for southern Europe. Disruptive weather will become more common for us in the UK, not just in the vulnerable developing world.

Impacts and consequences will be both direct and indirect, and may operate at local, national, regional and international scales. In the longer-term, we can expect synergies between climate change and other major stressors. Direct effects will arise from the weather events themselves. The economy, society, markets and migration may become transmitters of indirect effects. Trends and events might include a worsening financial depression, world/UK food scarcity, global insecurity, movements of environmental refugees, in combination with global commodity exhaustion, particularly energy scarcity and ‘peak oil’. Looking perhaps 10 to 20 years ahead, these effects may interact to disrupt local livelihoods, even in affluent and well-buffered regions, such as Oxfordshire.

An altering climate not only deals out more frequent and more extreme weather events, it is shown through modified seasonality. Local weather observers often notice that the ‘time of year’ is now different. What used to be a series of reliable seasons, running through the year, have changed their start and end dates, overall length and intensity. Alongside the physical changes to these averages, our social understandings are evolving as individuals already adapt psychologically to altered patterns of weather.

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2.3 VULNERABILITY, IMPACTS, CONSEQUENCES AND ADAPTATION

The 2003 heatwave calls to mind a great season of outdoor dining and waterside frolics. For many residents though, those benefits paled beside the stress of being practically boiled alive, on roads almost melting, perhaps stuck in a traffic jam. Worse, attending the heat-related illness of an elderly friend or relative. Alongside the 2003 weather event, we maybe can recall the 2006 heatwave, the 2004 - 2006 drought and the floods of summer 2007. The statement that we must tackle climate change has become familiar. We can act in two broad areas – cutting carbon emissions through mitigation, and being prepared for increasing change to our weather and climate though adaptation. Adaptation starts from accepting that climate change is happening, so measures to help people adapt are essential. The ‘adaptation agenda’ assumes that the changing climate will lead to impacts from extreme weather events, and is based on the need to anticipate and cope with them. The less mitigation humanity does now, the more difficult it will be to continually adapt in the future. Given current negligible global control over human modification of our atmosphere, we will provoke significant climate change in almost all regions of the world within one or two decades. The ‘adaptation agenda’ argues that we should build up our resilience and coping abilities, so we respond much better to more severe and frequent extreme weather events.

As climate change alters UK weather patterns, climate scientists are confident severe weather events will become more frequent. The graphic below uses a red line to show a heating trend stretching forwards at the rate of 0.2 OC per decade, with a blue curve of annual temperature ups and downs. The yellow stars show major weather events when normal variability was exceeded, as with the heatwave of 1976 and the cold winter of 1962.

The figure shows weather anomalies taking the warming trend as their axis. This is why hot summers like 2003 or 2006 are increasingly likely to repeat in the mid-term.

2050s 2041 – 2070

2080s2071 – 2100

The 2020s2011 – 2040

CurrentClimate

Per iod 1991 – 2020

Long Term Average(1961 – 1990)

Today

+

- 1990 Baseline

Increasing magnitude

of extreme events

1962

1976

Increasing frequency of extreme events

2003

Figure 2: Slide developed from Ian Bateman’s presentation at UKCIP LCLIP seminar, London January 2008

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The green shaded range represents current coping capacity. Without adaptation future events, if extreme and frequent, may cause impacts with consequences beyond our capabilities to respond. Over-topping our coping capacity becomes more probable if Business as Usual greenhouse emissions, lead to heating rates that take us above the current figure of 0.2 OC per decade. Therefore, while there is a lot of uncertainty about future climate changes, we do know enough to act. Some important terms, to understand what adaptation involves, are: Vulnerability depends on our locality and how we are exposed in different ways to weather hazards. It relates to local landscapes, settlements, transport links and socio-economic characteristics of exposed social groups and habitats. It is closely linked with the distribution of assets and access to all kinds of capital – financial, human, social, physical and natural. Depending on the mix of assets available across social groups, vulnerability is expressed in the varying levels of readiness of communities to respond, short-term and long-term, to weather events under an altering climate. The term ‘impacts’ describe the effects of different weather and climate events. Storm damage to trees, and failed harvests during a drought, are examples of impacts caused by weather events. Each major type of weather event may cause many kinds of specific incidents at differing locations affecting socio-economic groups according to local patterns of vulnerability. In a heatwave, typical incidents would involve evacuation of elderly care-home residents from overheated buildings and fires in rural fields. Consequences are key longer-term issues that overlap with our adaptation efforts. These occur because of an event and due to our response to it, for example flooded-out families made homeless for long periods due to poor insurance cover, official reviews of a weather event and plans made to mitigate future risk. These could also be opportunities that we try to exploit, such as developing a new tourism niche market or planting new crops. Adaptation to climate trends and to weather events involves building capacities, generating resilience and active risk management to minimise the adverse effects of climate change and take advantage of any benefits. Two key facets of adaptation are building adaptive capacity and practical adaptation actions. Building adaptive capacity covers many of the initial local adaptation responses that a local council needs to carry out first. Information on current vulnerabilities of services, communities and businesses needs to be assembled and shared, research examined on future climate, and staff capacities enhanced. Practical adaptation actions, are both tangible and non-physical actions that reduce exposure to hazards and cut the risks. These could involve:

• re-negotiated green spaces maintenance contracts to account for altering vegetation growth;

• the setting-up of local groups of residents and businesses to clear weeds out of rivers to reduce flood risk; political lobbying for physical measures like flood defence bunds, as well as installing early warning systems on local flooding;

• to cope with heatwaves, installing external shading and a green infrastructure of shade trees around offices and schools, altering building specifications to ensure buildings keep cool, as well as changing the school calendar to reduce the exposure of children.

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2.4 NI188 AND THE COUNCIL’S CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGY

In December 2007 the Council adopted a Climate Change Strategy, which outlined that VOWH would account for predicted changes in climate on service delivery and Council operations. The strategy stated the Council would use local authority powers to influence others to adapt to climate change. Specific actions included implementing a sustainable procurement protocol, agreeing to implement a district wide climate change plan through the Vale Partnership / Oxfordshire Partnership, and active promotion of adaptation measures by local communities.

Many local authorities have signed the Nottingham Declaration on Climate Change (see First and Second Declarations). Advice to help services adapt to climate change is available. In 2008 National Indicator 188 'Adapting to Climate Change' became part of the performance framework. The indicator was a developed through joint work between Defra and the UK Climate Impacts Programme.

NI 188 sets the stages though which authorities should progress. Government advice states: …..this indicator is designed to ensure local authority preparedness to manage risks to service delivery, the public, local communities, local infrastructure, businesses and the natural environment from a changing climate, and to make the most of new opportunities. The indicator measures progress on assessing and managing climate risks and opportunities, and incorporating appropriate action into local authority and partners’ strategic planning.

The end goal of these three instruments (NI 188, LAA, Nottingham Declaration) is to build-up awareness of the issues, supply information to decision-makers and stimulate adaptation action, ensuring risks are addressed and services respond well to weather impacts.

Defra has published NI 188 guidance, which establishes the aim ‘we are trying to ensure that assessing the risks and opportunities from climate change is embedded across all decision making, services and planning’. The stages are:

Level 1: Public commitment and prioritised risk-based assessment Level 2: Comprehensive risk-based assessment and prioritised action in some areas Level 3: Comprehensive action plans and prioritised action in all priority areas Level 4: Implementation, monitoring and continuous review. Adaptation is one of OCC’s four corporate priorities. With UKCIP support, in 2006 OCC identified weather events costs of more than £16 m over 10 years (Oxfordshire Climate Impacts Profile). NI 188 is part of Oxfordshire’s Local Area Agreement and the aim is to ensure an overall increase in Oxfordshire’s performance from baseline to Level 3 by 2010 / 2011. The county-level outcomes: � Reduced risks to services and communities by controlling weather impacts

� More robust areas of ecological habitats, able to absorb climate change

� Organisations have integrated climate change into business and risk planning

� Strategic plans for the building of resilience are developed that contribute to Sustainable Community Strategies.

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According to the Target Proposal Form, actions agreed for implementing this indicator are:

• Service areas have considered impacts / risks and are implementing plans to address them

• Adaptation process targets: Oxfordshire Local Authorities agree to complete Levels 1 up to at least 3 (even up to Level 4) within the 2008 - 2011 period

• Ensure new developments and infrastructure incorporate high adaptation levels

• Focus on conservation target areas for biodiversity and on incorporation of high-quality, accessible and wildlife-rich green space into built development.

The main activity for a local authority to achieve Level 1, is to carry out an assessment of current vulnerability to weather events. A tool for this is the Local Climate Impacts Profile (LCLIP).

Further guidance on adaptation is set out below:

• Differently to the global argument about carbon reductions mitigating future change, adaptation should be a specific process of stakeholder decision-making, in a context of specific threats and opportunities. This makes adaptation into a local issue best carried out in partnership with organisations on the ground, for example with strategic partners and with technical support for example, from UKCIP to aid capacity-building.

• Looking backwards and at today’s vulnerabilities helps understand recent impacts. But the past record is no longer the only guide to the future. Given that the climatic goalposts are moving, we must examine the risks under future climate by analysing scenarios. Adaptation strategies and actions should be robust against a wide variety of future conditions. We cannot predict future impacts and provide certain ‘climate-proofing’ measures. Climate change involves a range of futures for which current climate scenarios are an estimate.

• Effective adaptation equips people and institutions alike to cope with a wide range of contingencies. Given that the climate will change continuously over coming decades (though perhaps gradually), learning is achieved through periodic re-assessments that account for changing conditions. Within the Council, proactive teamwork across exposed teams can decide how often these reviews should happen to ensure service continuity under changing weather conditions.

• This means that adaptation becomes a process of social and institutional learning that recognises stakeholder processes and uses information at various levels. Action to promote adaptation is best based on the so-called “3 A’s” - our awareness of the issue and what it means for us; our grasp of what we can do as active agents; and our association with others to work together on the issues.

• Appropriate communication tools to encourage consensus among stakeholders on adaptation options rely on shared information and participatory techniques focused on exploring links, conflicts and awareness-raising around potential adaptation pathways.

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2.5 FUTURE CLIMATE - UKCIP 2008 HEADLINES

The IPCC 4th Assessment Report concluded that, depending on future emissions, by the end of the 21st century, global temperatures will increase to between 1.1 and 6.4°C above 1980 – ‘99 average. UKCIP has prepared the following headline messages describing UK’s future climate. Some changes have been assigned a confidence level, from high to low. Future changes are relative to 1961 - 1990. The UK will continue to get warmer…

• By 2040, average annual temperature for the UK will rise by between 0.5 and 1 °C, depending on region. By 2100, average annual temperature for the UK is expected to rise by between 1 and 5 °C, depending on region and emissions scenario (high confidence).

• Warming will be greater in summer/autumn than in winter/spring (medium confidence). • The thermal growing season will lengthen, but soil moisture levels in the summer and autumn are

expected to decrease (high confidence). • For coastal UK, sea level will continue to rise.

Summers will continue to get hotter and drier…

• By 2040, average summer temperature for the UK is expected to rise by between 0.5 and 2 °C, depending on region. By 2100, average summer temperature for the UK will rise by between 1 and 6 °C, depending on region and emissions scenario (high confidence).

• By 2100, there will be up to 50% less precipitation in the summer months, depending on region and emissions scenario (medium confidence).

• The number of days when buildings require cooling will increase (high confidence).

Winters will continue to get milder and wetter…

• By 2040, average winter temperature for the UK will rise by between 0.5 and 1 °C, depending on region. By 2100, average winter temperature for the UK is expected to rise by between 1 and 4 °C depending on region and emissions scenario (high confidence).

• By 2100, there is expected to be up to 30% more precipitation in the winter months, depending on region and emissions scenario (high confidence).

• Snowfall amounts will decrease across the UK (high confidence), and large parts of the country will have long runs of winters without snow (medium confidence).

• The number of days when buildings require heating will decrease (high confidence).

Some weather extremes will become more common, others less common…

• The number of very hot summer days will increase. High temperatures similar to those experienced in August 2003 or July 2006 (>3 °C above average) will become common by the end of this century, even under the Low Emissions scenario (medium confidence).

• The number of very cold winter days is expected to decrease, and low temperatures like those experienced in 1963 (>3 °C below av) will become highly uncommon by the end of this century.

• Heavier winter precipitation is expected to become more frequent (high confidence). • Winter storms and mild, wet and windy winter weather will become more frequent (low

confidence).

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3. LCLIP FINDINGS

3.1 LOCAL CLIMATE IMPACTS PROFILE TOOL

The LCLIP approach should help local authorities to better understand the impacts that the weather has on its operations by uncovering relationships between service areas and various types of weather. For information about LCLIPs as a tool, see links – here & here. Significant events are reviewed and the variables that affect services are examined, as well as adaptation plans and responses. In July 2008 UKCIP hosted an event on recent LCLIPs. Presentations here. County Councils that have undertaken LCLIPs are Kent, Worcestershire, Derbyshire, Warwickshire, Lancashire, Dorset, Devon and Hertfordshire. Fewer UK District Councils have carried these out – an example is Aylesbury Vale DC - initial results. An LCLIP study focuses on issues facing the local authority. Wider work, perhaps through Local Strategic Partnerships, will be needed to support residential communities and businesses when building their own adaptation programme. Ecosystems and biodiversity need attention, as nature cannot adapt proactively, and this LCLIP supplies some relevant comment. The first step in an LCLIP is to look at local media reports across the area and weather records for the last 5 years. These are compiled into a database of the type, location and severity of weather events affecting the District. They include ‘extreme’ events like gales, heat-waves, droughts, and of course flooding. As well, climate trends are important, such as longer growing seasons, the altering seasons and changing ‘typical weather’ each season. The second step is to interview key Council informants asking service managers about impacts and responses. Emails were sent out just before a request to interview. Issues were explored through semi-structured interviews, investigating recent events using the format appended. This format was distinct to that used in other LCLIPs, allowing discussions to strongly focus on weather relationships, trends and variables. 20 interviews were carried out, each about one hour long. Thirdly the researcher pulls together a report covering the findings and main issues to be addressed and feeds back findings to support follow-on actions.

3.2 WEATHER EVENTS OBSERVED - 2003 TO 2008

The full data set of weather-related news is compiled in the annex as a Word table supplies summarised media stories over the 5+ year record. The most frequent type of extreme weather is gales and storms with 14 events over this period, with 2006 – early 2007 particularly active, at the height of some of the warmest months in the UK long-term record. Over this 14-month period, the UK experienced the hottest July, the hottest April, hottest autumn and the hottest spring - and by a wide margin, the hottest single 12-month period. There were a high number of storms in this period, often associated with localized flash flooding in late-summer period often linked with breaking heat waves.

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16

Flooding is by far the most significant weather event in terms of damage to public and private assets, civil concern and service delivery implications, with four widespread events on record, two of these serious (2003 and 2007). Serious events of snow and ice are marginal in the 5-year record. No significant events were recorded by the media, and for Services, coping with severe winter weather has largely dropped off the agenda. Heat waves are infrequent in this short record, but if they recur on the scale of the 2003 event, would greatly impact human health, particularly for the elderly, children and other vulnerable groups. Impacts to infrastructure will include damage to buildings by tree and drought-related subsidence, roads, leisure facilities, drainage systems and business closures. Health effects will include large numbers of people suffering sunstroke, dehydration and (later) skin cancer. Two significant droughts have occurred in 2003, that then ran on into the 2004 – 2006 event. Multiple impacts resulted - and it is the case that if the 2004-2006 drought had run on into 2007 (beyond April 2007 – the hottest April since records began) then southern UK would have entered an unprecedented crisis. 1. Rain and flood Flooding has been the most frequent cause of incidents affecting council services. The OCC LCLIP reported more than 40 incidents have been reported in Oxfordshire due to flooding over past 15 years, from 14 heavy flood periods, summer and winter. There have been more than 12 incidents of summer flash flooding 1999- 2006 over the last six years. In Vale of White Horse since early 2003, significant flooding has occurred 6 times in the 5-year record. With flash flooding runoff rapidly occurs often within a couple of hours, making these unpredictable. Two major events occurred, with substantial river flooding (fluvial), in winter 2003, and very severe and widespread floods in late July1 2007. Catchments filled in the west, while rainfall intensities decreased towards the east of the District. Flooding problems were due to watercourses breaking out of their banks and excess surface flows from the land and in smaller watercourses. This mix of river and flash floods affected many towns and villages. As well, the record includes many smaller cases of flash flooding (pluvial), sometimes associated with **gales. In late-summer periods, flash floods are often linked with breaking heat waves. This was the case after both the 2006 and 2003 heat waves. While the summer 2007 floods cannot be attributed directly to climate change, it does provide an indication of the scale and nature of the extreme weather events we may experience as a result.

1 A study from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology of Britain’s wet summer in 2007 confirms that the floods were a

singular event. The report, The summer 2007 floods in England and Wales − a hydrological appraisal, brings together flood and meteorological data and breaks down the events leading to the flooding, for which no modern UK parallel exists. As the event is inconsistent with models predicting drier summers, it does not support the notion that this exceptional flooding was causally linked to climate change. Document here

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17

Table 2 – Categories used for Stories. Dates of major events & totals of each kind of event

Abbre-viation

Category & shading

Definition and explanation Dates + duration Hyperlink to each story

Number events

G / S

Gale / Storm / lightning / + flash floods

Strong, sometimes localised, winds (at least 50 up to 88 kph – Beaufort scale 7 to 9) that damage trees and buildings. This severe weather may be accompanied by lightning, and by rain or other precipitation capable of causing flash flooding. In the Beaufort scale, a storm is defined as a disturbance with wind speeds greater than those of a gale (from 89 up to 117 kph), so that in fact real ‘storms’ are very rare. Common use is not so restrictive and associates ‘storms’ with gusty, heavy rain and thunder. Gales and storms are usually significant once they lead to significant travel disruption.

September 2003 March 2004 July 2004 August 2004 June 2005 July 2006 July 2006 – event two October 2006 October 2006 – event two December 2006 January 2007 January 2007 – event two November 2007 March 2008

14

R / F

Excess sustained Rainfall + river / flash Flooding

Heavy rainfall (often widespread, intense and prolonged) that covers substantial areas, capable of causing both river and flash flooding.

January 2003 November 2006 (minor event) July 2007 are profiled here with a hydrological analysis here. June 2008

4

H / S

Heatwave / Excess Sun

A period of abnormally, uncomfortably hot, and usually humid weather, during which high day and night-time temperatures develop, almost always associated with intense sunshine. Defined in the Oxfordshire PCT 2008 Heatwave Plan and Met Office in terms of threshold temperatures - 16ºC overnight and 31ºC daytime - for at least two consecutive days with one intervening night, having significant effects on health.

“2003 Heatwave” – June to July 2003 has been profiled here. “2006 Heatwave” – June to July 2006 has been profiled here.

2

I / S

Ice / Snow / Fog

Significant coverage over fog, ice and/or snow, combined or singly, sufficient to cause travel delays.

February 2007 April 2008 October 2008

2

DT

Drought

Long periods of water deficit resulting in water scarcity. These are usually a combination of meteorological droughts due to direct rainfall deficiency; hydrological droughts where accumulated shortfalls in runoff or aquifer recharge are key; and agricultural droughts where availability of soil water through the growing season is critical. Usually associated with high pressure or 'blocking highs' dominating the weather.

2003 Drought – ran from April to October 2003 and profiled here. 2004 – 2006 Drought Relevant profiles by CEH Wallingford can be found here and here (for both 2003 and 2004-06)

2

AS

Altered seasons

Issues related to alterations to the typical dates of onset of the seasons, their length and intensity. This may affect plant growing season, plant phenology, species behaviour, and the ecological condition of habitats in the longer-term, particularly of species that are human pests. These kinds of shifts are certainly ‘climatic’, as they are departures from long-term averages, can be related to increased Central England Temperature and can very likely be attributed to human influence on the climate system.

n/a

RRP

Response, recovery and policy

Items relating to resilience and broader event-related issues, not the event as it is happening. These maybe to do with pre-event prevention / preparedness; and with post-event issues, related to quality if the emergency response, longer-term recovery after an event. These stories are particularly important when they cover adaptation to these events and the state of planning for mitigating disasters, and preventing the weather from having so many negative impacts.

n/a

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18

2. Sun and heatwaves Heat-waves have not occurred often over the last 5 years, but when they do the consequences are many, human and health costs arising from heat stress are high. Heat-waves in July/August 2003 and in July 2006 caused diverse impacts across the District illustrated in media accounts. These events are also firmly linked with a significant drought that occurred from 2003 and deepened in intensity over 2005 and 2006, only concluding in late spring 2007. The two heat waves were also associated with altered seasonality and changed growing seasons, over the winter of 2003/05 and as well and very significantly, in the winter of 2006/07. For that period, many records were broken. It is projected that heat waves as experienced in the summers of 2003 and 2006 could become a normal summer within 20-30 years. Impacts to infrastructure will include damage to buildings by tree and drought-related subsidence, roads, leisure facilities, drainage systems and business closures. Health effects on the community will include larger numbers of people suffering sunstroke, dehydration and skin cancer. Anti-social behaviour, burglaries and assaults are likely to increase in summer months. Bio-diversity impacts may include dried-up riverbeds, outbreaks of botulism and algae, and bird and insect losses. 3. Drought Two long dry spells affected the region between 2003 – 2005. The first began in October 2003. It is unclear if in meteorological terms this drought ‘broke’ in 2004. A spate of media mentions were made of increasing drought biting into District life in late 2004, with very significant concerns expressed in late 2005. The water restriction timeline began in April 2006 when Thames Water introduced a domestic hosepipe and sprinkler ban, the first in 15 years. In mid-April 2006, Thames Water applied to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs for an order to ban non-essential water use. In June 2006 a very wet May eased pressure on water supplies. Again, in August 2006, the county received twice the normal average rainfall amount for July, staving off suggestions that an emergency drought order should be imposed. By 18th January 2007, by the time the ban was lifted, hundreds of people across the county had been issued warnings. The combination of drought with flooding on clay soils in Oxfordshire has caused incidences of subsidence, which can have serious and costly consequences. This was poorly covered by the media, except for some mention of the costs to OCC of road repairs. This issue only came to light following publication of the OCC LCLIP. Fires that were clearly related to dry weather or lightning have been rare and minor in scale. 4. Gales and storms A few storm events pepper the record, with for example heavy winds in Sept 2003, May 2005, July 2006 and January 2007. These have caused some damage and loss of life, but would rate lower on the scale of concern than flooding. 4. Ice and snow Serious events of snow and ice are highly marginal in the 5 year record. No significant events were recorded by the media.

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19

3.3 AWARENESS OF TRENDS IN WEATHER AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Good local knowledge about the role of weather was evident with staff involved in team management and operational work. The Vale Climate Change Strategy shows that service managers have begun to consider the weather as a factor related to service planning. However, confounding factors often may make it hard to ‘blame the impacts’ under discussion directly to the weather. This report tries to unravel some of those links. Weather awareness is not the same as climate concern. Some Council staff stated they had noticed climate change, personally and professionally. Despite interest in the direction of climate change, the overall observation is that staff attitudes don’t yet demonstrate deep concern about climate adaptation – it is just another issue amongst many competing for busy people’s attention.

In carrying out the LCLIP research, a difficulty was the fading of informant’s memories of how a specific event unfolded, and recalling just what were the impacts and responses. Many of the known events that were picked up in the media trawl were not seen as 'extreme' by interviewees. The risk of climate change is still abstract (it might get hotter and drier, we might have more extreme events).

This is consistent with sociology research on how people react to climate risks, that concludes that people's response to risk has very little to do with the probability of something negative happening. People may be worried by unlikely events (dying in an airline crash, victim of terrorism), and demand major efforts to protect them from these, yet worry little about likely risks, such as being in a car crash. Being informed about the probability of something happening often impacts little on behaviour.

Concern about meeting performance targets and potential reputation damage helps drive local authority action for carbon mitigation. On the adaptation side, for the moment, accountability only applies to how adequate were Council responses during weather emergencies.

Public understandings await development as the climate issue evolves, and has effects on local lives in the future. Many community groups are unaware of flood and other weather related risks. As climate change impacts worsen, adaptation may become a potential concern of citizens, and Council teams may be held to account for the quality of VOWH ’s adaptation responses. If future responses are inadequate, this could damage the council’s reputation.

As well, fading of memories makes the risk seem limited and an issue in the long-term. Climate problems appear to develop slowly, like the remote effects of rising sea level. People do not process hazards associated with slow, long-term processes, or with infrequent events at all well.

Perception of risk is tied to the immediacy or vividness of events, and whether those events are personalized. On average, how likely they are to happen may not be that relevant. People's willingness to respond to potential hazards depends more on whether or not they think other people are responding, than on what the chance of the hazard affecting them is. This is why NI 188 argues for local authorities to work within enduring partnerships, between experts and practitioners, multiple stakeholders and across scales. This is essential for building adaptive capacity over the time scales required by climate change.

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3

.4 L

IST

OF

PR

OP

OS

ED

PR

IOR

ITY

AC

TIO

NS

WIT

H S

UG

GE

ST

ED

PR

IOR

ITY

LE

VE

LS

PRIORITY

LEVEL +

NUMBERS

ACTION PRIORITY BY SERVICE

COMMENT

1.

PLANNING AND COMMUNITY STRATEGY

i.

T

he u

pda

ted

VC

S s

hou

ld f

ully

enco

ura

ge p

rivate

la

nd

ow

ners

to c

lear

ditches a

nd

dra

ins.

Re

levan

t L

SP

mem

bers

should

take a

ll fe

asib

le m

easure

s t

o c

olla

bora

te o

n

avo

idance o

f ri

ver

and f

lash

flo

odin

g.

Specific

m

easure

s to

be develo

pe

d w

ith LS

P th

rou

gh an

nua

l upda

tin

g.

ii.

P

ropose

to

the

LS

P

Bo

ard

th

at

it

takes

on

a

role

in

m

onitori

ng

the

cro

ss-

org

an

isationa

l actions t

hat

the F

loo

d G

roups m

ight

requ

ire,

to t

ackle

pro

ble

ms t

hat

cro

p u

p d

urin

g im

ple

menta

tion.

Sup

port

ed b

y V

OW

H e

ngin

eeri

ng s

taff

, th

ese p

lans a

re l

ocally

im

ple

mente

d b

y F

lood

Action G

rou

ps.

The L

SP

sho

uld

monitor

and

supp

ort

m

easure

s

undert

aken

by

Flo

od

Actio

n

Gro

ups

thro

ug

h t

he c

om

munity r

esponse p

lans,

and e

nsure

th

at

these

lo

cal gro

ups r

ece

ive a

ll sup

port

ne

ede

d f

rom

LS

P o

rga

nis

ation

s

and o

ther

bod

ies.

The E

A is a

vita

l part

ner

and t

he V

OW

H-L

SP

-E

A r

ela

tionsh

ip i

s k

ey

to e

nsure

cohere

nce b

etw

een E

A w

ork

, V

OW

H a

ppro

aches a

nd L

SP

str

ate

gie

s a

nd a

ctio

n p

lans.

iii

.

Opport

un

itie

s f

or

loca

l actio

n d

uri

ng h

ea

twa

ves s

ho

uld

be e

xp

lore

d,

under

the le

ad

of

Oxfo

rdshire P

ST

.

The LS

P V

CS

A

ction P

lan fo

r th

e A

daptin

g to

E

xtr

em

e W

eath

er

them

e,

should

pro

pose a

ctio

ns f

or

the s

pe

ctr

um

of

extr

em

e e

vents

.

Work

needs t

o b

e d

one

to

assess a

ny p

ossib

le g

aps in m

eeting

th

e s

up

port

nee

ds o

f th

e e

lderl

y d

uri

ng

he

atw

aves.

Local

com

munity p

lans sh

ould

e

nsure

th

at

vuln

era

ble

gro

ups

are

id

entifie

d befo

reha

nd and lo

oked aft

er

during a

n extr

em

e

eve

nt. C

om

munity s

upport

to t

he e

lderl

y a

nd

oth

er

vu

lnera

ble

peop

le d

uri

ng f

loo

d e

ven

ts c

an b

e a

ddre

ssed l

oca

lly,

inste

ad o

f ju

st ale

rtin

g t

he C

ou

ncil

wh

en th

ere

is a

pro

ble

m.

iv

.

Apart

fr

om

D

efr

a and U

KC

IP g

uid

ance,

the

re

com

menda

tions of

the

P

itt

Re

vie

w

should

be

taken in

to a

cco

unt

wh

en d

evelo

pin

g t

he V

CS

Action

Pla

n.

This

covers

develo

pm

ents

in f

loo

d m

anagem

ent

researc

h a

nd

sets

out pro

posa

ls f

or

impro

vin

g loca

l a

uth

ori

ty e

ffectiven

ess.

v.

T

ham

es W

ate

r and U

KA

EA

as very

la

rge la

ndo

wne

rs acro

ss th

e D

istr

ict

ma

y be

inte

reste

d i

n d

eve

lop

ing

th

eir o

wn a

dap

tation p

lans a

nd c

olla

bora

ting

with t

he V

ale

LS

P.

Lik

ew

ise

the

role

of

the

Oxfo

rdshire

Econom

ic

Pa

rtn

ers

hip

, w

hic

h

seeks

to

work

on

en

viro

nm

enta

l as

well

as

socio

-econom

ic d

evelo

pm

ent, c

ould

be f

urt

her

de

velo

ped.

vi.

S

hare

ad

apta

tio

n info

rmation w

ith V

ale

LS

P B

oard

, in

clu

din

g t

his

LC

LIP

rep

ort

.

O

nce t

he V

CS

action p

lan

nin

g h

as a

dva

nced i

n 2

009

and s

ub-

work

ing-g

roups a

round t

he

mes h

ave b

ee

n s

et

up

, th

is w

ould

be

Page 21: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

21

the o

pport

unity t

o t

ackle

an

y i

ssues a

nd g

aps i

n t

he

VC

S t

ha

t need

more

attention.

vii.

Pro

mote

involv

em

ent

of

local b

usin

esses in a

dapta

tion

pla

nnin

g v

ia m

em

bers

of

local

Cham

bers

of

Com

merc

e k

een to

becom

e m

ore

invo

lve

d.

This

to b

e d

one a

longsid

e o

ther

Dis

tric

ts w

ith

UK

CIP

sup

port

. U

nder

the arg

um

ent

that

the

y shou

ld im

pro

ve th

eir

b

usin

ess

contin

uity p

lans to a

ccount

for

extr

em

e w

ea

ther

eve

nts

. 2. CONTRACT AND PROCUREMENT - PARKS AND OPEN SPACES

viii

.

Carr

y o

ut a s

tud

y to info

rm the n

ego

tia

tio

n o

f th

e n

ext

main

tenance c

ontr

act.

Bear

in m

ind t

hat

the o

vera

ll cost

incre

ase c

ould

tota

l a r

ou

gh

£50,0

00 p

er

year.

ix.

P

rocure

ment

of

pla

nts

an

d la

ndscape serv

ices sho

uld

ta

ke account

of

adapta

tio

n

measure

s

and

be

consis

tent

with

an

upd

ate

d

Cou

ncil’

s

Gre

en

Sp

ace

&

Sp

ort

S

trate

gy.

This

is a

lrea

dy id

entified in V

OW

H’s

CC

str

ate

gy.

x.

E

ng

agem

ent

with loca

l use

rs o

f re

cre

ationa

l a

nd o

ther

ope

n s

paces m

ight

be n

ee

ded

to

info

rm a

bout cha

nges in p

olic

y a

nd o

bta

in local in

pu

t.

Atte

ntion

mig

ht

be

ne

ede

d

if

there

w

ere

com

pla

ints

due

to

diffe

rent m

anagem

ent.

xi.

P

rom

ote

tre

e p

lanting u

sin

g a

ppro

priate

specie

s f

or

the a

rea t

hat

are

to

lera

nt

of

hot

weath

er,

flo

odin

g a

nd d

rou

ght.

Follo

w de

ve

lopm

ents

in

F

ore

str

y C

om

mis

sio

n advic

e fo

r tr

ee

specie

s a

nd p

rove

nance

se

lection.

xii.

Incre

ased t

arg

ets

for

gre

en i

nfr

astr

uctu

re a

cro

ss t

he c

ouncil’

s l

and p

ort

folio

would

le

ad to n

ew

pla

ntings o

f la

rger

num

bers

of

urb

an s

ha

de tre

es.

If th

is becam

e a priority

th

at

wou

ld h

elp

lo

cal

resid

ents

cope

w

ith f

utu

re h

eatw

aves.

xiii

.

Pro

moting gre

ate

r w

ate

rin

g eff

icie

ncy

in gard

ens an

d com

munal

gre

en space

s b

y encoura

gin

g a

n o

ptim

al ch

oic

e o

f specie

s a

s a

n e

lem

ent

in lan

dscapin

g s

chem

es.

3. BIODIVERSITY MANAGEMENT

xiv.

T

he c

ouncil

shou

ld c

arr

y o

ut

a r

evie

w o

f C

ouncil

ow

ned/c

ontr

olle

d l

oca

l sites a

nd

th

eir m

anagem

ent.

The i

nfo

rmation b

ase

sho

uld

dra

w o

n t

he s

taff

of

bio

div

ers

ity

org

an

isations

involv

ed

acro

ss

the

Dis

tric

t an

d

Co

un

ty,

and

should

in

volv

e

coord

inatio

n

with

UK

CIP

a

nd

oth

er

na

tion

al

bod

ies s

uch a

s N

atu

ral E

ng

lan

d.

xv.

C

arr

y o

ut

a w

ider

revie

w o

f clim

ate

adapta

tion s

tra

teg

ies u

sed b

y c

om

munity n

atu

re

conserv

atio

n p

roje

cts

supp

ort

ed b

y t

he C

ou

ncil.

Best

run i

n l

iais

on

with o

ther

Dis

tric

t auth

orities.

As w

ell,

much

pot

fundin

g is

jo

intly sup

plie

d to

b

iod

ivers

ity org

anis

atio

ns b

y

Dis

tric

ts a

nd O

CC

for

the

Oxfo

rdshire B

iodiv

ers

ity A

ction

Pla

n,

and

measure

s

decid

ed

upon

ma

y nee

d

to

be

wri

tte

n

into

fu

ndin

g a

gre

em

ents

.

6. WASTE MANAGEMENT

xvi.

P

ossib

le j

oin

t w

aste

co

llection t

eam

betw

ee

n S

OD

C a

nd V

OW

H w

ill r

eq

uire f

ulle

r

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22

record

keepin

g o

f costs

of

serv

ice d

isru

ption f

rom

severe

wea

ther

incid

ents

and t

he

revis

ion o

f schedule

s.

xvii.

Develo

p join

tly w

ith

OC

C a

work

pro

gra

mm

e f

or

gully

/ d

rain

-cle

ari

ng.

xviii

.

Revis

e

leaf-

cle

an

ing

alo

ngsid

e

the

gra

ss

main

ten

ance

schedu

le

in

line

with

th

e

chang

ing le

ngth

of

the s

easons.

xix

.

Investig

ate

th

e

su

ita

bili

ty

for

win

dy

con

ditio

ns

of

the

conta

iners

used

to

co

llect

dom

estic w

aste

for

dis

posal

an

d r

ecyc

ling.

Lik

ew

ise

, re

vie

w t

he l

ong-t

erm

suita

bili

ty

of

hig

h-s

ided w

aste

co

llection lorr

ies.

Ad

vic

e t

o t

he p

ublic

abo

ut

to h

ow

to w

eig

h d

ow

n b

ins m

ay

be

need

ed.

xx.

R

evie

w i

f th

e f

requency o

f gre

en w

aste

co

llectio

ns i

n s

um

mer

mig

ht

need a

dju

sting

under

a h

eat

wave,

if s

o a

routin

e f

or

this

and g

uid

ance t

o h

ouseho

lds w

ould

nee

d t

o

be p

repare

d.

xxi.

E

nsure

ada

pta

tion

measure

s a

re a

ccou

nte

d f

or

in f

utu

re w

aste

co

llectio

n c

ontr

acts

.

7. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

xxii.

The L

EA

DE

R+

pro

gra

mm

e c

ould

esta

blis

h a

specific

lin

e o

f fu

ndin

g,

by e

nga

gin

g

with

expert

org

anis

atio

ns l

ike U

KC

IP,

to d

esig

n h

ow

support

fro

m t

he f

und c

an

be

based o

n re

al

assessed b

usin

ess ne

eds,

and w

hat

kin

ds of

pro

jects

w

ould

m

erit

clim

ate

ada

pta

tion

fundin

g.

This

assessm

ent could

involv

e local C

ham

bers

of

Com

merc

e.

xxiii

.

Recom

mend th

at

- alo

ngsid

e O

xfo

rdshire C

ounty

C

ouncil,

O

xfo

rdshire E

co

no

mic

P

art

ners

hip

, an

d n

eig

hb

ouri

ng

Dis

tric

t C

ouncils

, V

OW

H s

hou

ld e

ngag

e p

rivate

secto

r part

ners

and

busin

esses i

n a

join

t re

vie

w o

f th

e i

mplic

atio

ns o

f clim

ate

scenari

os f

or

futu

re b

usin

ess d

eve

lopm

ent.

This

could

le

arn

fro

m o

ther

local a

uth

ori

ties’ goo

d p

ractice,

such

as t

he h

igh le

ve

ls o

f busin

ess e

ngagem

ent

in c

limate

adapta

tion

activitie

s a

ch

ieved b

y K

ent

County

Council.

xxiv

.

Develo

p n

ew

opport

unitie

s f

or

tourism

in the D

istr

ict.

An a

ssessm

ent

of

som

e e

arlie

r scop

ing s

tudie

s s

ug

gests

tha

t th

is

mig

ht

requ

ire

som

e

specia

list

input

from

clim

ate

and

tourism

expert

s,

as

well

as

consu

ltatio

n

with

touri

sm

re

pre

senta

tives.

xxv.

A

ris

k a

ssessm

ent should

be u

ndert

aken to e

nsure

th

at

council-

ow

ned p

ropert

ies a

re

as p

rote

cte

d a

s p

ossib

le f

rom

gale

s, heat

wa

ves a

nd

flo

od r

isk.

Page 23: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

23

xxvi.

In

th

e e

ven

t of

a f

loo

d e

merg

ency,

gu

idance a

nd r

eh

ea

rsed p

rocedure

s m

ust be

ava

ilab

le t

o th

e E

co

nom

ic D

evelo

pm

ent te

am

to e

na

ble

them

to c

om

munic

ate

pro

active

ly.

This

ensure

s t

hat

vis

itors

and b

usin

esses a

re g

ive

n a

n a

ccura

te

pic

ture

duri

ng a

n e

xtr

em

e w

eath

er

even

t.

xxvii.

When p

lan

nin

g e

vents

in

m

ark

et

tow

ns,

care

ful

tho

ug

ht

is n

ee

ded c

oncern

ing t

he

lo

cation a

nd

date

s o

f fu

ture

events

.

Durin

g r

iskie

r tim

es o

f ye

ar

for

sto

rms,

it m

ay b

e s

ensib

le t

o

avo

id b

ookin

g c

hild

ren

’s inflata

ble

s f

or

outd

oor

eve

nts

.

8. COMMUNITY SAFETY

xxviii

.

Ana

lysis

of

rela

tionship

s

betw

een

h

eat

wa

ves

and

nu

isance

beh

avio

ur

is

recom

mended.

The m

ore

fr

equent

and

inte

nse

heat

wa

ves pro

jecte

d

under

clim

ate

change

scenari

os h

ave a

pote

ntially

ne

gative

influe

nce

on

sum

mer-

rela

ted

crim

es

and

antisocia

l be

ha

vio

ur.

If

re

lationsh

ips a

nd r

isks a

re s

ignific

ant,

managem

ent

pla

ns c

an

be p

ut in

pla

ce.

xxix

.

An w

eath

er

eve

nts

and com

munity safe

ty in

cid

ents

data

base could

be cre

ate

d to

w

hic

h w

eath

er

vari

able

s c

ould

easily

be a

dd

ed.

W

hile

nuis

ance c

om

pla

ints

do s

eem

to b

e r

ela

ted t

o b

oth

th

e

seasons a

nd th

e h

eat, n

o m

onitoring s

yste

m e

xis

ts.

xxx.

C

onsid

er

inclu

sio

n

of

we

ath

er-

rela

ted

issues

with

in

the

V

ale

C

rim

e

Part

ne

rship

in

dic

ato

r set.

A

s th

ese

are

‘refr

eshed a

nnua

lly’, th

ey m

ay be

a ch

ance to

in

clu

de a

n o

vera

ll in

dic

ato

r in

futu

re.

xxxi.

E

xplo

re t

he P

art

ners

hip

’s p

ote

ntia

l ro

le i

n i

dentify

ing a

nd s

upport

ing t

hose r

esid

ents

vu

lnera

ble

to f

lood

ing a

nd h

eatw

aves.

Thro

ugh e

ng

agin

g c

om

munitie

s,

an

d h

elp

ing l

ead a

gen

cie

s l

ike

the P

ST

and E

nvironm

ent

agency t

o k

eep t

he

ir d

ata

ba

ses a

nd

lis

ts u

pdate

d.

9. COMMERCIAL SERVICES - PROPERTY AND ESTATES

xxxii.

Deplo

y

gre

ate

r p

lannin

g

resourc

es

and

socia

l scie

nce

exp

ert

ise

to

en

able

com

pre

hensiv

e F

AG

str

ate

gic

an

d a

ction p

lann

ing.

Develo

p t

he F

loo

d A

ction G

roup p

rogra

mm

e s

o t

hat

the lessons learn

t can b

e s

hare

d

with o

ther

Au

thori

ties f

acin

g s

imila

r pro

ble

ms.

The i

ssue o

f th

eir

in

tegra

tion w

ith

Parish C

ou

ncils

ma

y n

eed t

o

be c

lari

fied,

so

th

at

the

y t

he G

roups o

pera

te i

n f

ull

part

ners

hip

and w

ith

pu

blic

accounta

bili

ty.

xxxiii

.

Continu

e t

o s

upport

FA

Gs s

o t

he

y sh

are

resourc

es,

link-in t

o a

vaila

ble

fund

ing a

nd

learn

fro

m o

ther

more

adva

nced g

roups thro

ug

h a

com

munity o

f pra

ctice.

xxxiv

.

Seek a V

ale

LS

P ro

le fo

r sharing

experi

ence an

d goo

d capacity-b

uild

ing pra

ctice

under

the

Liv

ing

with E

xtr

em

e W

eath

er

them

e,

as w

ell

as d

evelo

p a

n L

SP

overs

ight

role

of

the m

ulti-ag

ency d

eliv

ery

requ

irem

ents

of

FA

G A

ctio

n P

lans.

xxxv.

C

onserv

e senio

r m

anage

ment

expert

ise to

allo

w fo

r continu

ed ste

era

ge of

flood

pre

ve

ntion w

ork

and c

om

mitm

ent to

a s

ocia

lly-c

ohere

nt

response.

Consid

era

ble

experi

ence

has

been

develo

ped

and

go

od

pra

ctice

has

be

en

gen

era

ted.

This

should

b

e

safe

gua

rde

d

durin

g th

e o

ngo

ing

re-o

rga

nis

ation o

f S

OD

C a

nd V

OW

H.

Page 24: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

24

xxxvi.

R

evie

w t

he m

anpo

wer

sta

tus o

f la

nd d

rain

ag

e e

ng

ine

ering

an

d t

he

im

plic

ations o

f th

e

backlo

g,

and

exam

ine

if

furt

her

sta

ff

mig

ht

nee

d

to

be

ta

ken

on

and

bu

dg

ets

in

cre

ased

.

xxxvii.

Work

still

ne

eds t

o b

e d

on

e o

n t

he l

on

ger-

term

educatio

n o

f re

sid

en

ts i

n c

on

ne

ction

w

ith a

ware

ness a

nd a

llevia

tion o

f flood r

isk.

Pa

y m

ore

atte

ntion t

o i

nvo

lvin

g y

oung

pe

op

le w

ho

will

be

liv

ing

w

ith e

nha

nced f

lood r

isk t

hro

ugh t

heir l

ives.

Active

ly e

ncoura

ge

th

e p

ub

lic t

o s

ign

up f

or

cellp

ho

ne-d

eliv

ere

d F

lood

Info

rmation

A

lert

s.

xxxviii

.

Recom

mend

appro

achin

g

OC

C

and

the

Hig

hw

ays

Agency

to

esta

blis

h

a

join

t pro

gra

mm

e and exam

ine ho

w to

poo

l an

d fo

cus re

sourc

es,

to im

pro

ve dra

inage

main

tenance c

apacitie

s.

xxxix

.

Pro

pose t

hat

VO

WH

can i

ndic

ate

anti-f

lood m

easure

s a

nd c

om

panie

s s

elli

ng t

hese

(witho

ut e

ndors

ing)

pro

ducts

on a

ded

icate

d p

age o

n V

OW

H’s

site.

Peo

ple

w

hose

houses

are

at

flo

od

ing

risk

should

ta

ke

responsib

ility

fo

r anti-f

lood

m

easure

s and not

mere

ly re

ly o

n

sandba

gs p

rovid

ed b

y t

he

council

xl.

E

xplo

re o

pport

unitie

s f

or

work

ing w

ith b

od

ies s

uch a

s t

he N

ation

al F

arm

ers

’ U

nio

n t

o

pro

mote

conserv

atio

n

tilla

ge

an

d

oth

er

measure

s

tha

t w

ould

in

cre

ase

wate

r absorp

tion.

Where

action s

eem

s d

esira

ble

, V

OW

H c

ould

off

er

to c

olla

bora

te

on t

hese m

easure

s w

ith

ag

encie

s s

uch

as t

he

Natio

na

l F

arm

ers

’ U

nio

n a

nd t

he C

oun

try L

an

d a

nd B

usin

ess A

ssocia

tion

.

10. BUILDING CONTROL

xli.

Move b

eyo

nd c

urr

ent

build

ing p

ractice a

nd c

od

es w

ithin

VO

WH

pla

nnin

g a

nd b

uild

ing

contr

ol to

actively

id

entify

and h

elp

incorp

ora

te inn

ovative h

om

e e

ngin

eeri

ng

solu

tions

by ind

ivid

ua

ls a

nd d

eve

lop

ers

seekin

g a

ppro

val of

pro

posed p

roje

cts

.

In lin

e w

ith

L

SP

C

om

munity S

trate

gy sta

tem

ent

- V

OW

H w

ill

‘enco

ura

ge c

hang

es i

n h

ousin

g d

esig

n t

o c

op

e w

ith

ch

angin

g

weath

er

patt

ern

s,

inclu

din

g

passiv

e

coo

ling

in

their

desig

n;

adeq

uate

gutt

erin

g t

o c

op

e w

ith heavy d

ow

np

ours

and

gra

ve

l drivew

ays a

nd o

ther

poro

us s

urf

aces t

o r

educe

surf

ace w

ate

r ru

n-o

ff’ .

xlii

.

Guid

ance n

eeds t

o b

e a

va

ilable

for

impro

vin

g v

entila

tio

n s

yste

ms in n

ew

an

d e

xis

ting

housin

g

sto

ck,

to

pre

-em

pt

use

of

unsusta

inab

le

ene

rgy-h

ungry

air

co

nditio

nin

g

sys

tem

s.

Som

e re

searc

h in

to flood-p

roofing te

ch

no

log

ies th

at

could

be

re

trofitted t

o b

uild

ings a

t risk o

f river

flood

ing c

ou

ld b

e u

sefu

l.

11.

PLANNING POLICY AND DEVELOPMENT

xlii

i.

C

ontinu

e t

o e

nsure

that

futu

re n

ew

-bu

ild d

evelo

pm

en

t is

not

locate

d o

n f

lood

pla

ins,

and t

ha

t pla

nn

ing c

ontin

ue

s t

o t

ake a

ccount

of

floo

din

g t

rends in t

hose a

reas t

hat

are

at a h

igh r

isk o

f flood

ing.

xliv

.

Requ

ire t

hat

sta

ff a

nd m

em

bers

get

specia

list

tra

inin

g o

n a

da

pta

tio

n m

easure

s,

so

the

y ca

n o

ut

into

pra

ctice a

ny n

ew

req

uirem

ents

laid

out

in n

ew

Pla

nn

ing A

dvic

e N

ote

(g

enera

ted t

hro

ugh t

he u

pd

ate

d P

olic

y o

n S

usta

inab

le C

onstr

uction).

Care

shou

ld

be

giv

en

to

ensure

th

at

all

ne

w

de

velo

pm

ents

w

ould

be

able

to

cop

e

with

futu

re

pre

dic

ted

sum

mer

tem

pera

ture

s.

Passiv

e c

oo

ling a

nd g

ree

n i

nfr

astr

uctu

re s

hould

be a

ctively

purs

ued in n

ew

develo

pm

ents

where

ver

po

ssib

le.

Page 25: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

25

xlv

.

Ensure

perio

dic

assessm

ent

of

ho

w p

lan

nin

g a

pplic

ations a

re m

onitori

ng w

ith r

egard

to

clim

ate

thre

ats

& o

pport

unitie

s to h

ab

ita

t pro

tectio

n.

xlv

i.

R

equ

ire c

loser

work

ing b

etw

een b

uild

ing c

ontr

ol a

nd

pla

nnin

g.

This

will

allo

w s

ignific

an

t p

lan

nin

g a

pp

licatio

ns t

o b

e a

ssessed

fo

r com

plia

nce w

ith u

pdate

d P

lan

nin

g A

dvic

e.

12. EMERGENCY PLANNING

xlv

ii.

E

nsure

th

at

furt

her

upda

ted em

erg

ency p

lans and

all

pro

ce

dure

s co

ver

not

only

floodin

g,

but

dea

l in

depth

with r

isks a

risin

g f

rom

heatw

aves,

dro

ug

hts

an

d s

torm

ha

zard

s.

13.

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, PROTECTION AND FOOD SAFETY

xlv

iii.

W

e r

ecom

mend t

hat

specia

list

org

an

isations s

uch a

s t

he N

ation

al

Pest

Technic

ians’

Associa

tion

shou

ld b

e c

on

sulted

in o

rder

to a

ssess n

ationa

l pe

st

trends a

s c

limate

change

pro

gre

sses.

Local

da

ta

on

tr

en

ds

in

the

typ

es

and

se

veri

ty

of

pests

in

re

lation t

o w

eath

er

varia

ble

s is h

ard

to o

bta

in.

xlix

.

The i

ntr

od

uction o

f ne

w h

um

an d

iseases a

nd p

ath

og

en

s d

ue

to

clim

ate

cha

ng

e i

s a

huge

are

a o

f concern

and r

equ

ires r

outine m

onitorin

g.

l.

V

OW

H should

consid

er

takin

g on a fu

ller

role

a

long

sid

e O

xfo

rdshire P

CT

and

its

part

ners

in a

llevia

tin

g th

e h

eat str

ess s

uff

ere

d b

y v

uln

era

ble

users

of

socia

l care

.

This

w

ou

ld

requ

ire

VO

WH

appro

ach

ing

the

PC

T

to

asse

ss

wheth

er

a s

upp

ort

role

ca

n b

e c

reate

d t

ha

t m

atc

hes V

OW

H’s

com

pete

ncie

s.

13.

ORGANISATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT -HUMAN RESOURCES

li.

S

tocks o

f w

ell-

made p

ow

erf

ul

fans s

hould

be a

vaila

ble

in V

OW

H’s

facili

ties t

o a

vo

id

the nee

d fo

r m

akin

g em

erg

ency purc

hases w

hen a

heat

wa

ve str

ikes and w

hen

dem

and f

or

these ite

ms in s

tore

s is o

verw

he

lmin

g.

Due to

ele

ctr

icity consum

ptio

n,

costs

an

d carb

on

em

issio

ns,

investing in

off

ice a

ir c

ond

itio

nin

g is lik

ely

to b

e in

eff

icie

nt

and

is

not re

com

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4. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

This LCLIP report should now provide enough evidence to approach senior management to decide on adaptation activities.

4.1 SIGNIFICANT OPPORTUNITIES AND VULNERABILITIES

The following are the ten highest priority issues, selected using the consultant’s best judgement:

i) Propose to the LSP Board that it takes on a role in monitoring the cross-organisational actions that the Flood Groups might require, to tackle problems that crop up during implementation.

ii) Share adaptation information with Vale LSP Board, including this LCLIP report.

iii) VOWH should engage private sector partners and businesses in a joint review of the

implications of climate scenarios for future business development. This will promote involvement of local businesses in adaptation planning via those members of local Chambers of Commerce that are keen to become more involved.

iv) Increased targets for green infrastructure across the council’s land portfolio could lead to new

plantings of larger numbers of urban shade trees using appropriate species and provenances. v) Carry out a wider review of climate adaptation strategies used by community nature

conservation projects supported by the Council, as well as Council owned/controlled local sites and their management. Information should be collected about preparedness of biodiversity partner organisations for oncoming weather / climate impacts on biodiversity.

vi) Analysis of relationships between weather, seasonality and nuisance behaviour is

recommended. If relationships and risks are significant, management plans should be put in place.

vii) Opportunities for local action during heatwaves should be explored, under the lead of

Oxfordshire PST. This would require VOWH approaching the PCT to assess whether a support role can be created that matches VOWH ’s competencies.

viii) Deploy greater planning resources and social science expertise to enable comprehensive FAG

strategic and action planning. Develop the Flood Action Group programme so that the lessons learnt can be shared with other Authorities facing similar problems.

ix) Move beyond current building practice and codes within VOWH planning and building control

to actively identify and help incorporate innovative home engineering solutions by individuals and developers seeking approval of proposed projects.

x) Involve VOWH and LSP partners in wider climate change actions through Oxfordshire Climate

Change Partnership and the Climate South East Partnership. Collaborate county-wide constructing a monitoring system to record events, log impacts and hold data on the weather that caused them.

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4.2 CONCLUSIONS

1 Service coping. This LCLIP has not found evidence of weather events overwhelming VOWH services. Except for the 2007 summer floods, highly damaging emergency events have not occurred in the 5-year record. There were almost no cases were Council responses were overwhelmed, VOWH reputation damaged or a great deal of extra man-power was needed. Few gaps and un-addressed vulnerabilities were found during the LCLIP research. Vale of White Horse is a well-buffered district, where we have been lucky that the kinds of weather events we have seen in recent times have not been catastrophic, and were responded to within management abilities and current resources. Much adaptation by services has already occurred, as part of good management and risk assessment. Despite the robust coping systems in place, the risk of ‘extreme weather’ causing overwhelming impacts to VOWH is apparent. 1 Costs. This study has not been able to demonstrate large costs to the Council from extreme weather events. Reporting mechanisms do not cover weather as a costed variable, so some impacts may stay hidden. It is likely that direct costs reported of weather events are limited – as shown for example by minimal insurance claims for subsidence. Identified costs are not significant in comparison with the overall VOWH budgets. It is appropriate that the costs of the impacts of weather on services continue to be treated within operating budgets. 2 Reputation. It is often noted that concern about potential Council reputation damage is now a driver of local authority action for carbon mitigation. On the adaptation side, for the moment, accountability only applies to the adequacy of Council responses to weather emergencies. Public understandings will mature as weather impacts are felt and climate change evolve, and affects local livelihoods in the future. Some sectors of the community are not aware of flood and other weather related risks. As climate change impacts worsen, adaptation may become a potential concern of citizens, and Council teams may be held to account for the quality of VOWH’s adaptation responses. Any lack of guidance and advice to the public and District businesses, which contribute to future inadequate responses, could damage the council’s reputation. 3 Staff understandings. Good local weather knowledge was evident with staff involved in operational work, however most service managers have not usually considered the weather as a factor that relates to service planning and delivery. Confounding factors often may make it hard to ‘blame the impacts’ under discussion directly to the weather. In carrying out the LCLIP research, a real difficulty was the fading of informant’s memories of how a specific event unfolded, and recalling just what were the impacts and responses.

Many of the known events that were picked up in the media trawl were not seen as 'extreme' by interviewees. Some Council staff stated they had personally and professionally ‘noticed’ climate change. Despite some interest in the effects and direction of climate change, the overall observation is that staff attitudes do not yet demonstrate of deep concern about climate issues. Almost all interviewees are just witnessing changed weather patterns, rather than understanding causes and anticipating climate change impacts. 4 Flooding issue. The 2007 flood led to a comprehensive assessment of VOWH DC’s responses within those of the team of agencies that had to attend to the emergency. Given the scale of the event, responses were very good, according to the internal review and this assessment. VOWH’s Flood Management Strategy is well-developed, for example clearly laying out the sliding scale of actions that should be enforced when dealing with recalcitrant riparian landowners who won’t maintain their watercourses.

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5 Flood Action Groups. The public is aware that resources are limited for VOWH to solve all drainage problems. This is a good reason for VOWH to invest resources to develop a robust network of Flood Action Groups across the District. Considerable effort has been ongoing by VOWH to build local resilience to flooding through exemplary work to foster and support Flood Action Groups. Flood Action Groups have a role when no large structured engineering options are available to reduce flood risk, and local flood risk can improve through channel maintenance and small-scale measures.

This correctly makes groups at Parish-level responsible for key tasks like detecting poorly maintained waterways, developing plans, seeking funding and assistance from other agencies and engaging communities. This work appears to be generating examples of good practice, making VOWH compare very well with other District Councils in Oxfordshire in its advanced engagement with the issue. 6 Engineering Services Capacity. The scale of the work needed to manage the Vale’s secondary drainage is beyond VOWH’s resources. Under Commercial Services, VOWH’s drainage inspection and engineering team has an excessive work load, given staff and resources, to meet its responsibilities, for example mapping the trouble spots that have been identified in successive flood incidents across the District. Under current resource limitations, this is unlikely to be rectified. 7 Risk management. The risk of repeated extreme weather events is gradually growing. Return periods for extreme events are shortening as the CET heating trend implies that average conditions are changing. Likelihood and magnitudes of future events have been projected by UKCIP and others. A robust statement is that events of all kinds, except cold-related ones, are likely to become progressively much more serious than today. We must anticipate growing impacts on the community and other stakeholders, regardless of the limited financial implications of extreme weather to date for VOWH.

8 Attention to flooding. Compared with other weather events, flooding takes up the lion’s share of Council attention and resources. While the summer 2007 floods cannot be attributed directly to climate change, it does indicate the scale and nature of the extreme weather events we may experience. While this focus on flooding is not misapplied, it may require some review. Other types of events could require effort on a similar scale, particularly heat waves and droughts. 9 Two droughts in the record were associated with altered seasonality (very pronounced over the winters of 2003/04 and 2006/07) and heatwaves (2003 + 2006). Drought is something of a forgotten issue – in spite of recent events and the consistency with which droughts appear in models of southern England’s future climate. However, compared with flooding, local authorities have few statutory obligations for coping with these effects. 10 Grass-cutting service operation is becoming over-stretched. Altering seasonality is causing a direct impact on the Council, with Landscape Services in late 2008 emerging from what was ‘an impossible workload’, due to copious grass growth, that could not be cut during the very wet summer of 2008. This had knock-on effects for the Council’s contractor, unable to carry out other landscape maintenance obligations.

The active grass-growing season is now at least 6 weeks longer than it was 20 years ago. This is due to the extending season of grass growth due to recent wetter summer months, and milder temperatures during the winter period associated with climate change. The wetter summer periods over 2007 and 2008 have impacted on the grass cutting timetables of the Council.

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11 The tree stock suffers routine levels of damage from storms, while subsidence due to floods or droughts is uncommon and not considered to be an issue resulting in claims. For example the 2-3 storms per year that have little affected the District, beyond causing travel disruption, so they carry few implications for VOWH DC. Even when Storm Kyrill struck the area in January 2007, almost no impacts were reported in the media. 12 Except for flood warnings, almost no monitoring of weather variables occurs. Little in the way of quantitative data is available to deepen understandings of the degree of the impacts. Weather-related staff time and financial costs are not separately identified and monitored. No logging mechanism is planned nor in place that would enable the monitoring of event variables. 13 The effects of weather events and of climate trends on the Council’s strategic goals have begun to be assessed. On a time scale of one to two decades, Council services are vulnerable to more and larger-scale weather events. Business continuity plans do not yet cover weather risks, may be incomplete. While VOWH service areas exposed to weather impacts have started to adapt, given the unknown future evolution of weather impacts, we argue for a proactive approach to strategically manage the impacts of future weather.

4.3 RECOMMENDATIONS

1 There is a growing risk of repeated extreme weather events. Return periods for extreme events and average conditions are changing. Likelihood and magnitudes of future events can only be projected, but further into the future, are likely to be much more serious than today. We must anticipate growing impacts on the community and other stakeholders, regardless of the limited financial implications of extreme weather to date. 2 Recommend that follow-up sessions be carried out with operational managers, using this report to confirm findings and extend understandings of weather impacts, using risk management as a suitable vehicle. Risk management sessions should develop action plans for LCLIP-style reporting, that monitors weather and considers the changing climate.

3 Climate change adaptation in VOWH should go beyond a managerial approach, and encompass climate change education of the staff base. With some staff awareness-raising, attitudes could build-up to become a driver for delivering adaptation. Extreme weather should be included as a corporate risk. Service-level adjustments to the authority’s risk register should explain how services are currently affected - and will be affected in the future - and identify adaptation options that plug particular vulnerabilities. 4 Oxfordshire Climate Change Partnership and the Climate South East Partnership can play a useful role in building capacity. As VOWH’s climate strategy suggests, VOWH should participate itself, and as well encourage LSP partners to become involved, by themselves participating in meetings and actions. Joint acting on significant issues would encourage more distributed involvement. This will aid VOWH sustain a diversity of partner interests in countywide community actions that integrate mitigation and adaptation. 5 Collaborate county-wide constructing a monitoring system to record events, log impacts and hold data on the weather that caused them. This would help in decision-making in two ways: •••• As thresholds of a given variable are crossed at the onset of extreme weather, responses would come into play to mitigate impacts through early warning, as for river flooding; •••• More widely, monitoring the impacts of weather as a factor in service delivery causing extra costs and increased demands.

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However, beyond flooding, exactly how the system would work, what variables and impacts should be tracked, by whom and why, needs joint research. 6 The approaches used by VOWH with other agencies to stimulate local efforts by Flood Action Groups should be shared with neighbouring authorities, where similar efforts are at earlier stages (such as SODC). However, first of all the need is to identify the lessons of the work underway – what exactly are the best practices that support partnership working, increase awareness and enable working together? This requires some social science research. 7 Taking the opportunity to share good practice will also boost horizontal contacts between Groups in various stages of development and promote their regional integration, providing benefits for the groups in the Vale. Taking on leadership in this area could also provide reputation gains for VOWH. 8 Assess the budgetary requirements of increased manpower across long wet grass growing period (from early April through to November under current climate change). There is a need to revise leaf-clearing and grass maintenance schedules and resources in line with the changing length of the seasons. A bid to increase the Landscape Services budget by approx. £ 40 - 60,000 per year may be required. 9 The new LEADER programme based at SODC could provide opportunities to work on joint adaptation projects with local stakeholders, members of the LSP or of Chambers of Commerce. 10 Further police analysis of the relationships that exist between heat waves and nuisance behaviour is recommended. 14 Opportunities for collaborating with Oxfordshire PCT’s heat wave Plan could be explored as a breakthrough project for joint work with the LSP. With partners, VOWH could approach the PCT to assess whether a support role can be created that matches LSP partners and VOWH ’s competencies, to jointly cope in the aftermath of a heatwave. 15 Learn from other local authorities’ good practice, such as the high levels of business engagement in climate adaptation activities achieved by Kent County Council. Alongside Oxfordshire County Council and neighbouring District Councils, VOWH could engage private sector partners and businesses in a joint review of the implications of climate scenarios for future business development.

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APPENDICES

APPENDIX 1: OXFORDSHIRE’S CLIMATE WITHIN GLOBAL CHANGE

This section draws on a variety of sources for findings and figures about Oxfordshire’s climate, setting climate information in the UK spatial context, then within the global setting

1.1 GLOBAL CHANGE

Despite some outlier contrarian opinion, the consensus (see here / here) around climate change science is robust, expressed as “unequivocal” in the 2007 assessment report by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC2). The Working Group examining the Physical Science in the Summary for Policy Makers stated:

• Changes in abundance of greenhouse gases3 (GHGs), aerosols, solar radiation and land properties, have significantly altered the climate system’s energy balance.

• GHG concentrations far exceed pre-industrial values, with current concentrations of CO2 much higher than the natural range over the last 650,000 years, and probably higher than at any time in the last 20 million years. Carbon emissions (3% per year) and atmospheric concentrations (2.2 ppm / year) are growing faster than ever recorded.

• Global land and ocean temperatures have already increased by 0.8 OC causing sea levels to rise and worldwide ice melting - warming is "unequivocal.

• It is at least 90% certain that human emissions of greenhouse gases, rather than natural variations, are responsible for global warming over the past 50 years.

• Improved computer modelling has increased confidence in climate projections that temperature rises, sea level increases and ice melting will continue.

There is no significant dispute within the expert community as to the reality or causes of manmade global warming. Oreskes stated ‘scientists publishing in the peer-reviewed literature agree with IPCC…. and public statements of their professional societies. Politicians, economists, journalists, and others may have the impression of confusion, disagreement, or discord among climate scientists, but that impression is incorrect’. We have reached the end of the wide science debate when it had been uncertain that significant climate change is occurring, is largely caused by humanity and that natural variations are complementary, not primary, causes. The human enterprise is clearly performing a massive shift in the distribution of carbon that has been stored over hundreds of millions of years in the crust of the earth, moving part of that material - in just a century or so - back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide and methane.

The ‘mitigation agenda’ addresses the causes of climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere. A target has been set by the EU to limit global warming to 2˚ Celsius, a level that is believed does not lead to dangerous climate change, and was thought to correspond to a CO2 level of 450 ppmv (parts per million by volume).

2 180 governments, that make up the IPCC, approved IPCC Fourth Assessment Report. The IPCC is formally a group of

governments (not one of scientists) which commissions assessments every 6 years. These are prepared through the efforts of hundreds of scientists, actively involved in state-of-the-art research, to provide a comprehensive view of the current understanding of climate science and change. 3 Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is at its highest concentration probably in the last twenty million years, at 387 parts per

million (ppm). Rising at an increasing rate over 2 ppm/yr, compared to 1970-2000 at 1.5 ppm. CO2 levels have increased by 30 ppm in the last 20 years. Over the last million years, an increase of 30 ppm has never taken less than 1000 years. Human activity is pushing the climate system at rates unprecedented in history.

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However, carbon emissions growth rate has increased to 3% per year over 2000 - 2007, due to trends involving both accelerating and more carbon-intensive global economic growth; and the weakening of some of the Earth’s carbon sinks. CO2 emissions are above the worst-case IPCC scenarios. A peer-reviewed Royal Society paper from the Tyndall Centre states:

It is increasingly unlikely that an early and explicit global climate change agreement, or collective ad hoc national mitigation policies, will deliver the urgent and dramatic reversal in emission trends necessary for stabilization at 450 ppmv CO2-e. Similarly, the mainstream...agenda is far removed from the rates of mitigation necessary to stabilize at 550 ppmv CO2-e. Given the reluctance, at virtually all levels, to openly engage with the unprecedented scale of both current emissions and their associated growth rates, even an optimistic interpretation of the current framing of climate change implies that stabilization much below 650 ppmv CO2-e is improbable.

...the latest scientific understanding of climate change, allied with current emission trends and a commitment to ‘limiting average global temperature increases to below 4C above pre-industrial levels, demands a radical reframing of both the climate change agenda, and the economic characterization of contemporary society. Only massive emission reductions, if carried out globally to an unprecedented extent, will stave off future irreversible, chaotic and harmful climate change.

The Tyndall Centre estimates that global emissions need to peak by 2015, then fall by 6 - 8% a year between 2020 and 2040, leading to full decarbonisation soon after 2050. This is hugely ambitious. Effective mitigation will continue to be very difficult. As well, there is a considerable time lag in the Earth’s response to CO2 already added into the atmosphere, meaning we are committed to much more warming than that has occurred so far. Current GHG concentrations commit the Earth to a further 0.6 degrees warming, that will certainly take place whatever humanity does. The lag in warming response means it would take at least 30 years before concerted global mitigation action, if successful, could result in a more stable global climate. Even if deep cuts in emissions were achieved through strenuous mitigation, Earth systems will progressively overcome inertia in their response, particularly as oceans warm further, and feedbacks generate further warming or more GHG emissions. This means that generations of humanity will be under the ongoing obligation to adapt to progressively changing climates. However, this is not the full picture. Observers now note that the IPCC consensus may underestimate the problem. Various updates (see WWF) of climate impacts studies have found accelerating negative trends in global carbon balances, carbon sinks, ecosystem integrity and ice cover4. Of particular alarm are recent trends in summer Arctic Ocean sea ice that were greatly underestimated in IPCC projections. An increasingly accepted view is that the Earth’s systems are more sensitive to current and future climate forcing from greenhouse agents than was assumed, even as late as 2007. The 2007 IPCC consensus did not take into account ‘tipping elements’ in Earth systems involving complex feedbacks, especially carbon-cycle forcing through GHG releases from Siberian thawing, northern forest dieback due to fire and pests and Amazon drying.

4 Climate Code Red Report - The case for a sustainability emergency (Spratt, Sutton, FoE) responds to the pressure to soft-

pedal on climate change, takes proper stock of the science and gives "the politics of the possible" its due. They argue that consensus science under-estimates our situation’s seriousness and a 'planetary emergency' declared. Download.

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A particular worry is that rapid dynamic changes of Greenland ice sheets are not yet understood, creating great uncertainty in estimates of likely sea level rises. The effects of smoke and aerosols released by humans, creating ‘global dimming’, causes uncertainty. The implication of policies to reduce air pollution is that these may cause unmasking of aerosol cooling effects, and this could release significant committed warming. These updated insights highlight the risks involved in accepting even 2°C of global warming, as many of the impacts are happening earlier, and at lower temperature increases, than predicted. A serious shortcoming in the IPCC’s work is the absence of a risk management approach that addresses these low-probability events with catastrophic consequences. Impacts and feedbacks that accelerate climate change are likely to be triggered within the 2 degree range. This is confirmed by studies of past climate showing safe carbon limits would require humanity to bring down CO2 concentrations to below 350 ppm, particularly to restore Arctic ice cover. The Government’s Committee on Climate Change only partly considered these issues when setting the target to reduce UK carbon emissions by 80% by 2050.

1.2 OXFORDSHIRE’S CLIMATE

The following table sets out selected Met Office/UKCIP climate variables and indices used to assess climate trends, mostly derived from the daily or monthly temperature/precipitation data.

Climate variable

Definition

Heating Degree Days ∑(15.5 – daily mean temperature) with T mean < 15.5 °C. Cooling Degree Days

∑(daily mean temperature - 22) for Tmean > 22 °C.

Extreme temperature range

Annual maximum temperature minus annual minimum temperature

Growing season length

Period bounded by daily mean temperature > 5 °C for > 5 consecutive days - and - daily mean temperature < 5 °C for > 5 consecutive days (after 1 July)

Summer 'heatwave' duration

Sum of days with daily max. T > 3 °C above 1961-90 daily for ≥5 consecutive days

Consecutive dry days Longest spell of consecutive days with precipitation <= 0.2 mm during the year

Greatest 5-day precipitation

Greatest total precipitation amount (mm) for 5 consecutive days during the year

Rainfall Intensity Total precipitation on days with ≥1 mm divided by count of days with ≥1mm

According to the UK Meteorological Office’s climatology reporting system, Vale of White Horse falls within the England South-East and Central South standard area. Oxfordshire has a Maritime Temperate climate ("Cfb" in the Köppen classification). Precipitation, mostly from Atlantic weather systems is fairly uniform through the year. The lowest temperature recorded in Oxford was -16.6 °C in January 1982; the highest recorded in Oxford was 35.6 °C during the 2003 European heat wave.

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Met Office data for Oxford is presented in the following table:

Max temp Min temp Days of air frost

Sunshine Rainfall Rainfall days > = 1mm

Month °C °C days hours mm days

Jan 7.2 1.9 8.8 58.0 57.5 11.5

Feb 7.6 1.7 8.5 72.0 42.6 9.2

Mar 10.3 3.4 4.0 107.9 50.0 10.5

Apr 12.8 4.7 2.1 150.0 46.2 8.7

May 16.5 7.5 0.2 191.9 53.9 9.1

Jun 19.5 10.5 0.0 187.8 54.5 8.7

Jul 22.3 12.8 0.0 205.5 38.2 6.7

Aug 21.9 12.6 0.0 193.8 54.4 7.8

Sep 18.6 10.5 0.0 138.6 58.9 9.1

Oct 14.4 7.4 0.7 108.2 61.8 10.6

Nov 10.1 4.3 4.5 72.0 59.4 10.1

Dec 8.0 2.8 7.3 51.8 64.7 10.9

1971 - 2000 mean 14.1 6.7 36.1 1537.4 642.0 112.9

1961- 1990 mean 13.8 6.4 40.7 1508.6 632.1 112.8

Figure 1: Climate variables at the Oxford meteorological station 1971-2000. Means for 1961-1990 also shown.

Oxford’s weather is reported by the Radcliffe Weather Station, which supplies meteorological data for twelve-month periods with yearly totals and means. Radcliffe analysis of the recent climate of England SE and Central South region (inc. Oxfordshire) contains these average:

Month

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year

Average high °C

6.8 7.4 10.1 13.0 16.7 19.8 21.7 21.2 18.5 14.2 9.8 7.4 13.9

Average low °C

1.4 1.4 2.5 4.3 7.2 10.2 12.2 11.9 9.8 6.8 3.8 2.1 6.1

Precipitation mm

52.6 41.0 41.1 43.9 50.6 53.3 59.5 58.3 60.3 65.3 61.8 55.8 643.5

Figure 2: Mean Oxford weather for 1881 - 2004. Source: Radcliffe Meteorological Station 2008

Available Radcliffe Station reports:

Weather at Oxford - Annual Report 2006; Weather at Oxford - Annual Report 2005

Weather at Oxford - Annual Report 2004; Weather at Oxford - Annual Report 2003.

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Headlines from the Radcliffe temperature time series are:

• 20th-century temperatures were generally higher than those of the 19th, partly because of ‘heat island’ effect due to urban development over open spaces.

• The Radcliffe temperature time series confirms the post-1996 decade as the warmest on record by a considerable margin.

• Increased temperatures lead to concerns that greater evaporation may affect water availability.

Figure 3: Mean annual air

temperature - 1815 to 2006 at Radcliffe Meteorological Station

Setting Oxfordshire within the Central England Temperature record

A key UK climate reference is Central England Temperature (CET). Running from 1772 this is the world’s longest temperature record and is perhaps the most representative measure of the surface climate of the UK. It is well correlated with land temperatures over the entire Northern Hemisphere. Recorded monthly temperatures, adjusted for urban warming, represent a triangular area enclosed by Lancashire, London and Bristol. Figure 4 shows annual anomalies relative to the 1961-1990 average The red line is equivalent to a 10-year running mean. After some 20th century warming between the 1920 - 40s, and a cooling during the 1970 - 80s, CET has been exceptionally warm in the period from 1990. To date CET has increased by about one degree Celsius.

Figure 4: Mean Central England Temperature anomalies, 1772-2008. Source: Hadley Centre

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Trends in temperatures since the mid-17th century show that temperatures were lower than the long-term average during the period roughly 1650-1700 and then rose sharply in the early 1700s. During the 18th/19th centuries, a cool period coincided with snowy winters and generally cool summers. From 1910, temperatures increased slightly until about 1950, when they flattened before a sharp rising trend began in 1975. Figure 5 shows the warmest years in the UK, calculated from CET (from UKCIP). This dataset gives the 12 warmest years since 1659, up to 2007, as:

Rank Years Difference (ºC) in mean temp. 1961 to 1990

1st 2006 +1.30

2nd / 3rd 1990 / 1999 +1.16

4th 1949 +1.15

5th 2002 +1.13

6th 1997 +1.06

7th 1995 / +1.05

8 / 9th 2003 / 1989 +1.03

10 / 11 / 12th 1959 / 2004 / 2007 +1.01

9 of the 12 warmest CET years since 1659 have occurred since 1990, and the 1990s were exceptionally warm in central England historically, 0.6°C warmer than 1961 – ’90. 2006 was a year that broke many records. The annual mean CET of 10.8 °C in 2006 was 1.35°C above the 1961-90 average, the warmest temperature for 348 years. 12-month rolling averages show that very warm individual months made April 2006 through April 2007 the warmest 12-month period on record. May to September 2006 was warmer than any equivalent period. July 2006 was the warmest month ever with a temperature of 19.7 °C. Appraisal of this trend show it to be statistically significant, concluding that the warming in annual-mean CET of 1.0°C since 1950 cannot be explained by natural climate variations, and is consistent with forcing due to increasing GHGs and aerosols.

How warm was 2008?

It is important to mention that climate is under the influence of natural variability as well as the greenhouse effect. Policy makers should understand that even a short-term cooling over a few years or seasons does not mean the consensus about human-driven warming is flawed (see). The weather will be warmer or cooler than average in particular places and times without affecting the over-all warming trend. In January 2008 the Met Office predicted that 2008 would be a little cooler than earlier years in the 21st C, but would still be one of the 10 warmest years. This prediction proved correct. 2008 would have been considered warm as recently as the 1970s, and ‘a scorcher’ for our Victorian ancestors. Today we have come to consider warmer weather usual, so while January 2008 did seem particularly cold, that was compared to January 2007, the warmest January on record (due to the warming from El Niño). Data shows that, though 2008 UK weather was influenced by La Niña (the cold phase of the El Niño oscillation), 2008 was still an exceptional year, which would be 50 times less likely to be as warm without human influence. 2008 shows how weather varies year-to-year under ongoing climate change.

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Setting Oxfordshire within recent UK temperature trends

Analysis by the Met Office examined spatial trends in UK climate since 1914 (Met Office). This noted increases in mean monthly temperature over the whole of the UK. This occurred in two main periods of warming (1914-1950 and 1970 onwards), with the most rapid warming occurring since 1985. Mean temperatures increased, both in summer and winter, when the 1991-2004 average is compared with the 1961-1990 average (UKCIP02 baseline) .

Figure 6. Mean temperature change °C from the 1961-1990 average compared to the summer and winter 1991-2004 averages

Daily maximum temperatures increased by more in the winter, while daily minimum temperatures have increased by more in the summer and annually. The strongest increases in mean monthly temperature have been in SE England, Midlands and East Anglia.

Oxfordshire within recent UK precipitation trends

The Radcliffe weather record identifies these local precipitation headlines:

• Recent Oxford rainfall patterns show large deviations from long-term averages. Dry spells were registered in the summer of 1995, 1996-97 2003 and 2004 to 2006. Droughts of the 1780s and early 1800s were more extreme than those of today. From 1980 to 1995 the winter rainfall totals were 20% above the summer rainfall.

• Rainfall deficits and exceptional temperatures have created periods of high evaporative demand. Over the past decade, potential evaporation losses have been persistently above average representing water losses from drainage basins.

Figure 7: mean annual precipitation (mm) from 1767 to date - Radcliffe Meteorological Station

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Met Office analysis shows that UK’s winters are getting wetter, with more precipitation concentrated in days of heavy rainfall. Despite a high degree of variability, there has been a decrease in summer precipitation across the UK by between 10 and 40% since 1961. There has been a marked increase in winter precipitation in all regions.

Figure 8. Mean precipitation change (%) from the 1961-1990 average to the 1991-2004 average for Summer (JJA) and Winter (DJF).

Figure 9 shows the trend of increasing contribution of heavy rainfall events in winter. Maraun et al noted that rainfall days with more than 10mm of rain (“heavy rain days”) increased greatly in winters.

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Other UK and Oxfordshire climate trends

This information came various sources, including the UKCIP report The Climate of the UK and Recent Trends and from the Met Office English climate page. Important trends include:

A strong downward trend since 1961 in southern England in the number of days with snow cover, where there are currently about 75% fewer days with snow cover compared to 1961. In the 1980s total days with snow in Oxfordshire would have been on average 20 - 25 per year. A strong downward trend means that snow now falls on few autumn or spring days.

A strong decreasing trend in days of air frost since 1961 of 35% for all regions, from about 55 per year in 1880 to 35 per year in 1980. 30 years ago, 12 –15 frosts per month during March and April were usual. Durations of winter cold waves have decreased, rapidly declining since mid-80s. Significant spells of cold weather are rare. Autumnal frost days also decreased, with very few October night frosts, these now only begin in November.

A steady increase in vapour pressure for the UK, especially since the 1980s.

Altering numbers of hot and cold days each year. A hot day is defined as when the daily mean temperature is above 20°C; a cold day when below 0°C. Since the 18th century, the frequency of hot days has increased, with at least eight additional hot days per year over the 1990s, about twice the long-term average. In contrast, the number of cold days has fallen from 15 - 20 days per year, to approximately 10 days per year. The average duration of summer heatwaves has increased in all regions of the UK by between 4 and 16 days since 1961. The average duration of winter cold snaps has decreased in all regions of the UK by between 6 and 12 days since 1961 making significant spells of cold weather rare. Figure 10: Annual number of ‘hot’ and ‘cold’ days (extracted from CET series 1772 – 1997).

The smoothed line emphasises variations on a 30-year time scale. Source: Gardening in the Greenhouse 2004

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Length of growing season. This highly sensitive indicator is important not only for farmers planning sowing and harvesting operations, but to gardeners, biodiversity managers, foresters and land-use planners. The thermal growing season length is defined as beginning when the temperature on five consecutive days exceeds 5°C, and ends when the temperature on five consecutive days is below that threshold.

Figure 11 shows thermal growing season data for the period 1772 – 2006 with a smoothed curve describing the trend (Defra)

Up to 2002, researchers found there was an increase in growing season length over the twentieth century of at least 30 days, due both to earlier onset of spring, and a later onset of autumn.

The summer season has extended by roughly 15 days, and summers as well are hotter and more intense as growing periods. Spring and autumn periods have likewise shifted, eating into what used to be winter. Winters may are effectively at least 15 days shorter and considerably less intense.

Long-term studies in plant phenology (timing of developmental changes) also demonstrate plant responses to climate change that confirm these data. An example in 2007/2008 was daffodils flowering in mid-January. While early varieties can hasten this impression, the mid-winter months of 2007/2008 were very warm against the record, and this promoted early flowering nation-wide, and not just of daffodils.

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Setting the CET record within the global temperature record

Figure 12 (Defra: Global and Central England record) compares the rise in CET with changes over the past century in global average land-surface temperatures, which over the same period have risen by 0.8 °C.

Figure 13 shows the Hadley Centre’s data on average global temperature for reference.

The red bars show global average near-surface temperature anomalies from 1850 to 2007. Error bars in grey show the 95% uncertainty range on the annual averages. The thick blue line shows the annual values after smoothing, and the thin blue lines show 95% uncertainty.

Globally, the warmest year of the entire global series was 1998, with a temperature of 0.546°C above the 1961 - 90 mean. The coldest was probably 1601. Twelve of the thirteen warmest years in the series occurred in the past thirteen years (1995 - 2007). The only year in the last thirteen not among the warmest twelve is 1996.

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2008 was reported as the 10th warmest year on record, with global sea/land-surface temperature at 0.31°C/0.56°F above the 1961-1990 annual average of 14.00°C.

It is important to be aware that over the last ten years, temperatures have warmed more slowly than the long-term trend. This does not mean that global warming has slowed down. It is consistent with natural fluctuations of the climate within a trend of long-term warming. Global average temperature trends, calculated over ten year periods, have varied from a modest cooling to a warming rate of more than 0.3 °C per decade.

Figure 14 (from Met Office) shows global anomalies from 1975 to 2007, relative to 1961-1990 averages. The black line shows the annual figure; red line shows the trend over the full 33 years; blue lines show varying rates of trends over 10-year periods. It is also useful to set the recent global and CET trends within the longer-term historical record. Mann et al, in a peer-reviewed paper, have reconstructed in Figure 18 Northern Hemisphere temperatures over the past two thousand years.

Globally Mann et al analysed over 400 proxy climate series (from trees, corals, ice cores and historical records) and temperature data from NASA, to show that the 20th century is by far the warmest century. The medieval warm period in the northern hemisphere saw a rise of about 0.4 degrees C, less than half that recently experienced. The authors concluded that recent Northern Hemisphere surface temperature increases are likely anomalous in a long-term context for at least the past 1300 – 1700 years. Other comments confirm this.

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APP 2: TYPICAL IMPACTS OF EXTREME WEATHER ON THE DISTRICT &

COUNCIL

Weather event

First order impacts

Incidents / Specific Impacts

Consequences and Responses

Communities Businesses / infrastructure

Biodiversity and env.

Communities and businesses

Council services

HEAVY RAINFALL

Flash and river flooding Drainage capacity exceeded Direct damage to buildings Transport networks affected

Power failures Damage to property caused by flood water (dampness & condensation) Travel delays Personal possessions destroyed Health and sanitation problems Insurance implications

Crop / harvest losses / difficult grain drying Disease / pests and water logging Power failures Damage caused by flood water / scouring problems Profits losses and business closures Damage to road surfaces and other transport stuctures Transfer of silt and debris into drainage systems Some buildings, sites & activities become uninsurable

Landslips Fauna mortality on flood plains Groundwater level Increases Wetlands under prolonged floodwaters

Positive action to avoid repeated damage from floods Local level / Parish - creation of Flood Action Groups Local work to improve drainage – freeing streams and drains of plants Installation of flood defence barriers Support families with uninhabitable homes. Protect critical infrastructure, such as power stations Ensure emergency services, local authorities and Environment Agency respond effectively Overhaul of drainage systems - the most urgent measure to reduce the risk of future flooding

Plan and promote measures to build resilience and adaptive capacity Provide support to residents/ businesses who face practical, financial and health problems Emergency responses in coordination with other bodies - support to families made homeless / temp. accommodation Emergency provision of sandbags Cover insurance premiums of vulnerable structures Raised profile and workload of civil protection services. Adhere to PPS relating to flood risk / water run-off on flood plains Revision of indicative flood maps Led by Environment Agency - flood alleviation schemes Passing on Env Agency warnings to vulnerable / relevant groups Altered building design guidance - drainage systems and increasing capacities of sewers Stricter application of riparian landowner obligations Prioritise non-flood areas for new development.

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Weather event

First order impacts

Incidents / Specific Impacts

Consequences and Responses

Communities Businesses / infrastructure

Biodiversity and env.

Communities and businesses

Council services

HEAT WAVE

High day and night external temperatures Extreme or unusual temperatures inside buildings (schools, care homes) High exposure to sun High ozone, NOX and dust levels

Heat related illness / stress / increased mortality Power failures Crime esp. burglaries up Increase in skin cancers, sunburn, allergies Food poisoning Altered leisure activities and hazardous pastimes Death of unattended pets School closures - loss of teaching and working hours for parents Pressure on childcare services

Reduced farm yields Power failures Deformed 'fatting up' of road surface Damage to infrastructure (buildings, roads, rails) Melting roads, buckled rails lead to travel delays

Increased fire risk for grassed areas and fields Flora, fauna under heat stress > mortality Poor surface water condition

Application of fire prevention information by owners of thatched cottages Ensure children and the elderly are kept hydrated Parents / carers application of sun cream to children Emergency attention to heat-related conditions like heatstroke; collapse; respiratory system failure Increased cooling / air conditioning costs Increased opportunity for solar energy generation

Identification of individuals most at risk for advice and support. School education and public health awareness programme School closures and other adaptations Vigilance and assistance to the elderly within the PCT Heatwave Plan Advice provision by media / public / health / social care professionals and help provided to those at risk. Meeting insurance claims for subsidence and damage Increased usage of cooling systems Cuts in amounts of green waste Meet pollution targets via establishment of "air quality management areas" Roads gritting to stop them melting

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Weather event

First order impacts

Incidents / Specific Impacts

Consequences and Responses

Communities Businesses / infrastructure

Biodiversity and env.

Communities and businesses

Council services

DROUGHT

Reduced underground water resource levels; reduced levels in reservoirs Lower water supply / quality Internal or external fires Air quality changes and dust Lower crop productivity

Water shortages Damage to infrastructure foundations > subsidence Illnesses exacerbated air or water quality - allergies and breathing difficulties Restrictions on / closure of open air swimming pools

Crop losses Soil shrinkage and subsidence Increased expenses on animal feed. Need to irrigate crops – but difficult to do so Demand for home water storage equipment Damaged crops / harvesting early

Increased plant and animal mortality esp. in wetland habitats Reduced fecundity and offspring mortality due to reduced / mistimed food supplies Breeding patterns affected by low water flows Low water flow levels causing death to aquatic life, algal growth and other imbalances Fly and wasp plagues

Water companies to introduce hosepipe bans, fix leaks and work with industries to cut water usage Application of hosepipe and sprinkler bans / people reporting on neighbours More investment in water supply and sewage treatment – new reservoirs Inc. water bills to pay for improving infrastructure / compulsory meters Introduction of standpipes and water tankers Drought order imposition on sports grounds, parks, and businesses

Damage to buildings caused by wind or lightning. Reductions is amounts of household waste Adhere to codes requiring homes of highest standards of water efficiency Retrofitting homes with water saving systems Ensure farmers adhere to guidelines for ploughing in manure quickly and for storage and spreading of waste Assess the vulnerability of the Council’s tree stock to causing subsidence of properties, incurring insurance and direct costs to the Authority. Tree planting schemes / include drought tolerant species

Weather event

First order impacts

Incidents leading to Specific Impacts

Consequences and Responses

Communities Businesses / infrastructure

Biodiversity and env.

Communities and businesses

Council services

HIGH WIND / TORNADO STORM / LIGHTENING

Damage to infrastructure and human injuries Flash floods

Power failures and fires caused by wind damage and lightning strikes Damage to buildings Injuries or death of animals or people Vehicle accidents and travel delays

Damage to infrastructure and road furniture Travel disruption caused by roads blocked by fallen trees or flash floodwater Hazardous driving conditions

Damage to vegetation Damage to Trees

Lightning protection systems to prevent strikes and minimise damage

Coordination with Fire and Rescue Services Issue of tree safety in areas of public access from winter storm damage

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Weather event

First order impacts

Incidents leading to Specific Impacts

Consequences and Responses

Communities Businesses / infrastructure

Biodiversity and env.

Communities and businesses

Council services

ALTERED SEASONS - DATES & INTENSITY

Increased likelihood of vector borne diseases Enhanced disease risk Invasive species Reduced frost days

Altered balance between use of indoor / outdoor facilities Longer growing seasons – altered options for gardens Increased maintenance i.e. grass cutting Increased disease spread by insects Increase in skin cancers. Winter deaths of elderly decline due to warmer weather

Changed crops and gardens - grow water-wise plants that prosper in hot, dry conditions. Possible double cropping for farmers Increased growth of vegetation , leads to visibility reductions Increased leisure opportunities, more tourists

Pest population rises / altered behaviour Changes in ecosystems changing Plant phenolgy and migration Increased productivity, longer growing periods, ability to grow new crops / diversify Plants and animals will move north Water logged areas decline / dry out due to high evaporation and lower groundwater and / or prolonged winter flooding

Changes in lifestyle such as frequency and type of outdoor activity improved food hygiene Increased demand for irrigation Increased costs for local businesses and communities from damage from storms, flooding, subsidence. Increased insurance premiums Opportunities for renewable energy businesses.

Increased requirement for grass cutting / hedge trimming / tree lopping. Investigate new planting and maintenance schemes Avoid planting beech trees or hedges Change schedules / contracts for landscape maintenance and for waste collection Greater demand for pest control services Raise public awareness about safety in the sun Green wildlife corridors - to redistribute less dispersive species and avoid ecological voids. Increased pressures on health services (diseases, housing damp problems, weather- related mortality, cataracts, skin cancers, sunburn) Design guidance for new development must address cooling, renewable energy technology; energy and water efficiency; sustainable drainage

LOW TEMPS / FROST / ICE / SNOW

Travel disruption

Demand for Heating Hazardous driving - reduced skid resistance

Freeze / thaw action damages surfaces and assets

Need to grit roads

FOG / MIST / LOW-CLOUD

Reduced visibility

Hazardous driving conditions

visibility reductions

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APPENDIX 3 – VOWH WEATHER INCIDENTS RECORDS TABLE

Approach: This table holds data produced within the Local Climate Impacts Profile (LCLIP) process. The purpose of the table is to set out the last 5+ years of Oxfordshire’s weather, as reported in the media, for Vale of White Horse District. It serves as an information repository for key information culled from media reports as an ongoing record. It was developed for SODC’s LCLIP and has been updated with data relevant to VOWH. Deciding categories for the news stories The categories used for the stories about the weather that has occurred in the District and county, are set out below. A simple and practical classification is used with four kinds of extreme weather. These are the types of weather that operate on a short time scale: (i) Gales and Storms – at times with lightning and often producing flash floods; (ii) Heavy rainfall - often leading to both river and flash floods; (iii) Heatwaves and high temperatures; and (iv) Ice, snow, cold-spell, low-cloud and fog - occurring largely over the winter; There are three other categories: (v) A fifth category is for the longer-term anomaly of Droughts; (vi) Stories about Altered Seasonality; (vii) Wider reactions to events (Local Authority reviews, public / communities, national bodies,

scientists) titled Response, recovery and policy. Table 1 gives the titles of the media sources and the addresses of the newspaper archive and search domain. Table 2 lists the categories used for the stories, the shading chosen for each category, sets out the most significant weather events and provides a total for the events that occurred over the 5+ year period. Table 3 contains more than 130 stories from the media. The column headings are self-explanatory. Each row is one story, with the central column carrying text summarised from the media report. Structure of the weather incidents records table The successive rows used here may record different phases of the event as it develops. The story line evolves, typically from initial warnings, then to report the direct impacts of the event as it strikes. A single event is often covered by several media sources on various dates, giving a number of stories for that one event. Given that the impacts of one weather event affect different groups and localities in various ways, the stories then cover a diversity of incidents happening on the ground. In turn, these incidents have consequences. Therefore, later stories cover wider issues to do with cleanup, recovery, policy reviews, lesson learnt and mitigation of future events. These broader stories might develop from one particular event, as happened after the July 2007 floods, but expand beyond the District, regionally and nationally. The table may be scrolled though on screen, as well as printed. As the font is small, it may be easier to read on a monitor set with zoom. The column-header row at the top of the table, is repeated as a page separator. An internet reference is supplied for each story, though it’s worth mentioning that many online archives were only built from circa 2004 onwards.

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Media sources used Sources are mainly those in the Newsquest Group (Oxford Mail, Oxford Times; Herald series including Abingdon Herald, Bicester Advertiser and the Banbury Cake), Johnston Press papers like the Banbury Guardian, plus national media - BBC Oxfordshire News, the Independent and Telegraph newspapers. Independent local free papers without online archives usually rely a lot on advertising revenues and cover the weather poorly. The Oxford Times has compiled an online flood archive (Oxford Times Archive) built after the 2007 floods, which contains news articles from 2007 to date, as well as policy and science information. Web search method Internet domains were searched using Google tools, particularly Advanced Search and Google News Advanced Search. These tools allow for more efficient searching than what is offered by the search functions of the archive page of a newspaper. This is useful when searching using combinations of terms. Most archives are stored on web servers according to year. Stories about a specific type of event in a particular year can be found by including the year at the end of the archive’s web address, along with the search term – for example a Google search of < flood site:http://www.oxfordmail.net/2008/6 > would find all Newsquest stories about floods published in June 2008. By using relevant search terms (heatwave, flood etc) and restricting archive searches to a single year, stories can be systematically identified and tracked. Table 1: Sources checked

Abbrev- iation

Title Archive Link

AH Herald Group Wantage Herald Abingdon Herald

http://archive.heraldseries.co.uk/YEAR/DAY http://www.heraldseries.co.uk/news/hswantagenews http://www.heraldseries.co.uk/news/hsabingdonnews

BBC British Broadcasting Corporation http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/oxfordshire

GU The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/

OM OT

Oxford Mail Oxford Times

http://archive.oxfordmail.net/YEAR http://www.oxfordmail.net/search http://www.thisisoxfordshire.co.uk

TI The Independent http://www.independent.co.uk/search/index.jsp

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Table 2 – Categories used for Stories. Dates of major events & totals of each kind of event

Abbre-viation

Category & shading

Definition and explanation Dates + duration Hyperlink to each story

Number events

G / S

Gale / Storm / lightning / + flash floods

Strong, sometimes localised, winds (at least 50 up to 88 kph – Beaufort scale 7 to 9) that damage trees and buildings. This severe weather may be accompanied by lightning, and by rain or other precipitation capable of causing flash flooding. In the Beaufort scale, a storm is defined as a disturbance with wind speeds greater than those of a gale (from 89 up to 117 kph), so that in fact real ‘storms’ are very rare. Common use is not so restrictive and associates ‘storms’ with gusty, heavy rain and thunder. Gales and storms are usually significant once they lead to significant travel disruption.

September 2003 March 2004 July 2004 August 2004 June 2005 July 2006 July 2006 – event two October 2006 October 2006 – event two December 2006 January 2007 January 2007 – event two November 2007 March 2008

14

R / F

Excess sustained Rainfall + river / flash Flooding

Heavy rainfall (often widespread, intense and prolonged) that covers substantial areas, capable of causing both river and flash flooding.

January 2003 November 2006 (minor event) July 2007 are profiled here with a hydrological analysis here. June 2008

4

H / S

Heatwave / Excess Sun

A period of abnormally, uncomfortably hot, and usually humid weather, during which high day and night-time temperatures develop, almost always associated with intense sunshine. Defined in the Oxfordshire PCT 2008 Heatwave Plan and Met Office in terms of threshold temperatures - 16ºC overnight and 31ºC daytime - for at least two consecutive days with one intervening night, having significant effects on health.

“2003 Heatwave” – June to July 2003 has been profiled here. “2006 Heatwave” – June to July 2006 has been profiled here.

2

I / S

Ice / Snow / Fog

Significant coverage over fog, ice and/or snow, combined or singly, sufficient to cause travel delays.

February 2007 April 2008 October 2008

2

DT

Drought

Long periods of water deficit resulting in water scarcity. These are usually a combination of meteorological droughts due to direct rainfall deficiency; hydrological droughts where accumulated shortfalls in runoff or aquifer recharge are key; and agricultural droughts where availability of soil water through the growing season is critical. Usually associated with high pressure or 'blocking highs' dominating the weather.

2003 Drought – ran from April to October 2003 and profiled here. 2004 – 2006 Drought Relevant profiles by CEH Wallingford can be found here and here (for both 2003 and 2004-06)

2

AS

Altered seasons

Issues related to alterations to the typical dates of onset of the seasons, their length and intensity. This may affect plant growing season, plant phenology, species behaviour, and the ecological condition of habitats in the longer-term, particularly of species that are human pests. These kinds of shifts are certainly ‘climatic’, as they are departures from long-term averages, can be related to increased Central England Temperature and can very likely be attributed to human influence on the climate system.

n/a

RRP

Response, recovery and policy

Items relating to resilience and broader event-related issues, not the event as it is happening. These maybe to do with pre-event prevention / preparedness; and with post-event issues, related to quality if the emergency response, longer-term recovery after an event. These stories are particularly important when they cover adaptation to these events and the state of planning for mitigating disasters, and preventing the weather from having so many negative impacts.

n/a

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rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

3/1

/21/2

70

88.h

tml

7

DT

16.5

.03

OM

Drought Hits

Badgers

Oxo

n

Ba

dg

er

ce

nsus s

ho

ws t

hre

ats

fro

m d

ry w

ea

the

r. W

arn

ings n

um

be

rs c

ou

ld b

e

sig

nific

an

tly c

ut, if th

e d

ry s

pring

s c

on

tin

ue,

as t

hese

me

an

the

ba

dg

ers

' sta

ple

die

t e

art

hw

orm

s w

ere

difficult to

fin

d.

Cu

bs m

ay s

tarv

e t

o d

ea

th if

mo

the

rs u

na

ble

to

pro

du

ce

eno

ug

h m

ilk.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

3/5

/16/2

17

32.h

tml

8

RR

PS

30.5

.03

BB

C

Warning texts

flood alerts

messages

All

Oxo

n

Re

sid

en

ts o

ffe

red

em

erg

ency m

essa

gin

g s

erv

ice

, C

ity A

lert

Te

xtin

g S

yste

m.

Mo

bile

ph

one

use

rs liv

ing

in a

rea

s a

t risk fro

m h

igh

wa

ters

can

re

ce

ive

w

arn

ing

s f

rom

th

e e

me

rge

ncy s

erv

ices a

bo

ut ri

ve

rs th

at a

re lik

ely

to

flo

od

.

n/a

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/2

9436

38.s

tm

En

v

Ag

en

cy,

Po

lice

, R

ad

clif

fe

Ho

sp

ita

l

Page 51: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

9

S /

H

06.0

8.0

3

OM

County

Swelters in

Record Heat

Oxo

n

Te

mp

era

ture

s s

et to

hit 9

5f.

Ra

il de

lays d

ue

to

th

e p

ossib

ility

of

bucklin

g

tra

cks.

Ice

cre

am

, su

n c

rea

m, sto

ma

ch

bug

me

dic

ine

, B

BQ

's, a

nd

drink s

ale

s

hig

h. R

esta

ura

nt

and

local o

pen

air

sw

imm

ing

po

ols

busy. W

ine

gro

we

rs

en

joy g

oo

d c

ond

itio

ns.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

3/8

/6/1

949

4.h

tml

10

S/H

8.8

.03

TI

Heat Causes

Worst Air

Quality in a

Decade

All

So

uth

-E

ast

Hig

h o

zo

ne

le

ve

ls in

So

uth

-East

incre

ase

ris

k o

f a

sth

ma

tic a

tta

cks o

r re

sp

ira

tory

pro

ble

ms (

vu

lne

rable

are

th

ose

with

bre

ath

ing

pro

ble

ms,

the

e

lde

rly).

DE

FR

A issu

ed

wa

rnin

g a

bou

t o

zo

ne

ha

za

rds -

avoid

ou

tdoo

rs

aft

ern

oo

n e

xe

rcis

e.

Vu

lne

rab

le g

rou

ps t

old

- b

ew

are

sym

pto

ms w

ors

enin

g.

Ozo

ne

in

So

uth

-E

ast

(80

-110

pp

b)

H

igh

est

level w

as

in ‘76

@ 2

50

ppb

http

://w

ww

.ind

ep

end

ent.

co.u

k/e

nvironm

ent/

he

alth

-ale

rt-a

s-h

eat-

causes-w

ors

t-air-q

ualit

y-i

n-a

-decade

-589

35

2.h

tml

DE

FR

A

11

S/H

9.8

.03

DT

Yes we've a

heatwave . . .

and crimewave

So

uth

-East

UK

H

ot

sum

me

r w

ea

the

r b

rou

ght a

co

rre

spo

ndin

g c

rim

e w

ave

, w

ith

ho

use

bu

rgla

ries u

p o

ve

r h

alf a

rou

nd th

e c

ou

ntr

y.

Te

leg

raph

’s s

urv

ey o

f p

olic

e

forc

es s

ho

ws a

ju

mp in

th

efts fro

m h

om

es.

Bu

rgla

rie

s r

ose

by

>

50

% a

bo

ve

u

su

al n

um

be

r

http

://w

ww

.tele

gr

aph

.co.u

k/n

ew

s/

ukne

ws/1

43

84

26

/Yes-w

e%

27

ve

-a-h

eatw

ave-.

-.-.

-and

-a-

crim

ew

ave.h

tml

12

G /

S

22.9

.03

OM

Torrential rain

batters county

Oxo

n

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

cha

os f

rom

to

rren

tia

l sh

ow

ers

an

d g

ale

-fo

rce w

ind

s.

Fa

llen

tr

ee

s, flash

flo

od

s a

nd

ro

ad

accid

en

ts,

due

to

ro

ads b

ein

g b

locked

. T

his

re

su

lte

d in

se

ve

re d

ela

ys fo

r dri

ve

rs.

2,5

00

lost

po

we

r d

urin

g s

torm

s in

B

iceste

r. F

lash

flo

ods c

lose

d A

40

95

be

twe

en

Witn

ey a

nd

Fa

rin

gdo

n.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/3

1301

12.s

tm

13

DT

18.1

0.0

3

OM

Drought

prompts

concern

Oxo

n

Fa

rme

rs a

re a

ffe

cte

d b

y w

ors

t d

rou

ght

in 1

00 y

ea

rs.

Gra

ss is n

ot

gro

win

g

an

d f

arm

ers

mu

st b

uy m

ore

anim

al fo

od

. T

he

pro

ble

m is w

ors

e in

Oxfo

rd a

s

the

ma

in s

up

ply

is t

he

R.

Th

am

es. T

he

re a

re lim

its h

ow

mu

ch

can

be

ta

ke

n

fro

m F

arm

oo

r R

ese

rvo

ir.

Pe

ople

urg

ed

to

gre

ate

r w

ate

r-use

eff

icie

ncy.

15

mm

Se

pt

rain

fall

- >

25 %

o

f th

e a

ve

rag

e

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

3/1

0/1

8/1

762

8.h

tm

l

14

DT

29.1

0.0

3

O

M

Roads crack as

drought bites

So

uth

Oxo

n

Ho

uses a

nd

ro

ad

s a

cro

ss O

xfo

rdshir

e c

rackin

g d

ue

to

sub

sid

en

ce

. F

arm

ers

str

ugg

ling

to w

ate

r cro

ps.

Cla

y s

hrin

kag

e u

nd

erm

ine

s fo

und

atio

ns.

OC

C

inve

stig

atin

g r

oa

ds f

or

da

ma

ge

. H

om

e insu

ran

ce c

laim

s fo

r str

uctu

re c

racks

incre

ased

fou

rfo

ld in

rece

nt m

on

ths.

Dri

est a

utu

mn

sin

ce

18

73

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

3/1

0/2

9/1

736

9.h

tm

l

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/4

0682

07.s

tm

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

C

ou

nty

C

ou

ncil

15

RR

PS

8.1

.04

OM

Dry weather

cuts rubbish

amounts

All

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

D

ry w

ea

the

r cu

t th

e a

mo

unt

of ru

bb

ish

pro

duced

ove

r la

st 1

2 m

on

ths.

Re

cyclin

g m

an

ag

ers

stu

die

d th

e a

mo

unt

of

wa

ste

pro

du

ced

in

re

lation

to

tem

pe

ratu

re a

nd

ra

infa

ll. D

ry w

ea

the

r in

20

03

le

d to

le

ss r

ubb

ish p

rodu

ctio

n

as p

eo

ple

mo

we

d le

ss a

nd

th

rew

ou

t le

ss g

ard

en w

aste

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

4/1

/8/1

559

7.h

tml

Dis

tric

t C

ou

ncils

Page 52: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

16

RR

PS

31.0

1.0

4

OM

Flood Plan 'Is

Working'

Oxo

n

Th

am

es W

ate

r is

wo

rkin

g a

cro

ss th

e c

ou

nty

to

re

du

ce f

loo

d r

isk,

follo

win

g

the

200

3 flo

od

s, ca

used

by b

urs

ting

riv

ers

an

d s

ew

er

ove

rflo

ws.

Pa

rts o

f th

e

se

we

r syste

m ide

ntifie

d a

s t

oo s

mall

to c

op

e. M

on

ito

rin

g e

quip

me

nt

use

d to

ch

ang

es p

ipe

co

nne

ctio

ns a

nd a

£4

00

,000

sch

em

e p

lan

ned

fo

r A

bin

gd

on.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

4/1

/31/1

48

58.h

tml

En

v A

ge

ncy

17

G /

S

22.3

.04

BC

Driver dies as

gale tips

grocery lorry

onto car

Oxo

n

A m

oto

rist w

as k

ille

d a

fte

r h

igh w

ind

s b

lew

ove

r a

Te

sco

lo

rry.

Fir

efig

hte

rs

att

en

de

d 4

0 in

cid

en

ts, m

ostly w

ind

-re

late

d.

In th

e m

ost

se

riou

s,

a 4

5-t

on

ne

lorr

y b

lew

ove

r a

t A

bin

gd

on

Ro

ad

rou

nd

ab

ou

t in

Oxfo

rd,

cru

sh

ing

a F

ord

F

iesta

. 6,0

00 h

om

es w

ere

aff

ecte

d b

y p

ow

er

cu

ts a

s c

ab

les, tr

ee

s, ro

ad

sig

ns a

nd

te

levis

ion a

eria

ls w

ere

blo

wn

do

wn

.

Gu

sts

of

betw

ee

n

50

and

70m

ph

bu

ffe

ted

O

xfo

rdsh

ire

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.b

anbu

rycake.n

et/

2004

/3/2

2/1

351

9.

htm

l

18

G /

S

8.7

.04

OM

Battered by the

weather

Oxo

n

City p

ark

s,

ce

mete

rie

s a

nd

Oxfo

rd's

on

ly o

utd

oo

r p

ool h

ad

to b

e c

lose

d a

s

ga

le-f

orc

e w

ind

s a

nd

he

avy r

ain

ba

tte

red

th

e c

oun

ty.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

4/7

/8/1

049

2.h

tml

19

H /

S

2.8

.04

BB

C

Heatwave

burglars walk

into homes

Oxo

n

Bu

rgla

rs f

ind

ea

sy a

ccess w

he

n d

oo

rs a

nd

win

do

ws a

re le

ft o

pe

n in

hot

we

ath

er.

Mo

bile

s, cash

an

d k

eys a

re a

mo

ng

ite

ms s

tole

n.

Th

am

es V

alle

y

Po

lice

wa

rn t

o lo

ck u

p w

he

n t

he

y g

o o

ut o

r sit in

the

ga

rde

n.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/b

erk

shir

e/3

52

8688

.stm

20

G /

S

4.8

.04

OM

Storm

leaves

homes without

electricity

Th

am

es

Va

lley

A t

hu

nde

rsto

rm le

ft 3

0,0

00

hom

es in

th

e T

ha

me

s V

alle

y w

ith

ou

t ele

ctr

icity a

s

ligh

tnin

g s

trik

es c

ut p

ow

er.

First

Gre

at W

este

rn t

rain

se

rvic

es o

n th

e

Co

tsw

old

Lin

e c

ance

lled

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

4/8

/4/9

823

.htm

l

21

AS

6.8

.04

OM

Mild winter

weather has

sting in the tail

Oxfo

rdshire

Sw

arm

s o

f w

asp

s p

lag

uin

g h

ou

se

ho

lde

rs.

Co

ntr

ol a

ge

ncie

s s

tru

gg

ling

with

h

igh

est n

um

be

rs f

or

ye

ars

follo

win

g d

ram

atic incre

ases in

ne

sts

. In

cre

ase

in

w

ork

er

wa

sp

s r

esu

lt fro

m q

ueen

s s

urv

ivin

g m

ild w

inte

rs. D

istr

ict

Cou

ncil

pe

st

co

ntr

olle

rs h

ave

re

ce

ive

d e

xtr

a c

alls

ab

out

wa

sp

nests

and

ha

ve

ta

ken

on

ne

w c

on

tracto

rs a

nd

sta

ff, m

ea

nin

g c

alle

rs w

ith

ra

t p

roble

ms w

ait lo

ng

er.

Re

nto

kil:

gre

ate

st

nu

mbe

rs o

f w

asp

s

sin

ce

19

97

. C

alls

to

destr

oy n

ests

u

p 2

0%

on 2

003

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

4/8

/6/9

770

.htm

l

Mu

se

um

o

f N

atu

ral

His

tory

Pe

st

co

ntr

ol

firm

s

22

RR

PS

13.8

.04

OT

Families 'could

face life with

little water'

Oxfo

rdshire

OC

C L

ea

de

r M

itch

ell:

Wate

r sh

ort

age

s w

ith

ho

mes d

ep

rive

d o

f ‘b

asic

ne

eds’

is a

re

al p

ossib

ility

. W

ith

ou

t in

ve

stm

en

t in

wa

ter

su

pply

& s

ew

ag

e t

rea

tme

nt,

mill

ions liv

ing

in

th

e S

E r

isk h

ose

pip

e b

an

s &

se

ve

re w

ate

r sh

ort

age

s.

Th

e

situa

tion

will

go c

ritica

l in

5 y

ea

rs.

Th

am

es W

ate

r: "

Pop

ula

tion

gro

wth

is a

co

nce

rn. W

e a

re im

pro

vin

g c

on

se

rva

tio

n a

nd

up

da

tin

g p

ipe

s. E

ffic

ien

t h

om

es

are

im

po

rta

nt…

ne

w h

ou

sin

g m

ust a

ch

ieve

30

% w

ate

r sa

vin

gs.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

4/8

/13/9

59

4.h

tml

Th

am

es

Wate

r S

ou

th E

ast

of

En

gla

nd

Re

gio

na

l A

ssem

bly

23

RR

PS

12.1

1.0

4

BB

C

Heatwave-hit

road set to

reopen

Oxon

A r

oa

d b

ad

ly d

am

ag

ed

du

rin

g la

st su

mm

er's r

eco

rd h

ea

t w

ave

will

re

ope

n.

Th

e A

32

9 in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

ha

s b

ee

n c

lose

d fo

r m

on

ths fo

r re

pair

s a

fte

r tr

ee

s

su

cke

d m

ois

ture

fro

m th

e b

ase

of

the

roa

d, ca

usin

g it to

sin

k.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/4

0063

07.s

tm

OC

C

Page 53: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

24

RR

PS

3.2

.05

OM

Revamp may

affect town

centre trade

Vale

T

esco

ann

oun

ced

pla

ns t

o e

xp

an

d its

Abin

gd

on

sto

re,

despite

fe

ars

abo

ut

tra

ffic

and

flo

od

ing

. A

fte

r pa

yin

g V

ale

of W

hite H

ors

e D

istr

ict C

ou

ncil

£1

2m

fo

r th

e f

reeh

old

off

Ma

rch

am

Ro

ad

, T

esco

lo

dge

d e

xp

an

sio

n p

lans.

Co

un

cill

ors

ha

d r

ese

rva

tio

ns a

bo

ut

flo

od

ing,

as t

he c

ar

pa

rk flo

ods in b

ad

we

ath

er.

Mo

re b

uild

ings m

ea

ns w

ate

r w

ill r

un

-off,

on

an

are

a o

f flo

od

pla

in.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

5/2

/3/5

545

.htm

l

25

DT

25.3

.05

OM

Thousands

face hosepipe

ban

Oxon

Th

ou

sa

nds o

f p

eo

ple

in

Oxo

n f

ace

sum

me

r h

ose

pip

e b

ans f

or

the

fir

st tim

e

in 1

5 y

ea

rs a

fte

r o

ne

of

the

drie

st

win

ters

on

re

co

rd.

Dry

spe

lls h

alv

ed

u

nd

erg

rou

nd

wa

ter

reso

urc

es a

nd

riv

er

flo

ws a

re m

uch

lo

we

r th

an

no

rma

l.

Fro

m N

ov.

20

04

re

gio

n g

ot 4

9%

of

usu

al ra

infa

ll.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

5/3

/25/4

27

8.h

tml

Th

am

es

Wate

r E

nv A

ge

ncy

26

DT

7.5

.05

OM

Hosepipe ban

threat hangs

over county

Tham

es V

alle

y

Ho

se

pip

e b

an

fo

r O

xfo

rdsh

ire

re

sid

en

ts.

Resid

en

ts w

ere

wa

rne

d t

o c

on

se

rve

w

ate

r to

avo

id th

e fir

st h

ose

pip

e b

an

in

15

ye

ars

. S

ix m

on

ths fro

m la

st

No

ve

mb

er

to t

he

end

of

Ap

ril w

ere

th

e f

ou

rth

drie

st w

inte

r on

re

co

rd.

Th

e

sta

rt o

f sp

ring

me

ans t

ha

t m

uch

of

the

rain

we

ge

t no

w w

ill e

ith

er

eva

po

rate

d

uri

ng t

he w

arm

er

we

ath

er

or

be

take

n u

p b

y t

ree

s a

nd p

lan

ts.

Fiv

e m

on

ths o

f w

ell

be

low

a

ve

rag

e r

ain

fall.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

5/5

/7/3

244

.htm

l

27

H /

S

23.6

.05

OM

Sunshine

prompts pool

plea

Vale

T

em

pe

ratu

res a

ttra

cte

d h

und

red

s o

f p

eo

ple

to

riv

ers

ide

at

Ab

be

y M

ea

do

w in

A

bin

gdo

n.

Sw

imm

ing p

ool w

as c

lose

d,

so c

hild

ren

an

d y

ou

ths s

wa

m in

th

e

Th

am

es. M

em

be

rs o

f S

top S

ave

Th

e O

utd

oo

r P

oo

l, w

ho

must

co

me u

p w

ith

a

n a

ccep

table

bu

sin

ess p

lan, h

ighlig

hte

d r

isks a

ttach

ed

to

riv

er

sw

imm

ing

.

1 p

ers

on

dro

wn

s

in R

.Th

am

es

eve

ry y

ea

r e

ve

ry 5

m

iles o

f th

e r

ive

r

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

5/6

/23/2

05

8.h

tml

28

R /

F

29.6

.05

OM

Ambulance in

flood drama

Oxfo

rdshire

Ho

uses s

tru

ck b

y lig

htn

ing

, b

uild

ing

s flo

od

ed

, ve

hic

les s

tra

nde

d d

ue

to

se

ve

re e

lectr

ica

l sto

rm.

Sou

the

rn E

lectr

ic:

a lig

htn

ing

str

ike

hit h

igh

-vo

ltag

e

eq

uip

men

t kn

ockin

g o

ut

su

pplie

s t

o A

bin

gd

on

/ D

rayto

n.

Fire

se

rvic

e d

ealt

with

10

0 c

alls

in

a c

ou

ple

of

hou

rs a

s h

ou

se

ho

lde

rs r

epo

rte

d flo

odin

g.

Ha

rwe

ll: 2

6m

m/h

r

Me

t O

ffic

e:

14m

m

co

mp

are

d w

ith

av

Ju

ne 5

3m

m.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

5/6

/29/1

97

1.h

tml

So

uth

ern

E

lectr

ic

Fir

e &

R

Se

rvic

e

29

R /

F

29.6

.05

BB

C

Freak storm

leaves county

flooded

Oxfo

rdshire

Fre

ak w

ea

the

r sto

rms le

d t

o f

lash

-flo

odin

g in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

with

mo

torists

tr

ap

ped

. P

eop

le t

hro

ug

hou

t th

e c

ou

nty

affe

cte

d b

y f

loo

din

g, lig

htn

ing

str

ikes

an

d fir

e a

larm

s.

Ma

ny p

rop

ert

ies w

ere

att

en

ded

eith

er

by o

ffic

ers

, o

r in

mo

re

urg

en

t cases,

fire

app

lian

ce

s w

ith

pu

mp

ing

an

d s

alv

agin

g e

qu

ipm

en

t.

Fir

e c

rew

s t

ook

60

ca

lls d

urin

g t

he

p

ea

k o

f th

e s

torm

s

ove

r 2

hou

rs.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/4

6360

29.s

tm

Fir

e

and

Re

scue

30

DT

5.7

.05

OM

Hosepipe ban

likely despite

storm

s

Oxfo

rdshire

A v

ery

we

t su

mm

er

no

w n

ee

de

d t

o r

esto

re fa

llin

g w

ate

r le

ve

ls a

nd

sta

ve

off

th

e f

irst h

ose

pip

e b

an

in

15

yea

rs.

To

re

ple

nis

h w

ate

r le

ve

ls, 3

30

mm

of

rain

w

ou

ld n

ee

d to

fa

ll d

urin

g J

uly

-Se

pte

mb

er.

Th

e w

ate

r co

mp

an

y is w

arn

ing

th

at

do

uble

the

no

rmal am

ou

nt o

f ra

in m

ust fa

ll to

re

fill

rive

rs a

nd

bo

reh

ole

s.

Fir

st d

roug

ht

in 8

ye

ars

. D

riest

win

ter

sin

ce

19

76

. 2

85

mm

in

8 m

ths,

59

% o

f n

orm

al.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

5/7

/5/1

808

.htm

l

Th

am

es

Va

lley

Wate

r

Page 54: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

31

DT

19.0

7.0

5

TI

Drought alert:

the 2005 water

crisis

UK

C

ou

ntr

yw

ide

re

po

rt o

n s

tate

of th

e U

K u

nd

er

dro

ug

ht.

Fiv

e o

f th

e e

igh

t w

ate

r co

mp

an

ies in

so

uth

ern

En

gla

nd

im

po

se

d r

estr

ictio

ns u

nd

er

se

ve

re d

roug

ht

tha

t is

als

o a

ffe

ctin

g F

rance

and

Sp

ain

. W

adin

g b

ird

s h

ad

a c

ata

str

op

hic

b

ree

din

g s

easo

n.

Dro

ugh

t pe

rmit a

pp

lication

s e

xp

ecte

d t

hro

ug

h t

he

autu

mn

. E

xp

ect

wid

esp

rea

d e

nvir

onm

en

tal p

rob

lem

s,

with

fis

h k

ills, a

lga

l blo

om

s a

nd

ve

ry lo

w f

low

s in

so

me

riv

ers

. In

th

e e

igh

t m

on

ths f

rom

No

vem

be

r 0

5 u

ntil

Ju

ne 0

6 s

ou

the

rn c

ou

ntie

s h

ad

on

ly 5

8 p

er

cen

t o

f th

eir

ave

rag

e r

ain

fall.

Dri

est

win

ter

an

d

sp

ring

in s

ou

th-

ea

st

En

gla

nd

in

n

ea

rly 3

0 y

ea

rs

Th

ird

dri

est

win

ter

in 1

00

ye

ars

http

://w

ww

.ind

ep

end

ent.

co.u

k/e

nvironm

ent/

dro

ug

ht-

ale

rt-t

he

-200

5-w

ate

r-crisis

-499

35

9.h

tml

32

RR

PS

3.1

1.0

5

GU

How clean is

your air?

UK

S

ho

uld

pe

op

le w

ho

are

vu

lne

rab

le to

resp

ira

tory

pro

ble

ms just

get

ou

t o

f to

wn

? I

n t

he 1

993

hea

twa

ve

, th

e w

ors

t a

rea

s fo

r o

zo

ne w

ere

ru

ral S

om

ers

et

an

d O

xfo

rdsh

ire a

nd t

he

Sco

ttis

h H

igh

lan

ds.

Pro

ba

ble

th

at

pe

op

le a

re

bre

ath

ing

un

acce

pta

ble

le

ve

ls o

f p

ollu

tan

ts a

ll o

ve

r th

e U

K.

http

://w

ww

.gu

ard

ian.c

o.u

k/e

nvir

on

ment/2

00

4/o

ct/0

5/h

ealth.life

an

dh

ealth

See

als

o

ww

w.a

irqu

alit

y.

co.u

k

33

DT

25.2

.06

OM

Water firm

stays

tightlipped

over drought

Oxon

Co

un

ty's

wa

ter

sup

plie

r h

as w

arn

ed

ab

out

hose

pip

e b

ans -

with

ou

t sig

nific

an

t ra

infa

ll, r

estr

ictio

ns a

re lik

ely

. A

re

po

rt s

aid

it

wa

s im

pe

rative

fo

r w

ate

r co

mpa

nie

s to

intr

od

uce

ho

sep

ipe

ban

s, fix le

aks a

nd w

ork

with

in

dustr

ies to

cu

t w

ate

r u

sa

ge

. S

itu

atio

n is u

np

rece

de

nte

d a

s s

ince

No

ve

mb

er

20

04

, th

e r

eg

ion

ha

s h

ad

on

ly 6

6 p

er

cen

t o

f e

xp

ecte

d r

ain

fall”

. O

xfo

rdsh

ire

cro

p/v

ege

table

fa

rme

rs w

ou

ld b

e h

it if

wa

ter

restr

ictio

ns a

re p

ut

in p

lace

.

Mo

st

se

rio

us

dro

ug

ht

in 1

00 y

rs.

Th

am

es r

eg

ion

-

1/3

of e

xp

ecte

d

rain

in

Ja

n.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/2

/25/9

13

99.h

tml

Th

am

es

Wate

r E

nv A

ge

ncy

34

DT

13.3

.06

OM

Hosepipe ban

to start in April

Oxon

Co

un

ty's

wa

ter

sho

rta

ge

re

ache

d c

risis

le

ve

ls. H

ose

pip

e a

nd

sp

rinkle

r b

an

w

ill h

it e

igh

t m

illio

n c

usto

me

rs in

the

Th

am

es V

alle

y f

rom

Ap

ril 3

. C

usto

me

rs

co

uld

face

em

erg

ency d

roug

ht ta

nke

rs a

nd

su

pp

ly inte

rru

ption

s.

Dro

ug

ht

acro

ss th

e S

E h

as n

ow

go

ne

on

fo

r so

lo

ng

, m

ust

intr

od

uce

me

asu

res t

o

ma

ke

best

use

of

limite

d s

upp

lies.

TW

: sp

en

din

g m

ore

th

an

£5

00

,00

0 p

er

da

y o

n t

he

task, fixin

g a

n a

ve

rag

e o

f 2

00 lea

ks a

da

y.

Dro

ug

ht b

eg

an

N

ov 2

00

4. 2

dry

w

inte

rs 1

5 m

onth

s

of

belo

w-a

v.

rain

. 2

00

5 w

as 3

rd

dri

est

sin

ce

189

7

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/3

/13/9

16

83.h

tml

35

DT

16.3

.06

OM

Water shortage

could mean

standpipes and

tankers

Oxon

Th

am

es W

ate

r p

lan

s to

sw

itch o

ff w

ate

r sup

plie

s t

o O

xfo

rdshir

e h

ou

seh

old

s

for

set

pe

rio

ds if d

ry w

ea

the

r pe

rsis

ts. S

ho

uld

th

e d

ry s

pe

ll pers

ist

and

wa

ter

su

pplie

s d

win

dle

, E

me

rgen

cy D

rou

gh

t O

rde

rs fo

rm p

art

of

its c

on

tin

ge

ncy

pla

n, a

lon

g w

ith

the

intr

od

uction

of sta

nd

pip

es a

nd

wa

ter

tan

ke

rs.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/3

/16/9

17

51.h

tml

36

DT

22.4

.06

OM

Drought Blaze

Risks Warning

Acro

ss

Oxfo

rdshire

Fe

ars

th

at g

rassla

nd

co

uld

beco

me

a tin

de

rbo

x if

dro

ug

ht con

tin

ue

s.

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

F &

R:

a h

ot sum

me

r m

ea

ns a

hig

he

r risk o

f g

rass c

atc

hin

g f

ire

a

nd

sp

read

ing

acro

ss f

ield

s.

Ow

ne

rs o

f th

atc

he

d c

ott

ag

es -

ta

ke

pre

ca

utio

ns.

Ho

se

pip

e b

an

an

nou

nce

d b

y T

ha

mes W

ate

r

Ra

infa

ll o

ve

r 8

m

on

ths h

as b

een

th

e d

rie

st p

erio

d

sin

ce

19

76

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/4

/22/9

39

94.h

tml

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

F

ire

a

nd

Re

scue

's

37

DT

15.5

.06

BC

37 Break

Hosepipe Ban

Oxon

37

peo

ple

ha

ve

rep

ort

ed

the

ir n

eig

hb

ou

rs f

or

bre

akin

g h

osepip

e b

an

s in

O

xfo

rdsh

ire

at

a t

ime

wh

en

rain

fall

is b

elo

w a

ve

rag

e f

or

this

tim

e o

f ye

ar.

On

-g

oin

g d

rou

gh

t h

as c

au

sed

sa

les o

f w

ate

r bu

tts b

y T

ha

mes W

ate

r to

soa

r

2 p

er

ce

nt d

rop in

w

ate

r d

em

and

in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/5

/15/9

54

71.h

tml

Page 55: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

38

DT

18.4

.06

OM

Water ban

prompts 'panic

buying'

Oxon

Ho

se

pip

e b

an

le

ft s

helv

es e

mp

ty a

t g

ard

en

ce

ntr

es a

cro

ss O

xfo

rdsh

ire

as

ho

use

hold

ers

‘go

cra

zy’ fo

r w

ate

r b

utts.

Su

rve

y f

ou

nd t

he

dem

an

d w

as s

o

gre

at

tha

t w

ate

r bu

tt s

up

plie

s h

ad

drie

d u

p.

En

v A

ge

ncy p

ub

lish

ed

"lo

w w

ate

r g

ard

enin

g"

guid

e w

ith

tip

s o

n p

lan

t va

rie

ties to

bu

y.

Ove

r 1

8 m

onth

s

rain

fall

low

er

tha

n

in 1

97

4-6

dro

ug

ht

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/4

/18/9

35

67.h

tml

39

DT

16.5

.06

OM

Agency: start

drought law

Oxon

Em

erg

en

cy d

rou

gh

t o

rde

r shou

ld b

e intr

od

uced

in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

no

w b

ecau

se

wa

ter

su

pp

lies a

re a

lrea

dy a

t se

rio

us r

isk, a

cco

rdin

g to

th

e E

nvir

on

me

nt

Ag

en

cy.

Dro

ug

ht o

rde

r cou

ld s

pe

ll re

al p

roble

ms fo

r sp

ort

s g

rou

nds,

pa

rks

an

d b

usin

esses,

on

ce b

ann

ed

fro

m n

on

-esse

ntia

l w

ate

r use

.

70

% o

f w

ate

r su

pply

in

th

e S

E

fro

m g

rou

nd

wa

ter

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/5

/16/9

55

57.h

tml

40

DT

19.5

.06

WG

Drought order

'not necessary'

Tham

es V

alle

y

Th

am

es W

ate

r d

ecid

ed

no

t to

ap

ply

fo

r a

dro

ug

ht

ord

er

aga

inst

ad

vic

e g

ive

n

the

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy.

Due

to

fa

lls in

de

ma

nd

, in

cre

ase

in

re

se

rvo

ir

leve

ls, a

nd m

ain

tain

ed

riv

er

flow

s,

a d

rou

gh

t o

rde

r w

as n

ot ne

cessa

ry y

et.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/5

/19/9

60

74.h

tml

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/6

/1/9

676

2.h

tml

Th

am

es

Wate

r

41

DT

8.6

.06

BC

Deluge eases

drought

Tham

es V

alle

y

Do

wn

po

urs

and

sh

ow

ers

made

it

less lik

ely

th

at th

ere

will

be t

ou

ghe

r cu

rbs

on

th

e u

se

of

wa

ter.

Th

am

es W

ate

r ad

mitte

d M

ay's

re

co

rd 9

6m

m r

ain

fall

co

uld

sta

ve

off a

ny im

med

iate

actio

n.

No

t b

een

as w

et

sin

ce

’8

3, d

ou

ble

M

ay a

ve

rag

e

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/6

/8/9

717

9.h

tml

42

DT

6.7

.06

OM

Water supplies

holding steady

Tham

es V

alle

y

Wate

r su

pplie

s in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

are

hold

ing

the

ir o

wn

de

spite

th

e c

ou

nty

re

ce

ivin

g o

nly

15

pe

r ce

nt o

f ave

rag

e r

ain

fall

in J

un

e.

Ove

r th

e p

ast

two

m

on

ths w

e h

ave

ha

d h

igh

er

rain

fall

tha

t w

e w

ou

ld e

xp

ect.

Dem

an

d h

as f

alle

n

by 3

% a

s a

re

sult o

f h

ose

pip

e b

ans a

nd

th

e W

ate

rwis

e c

am

pa

ign.

Ju

ne -

8m

m o

f ra

in, a

fte

r a

we

t M

ay.

Ra

infa

ll 1

75

% o

f m

on

thly

ave

r.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/6/9

903

9.h

tml

43

H /

S

4.7

.06

OM

Suncream

perm

ission

blocked

Oxfo

rdshire

Te

ach

ers

ye

t to

be

giv

en

the

go

-ah

ead

to a

pply

su

nb

lock to

ch

ildre

n.

Child

p

rote

ction

issue

s d

icta

ted

tha

t O

xfo

rdsh

ire

Co

un

ty C

oun

cil'

s p

olic

y o

n th

e

ap

plic

atio

n o

f su

ncre

am

is t

ha

t p

are

nts

or

ca

rers

sh

ou

ld a

pply

it

in a

dva

nce

. G

uid

ance

to

sch

oo

ls is t

ha

t h

ea

d t

eache

rs w

ill e

xe

rcis

e c

om

mo

n s

ense

it.

n/a

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/4/9

894

9.h

tml

44

H /

S

5.7

.06

OM

It's boiling

enough to fry

an egg

UK

O

xfo

rdsh

ire

‘fr

yin

g’. T

em

pe

ratu

res p

eake

d a

t 30

C in

Oxfo

rd. H

igh

te

mpe

ratu

res s

pa

rke

d s

torm

s a

nd

to

rre

ntia

l d

ow

np

ou

rs.

Re

gio

n w

ill c

on

tin

ue

to

exp

eri

en

ce

hig

h te

mpe

ratu

res.

Lo

okin

g a

t N

ort

h A

tla

ntic a

nd

Eu

rop

ea

n

lan

d te

mp

era

ture

s,

the

Me

t O

ffic

e p

red

icte

d a

ho

tte

r-th

an

-avera

ge

he

atw

ave

.

Te

mp

in

Bra

zil,

C

op

acab

ana

wa

s

23

C b

y

co

mp

ariso

n.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/5/9

897

5.h

tml

45

G /

S

6.7

.06

BB

C

Power restored

to 3,500

houses

Oxo

n

Ele

ctr

icity w

as r

esto

red

to h

om

es a

fte

r a

sto

rm b

rou

gh

t d

ow

n p

ow

er

ca

ble

s.

3,5

00

hom

es in

Whe

atle

y,

Tid

din

gto

n, W

oo

tto

n,

San

dfo

rd,

Fa

rin

gdo

n a

nd

A

bin

gdo

n w

ere

with

ou

t e

lectr

icity.

Ho

mes in

Mo

llin

gto

n a

nd

Ba

nb

ury

we

re

str

uck b

y lig

htn

ing

. P

rop

ert

ies in

Bic

este

r a

nd

Ga

rsin

gto

n f

lood

ed

.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/5

1565

32.s

tm

So

uth

ern

E

lectr

ic

46

H /

S

13.7

.06

OM

Floods and

trees block 70

roads

Oxon

Fir

efig

hte

rs r

esp

on

ded

to

30

ca

lls d

ue t

o lig

htn

ing

str

ike

s, floo

de

d h

om

es

an

d fir

e a

larm

s s

et

off

. 70

ro

ads a

cro

ss O

xo

n w

ere

blo

cke

d b

y f

alle

n t

rees o

r flo

od

wa

ter.

Lig

htn

ing

str

ike

s b

rou

gh

t d

ow

n c

able

s.

Sig

na

ls b

etw

ee

n D

idco

t a

nd

Sw

ind

on

we

re o

ut

of a

ction

. T

ailb

acks r

ep

ort

ed

on

M4

0.

En

tire

mo

nth

's

wo

rth

of

rain

fe

ll in

ju

st tw

o h

ou

rs

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/13/9

95

35.h

tml

Page 56: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

47

H /

S

19.7

.06

OM

It's too hot to

go to class

Oxfo

rd

Ab

ou

t 25

0 s

cho

olc

hild

ren

we

re s

top

ped

fro

m g

oin

g to

Oxfo

rd's

Pe

ers

T

ech

no

log

y C

olle

ge

be

ca

use

of

soa

ring

tem

pe

ratu

res.

Sch

oo

ls p

ut

ou

t ra

dio

w

arn

ing

s, sa

yin

g y

ou

ng

er

pu

pils

sh

ould

no

t tu

rn u

p.

Old

er

pup

ils w

ere

to

ld to

a

tte

nd s

ch

ool as n

orm

al, a

s t

he

y o

ccu

py a

co

ole

r p

art

of

the

bu

ildin

gs.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/19/9

98

25.h

tml

48

H /

S

20.0

7.0

6

OM

Grit shown in

heatwave

UK

C

ou

nty

bake

d in

sco

rchin

g tem

pe

ratu

res.

Sch

oolc

hild

ren

we

re s

en

t ho

me

, ro

ad

s w

ere

gri

tted

to

sto

p t

hem

meltin

g.

35

C o

n t

he

ho

tte

st d

ay o

f th

e y

ea

r.

He

at

me

lted

ro

ad

su

rface

s, g

ritt

ers

sp

raye

d g

ranite

du

st

and

sa

nd.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/20/9

98

95.h

tml

49

H /

S

20.7

.06

BB

C

Hottest July

day ever in

England

UK

W

edn

esd

ay -

ho

ttest Ju

ly d

ay in

En

gla

nd

eve

r, w

ith

a t

em

pe

ratu

re o

f 3

6.5

C

in S

urr

ey.

Th

e te

mpe

ratu

re b

ea

t th

e p

revio

us r

eco

rd f

rom

Ju

ly 1

91

1,

wh

en

te

mps r

ea

che

d 3

6C

in

Su

rre

y. N

HS

Dir

ect:

de

alin

g w

ith

2,5

00 e

xtr

a c

alls

pd

, p

eo

ple

wa

ntin

g h

eatw

ave

ad

vic

e.

Sch

ools

fo

rce

d to

clo

se

. R

SP

CA

: h

un

dre

ds o

f ca

lls r

ep

ort

ing

dog

s le

ft h

ot

pla

ce

s. W

est

Co

ast L

ine

re

str

icte

d

to 9

0m

ph

. H

ot m

oto

rists

ab

and

on

ed c

ars

to f

ind

sh

ade

.

Ho

tte

st te

mp

s:

He

ath

row

35

C,

H

igh

est

rec.

in

En

gla

nd

wa

s

38

.5C

Fa

ve

rsh

am

, K

en

t 1

0 A

ug

. ‘0

3.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/5

193

97

0.s

tm

NH

S

RS

PC

A

50

H /

S

20.7

.06

OM

The deadly

threat under

the surface

Tham

es V

alle

y

Th

rill-

see

ke

rs ju

mpin

g o

ff b

ridg

es th

is s

um

me

r co

uld

end

up w

ith

se

rio

us

inju

rie

s o

r de

ad

, a

s th

ey s

mash

in

to h

idd

en d

ang

ers

. R

AF

man

W. Lo

ve

lock,

27

, die

d w

he

n h

it h

is h

ea

d a

fter

jum

pin

g in

Oct.

20

03

. T

he

wa

ter

un

de

r th

e

bri

dg

e w

he

re t

he

div

ers

we

re s

ea

rchin

g w

as ju

st tw

o m

etr

es d

ee

p -

an

yo

ne

jum

pin

g in

to it

wo

uld

alm

ost

cert

ain

ly h

it t

he

bott

om

.

En

v A

ge

ncy

estim

ate

s 3

- 6

p

eo

ple

dro

wn

py

on

Th

am

es

thro

ugh

Oxo

n.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/20/1

00

01

9.h

tm

l

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

Th

am

es

Va

lley

Po

lice

51

H /

S

21.7

.06

OT

County

endures week

of baking heat

UK

S

ch

oolc

hild

ren

se

nt h

om

e,

road

s g

ritt

ed t

o s

top t

hem

me

ltin

g a

nd

an

ima

ls a

t a

wild

life p

ark

hose

d d

ow

n.

Cla

ssro

om

tem

pe

ratu

res h

it 1

00F

. O

CC

g

uid

elin

e:

"He

ad

tea

ch

ers

will

ta

ke

acco

unt

of a

ll fa

cto

rs a

t th

eir

sch

oo

l, a

bo

ut

wh

eth

er

sch

ool sho

uld

clo

se

ea

rly.

Pa

ren

ts to

lis

ten

to

no

tices issue

d v

ia

local ra

dio

sta

tio

ns."

Sticky c

on

ditio

ns r

epo

rte

d o

n 3

0 r

oad

s, re

late

d t

o h

igh

vo

lum

es o

f H

GV

s.

So

uth

ern

Oxo

n

mo

re a

ffe

cte

d &

roa

ds r

un

nin

g e

ast-

we

st.

34

.2 d

eg

C w

as

the

ave

rag

e

ma

xim

um

Ju

ly

tem

pe

ratu

re f

rom

1

96

1-1

99

0.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/21/1

00

12

2.h

tm

l

OC

C

52

RR

PS

23.7

.06

TG

100º - get used

to it

UK

U

KC

IP:

by 2

05

0 v

ery

hot

and

dry

su

mm

ers

co

uld

occu

r e

ve

ry 3

ye

ars

, w

hile

m

ax t

em

ps to

p 4

0C

. Ir

reve

rsib

le c

limate

ch

ang

e ta

kin

g h

old

. P

ark

lan

ds a

re

ble

ach

ed

lan

dsca

pe

s, re

se

rvo

irs c

racke

d d

ese

rts. S

cho

ols

are

clo

sed

, ra

ilwa

ys b

uckle

d,

roa

d s

urf

aces m

elted

. D

roug

ht

da

ma

ge

d c

rop

s a

nd

fo

rced

fa

rme

rs t

o s

tart

ha

rvestin

g e

arly.

UK

po

pu

lation

nee

ds t

o g

et u

se

d t

o 3

0 t

o

40

da

ys a

ye

ar

with

tem

ps a

bove

25

C.

Re

pro

du

ctive

patt

ern

s o

f p

ests

will

ch

ang

e, m

ean

ing

more

flie

s,

rats

an

d m

osq

uito

s.

Fifth

bo

ut o

f in

tense

sum

me

r h

ea

t to

str

ike

th

e

co

untr

y in

10

ye

ars

.

http

://w

ww

.gu

ard

ian.c

o.u

k/e

nvir

on

ment/2

00

6/jul/23

/weath

er.

the

obs

erv

er

Eu

rop

ean

C

om

mis

sio

n's

Jo

int

Re

se

arc

h

Ce

ntr

e

53

G /

S

24.7

.06

OM

We must adapt

to weather

Oxfo

rd B

otley

and K

idlin

gto

n

Mo

nso

on

-lik

e d

ow

np

ou

r fe

ll o

ve

r O

xfo

rd. W

ide

sp

rea

d f

lash

flo

od

ing

ca

use

d

da

mag

e a

nd

mis

ery

to

fam

ilies a

nd

bu

sin

esses.

Infr

astr

uctu

re is g

oin

g to

h

ave

to

be

ove

rha

ule

d s

o p

eop

le d

on

't g

et

flo

od

ed

out

eve

ry s

um

me

r.

Co

un

cils

, T

ha

mes W

ate

r an

d a

ge

ncie

s m

ust figu

re o

ut

wh

y c

ert

ain

are

as

we

re h

it s

o h

ard

an

d a

ct to

ensu

re th

at it d

oe

s n

ot h

app

en

ag

ain

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/24/1

00

20

0.h

tm

l

Page 57: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

54

G /

S

27.7

.06

OM

Storm

strikes

county after

heatwave – 1

Oxfo

rdshire

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

hit b

y a

to

rre

ntia

l ra

insto

rm.

Ho

me

s a

nd

sh

op

s w

ere

flo

od

ed

, su

mm

er

eve

nts

wa

she

d o

ut

and

ro

ads s

ubm

erg

ed

. F

ire

fig

hte

rs t

ook 1

60

ca

lls in

th

ree

ho

urs

. T

ree

s b

rou

gh

t do

wn

an

d r

oa

ds c

losed

. T

raff

ic b

acke

dup

a

nd

sh

opp

ers

fo

rce

d to

run

fo

r co

ve

r. M

et

Off

ice

: O

xfo

rdsh

ire s

uffe

red

th

e

wo

rst

sto

rm in

th

e U

K g

ett

ing

a m

on

th's

ra

infa

ll in

a c

ou

ple

of

ho

urs

.

On

e m

onth

’s

rain

4

0.8

mm

- fe

ll in

tw

o h

ou

rs,

with

fla

sh

flo

od

ing

an

d

ligh

tnin

g s

trik

es

http

://a

rchiv

e.t

he

oxfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

200

6/7

/27/1

00

46

4.h

tml

55

H /

S

27.7

.06

AH

Storm

strikes

county after

heatwave –2

Oxfo

rdshire

Pe

op

le o

f O

xfo

rdsh

ire

sw

elte

red

th

rou

gh o

ne o

f th

e c

razie

st w

ea

the

r p

erio

ds

in t

he

cou

nty

's h

isto

ry.

Pa

ren

ts a

nd

ch

ildre

n s

pla

sh

ed in

sw

imm

ing p

ools

an

d

pa

dd

ling p

ools

. S

izzlin

g h

ea

t th

rea

ten

ed

to

me

lt r

oa

ds,

gritt

ers

sp

raye

d

gra

nite

dust

& s

and

to

ho

ld t

he s

urf

aces t

og

eth

er.

Sticky c

ond

itio

ns re

po

rte

d

on

30

ro

ads,

inclu

din

g o

nes n

ea

r B

lew

bu

ry a

nd

th

e A

32

9 n

ear

Th

am

e.

Te

mp

era

ture

: 3

4.2

C (

94

F)

on

th

e h

ott

est

da

y o

f th

e y

ea

r.

http

://a

rchiv

e.t

he

oxfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

200

6/7

/27/1

00

46

4.h

tml

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

F

ire

a

nd

Re

scue

S

erv

ice

56

RR

PS

28.7

.06

OM

Get used to

this kind of

heat

Oxfo

rdshire

Ch

ris W

est, U

KC

IP:

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

sho

uld

bra

ce

its

elf fo

r sum

me

rs w

ith

eve

n

mo

re o

f th

e v

iole

nt

thu

nde

rsto

rms.

Su

mm

ers

ho

tte

r still

will

be

com

e t

he

norm

in

ye

ars

to

co

me

, w

ith

ch

an

ges t

o c

rops g

row

n a

nd

fre

qu

en

t e

xtr

em

e

we

ath

er

- such

as h

ot,

dry

sum

me

rs -

as te

mpe

ratu

res r

ise

. V

ari

abili

ty o

f th

e

we

ath

er

will

in

cre

ase

, w

ith

wa

rme

r w

inte

rs,

mo

re h

ea

vy r

ain

sto

rms a

nd

fla

sh

flo

odin

g. In

10

0 y

ea

rs o

ur

clim

ate

will

be s

imila

r to

th

e m

idd

le o

f F

ran

ce

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/7

/28/1

00

51

0.h

tm

l

57

DT

10.8

.06

OM

Drought takes

toll of wildlife

Buckin

gham

sh

ire /

Oxfo

rdshire

Fis

h d

ied

due

to

lo

w o

xyg

en

leve

ls.

Bre

ed

ing

patt

ern

s o

f fr

ogs a

nd

insects

a

ffe

cte

d b

y lo

w f

low

s a

nd

se

a w

ate

r flo

win

g f

urt

he

r u

pstr

ea

m t

ha

n n

orm

al.

Bo

tulis

m d

ete

cte

d in

wild

fow

l in

Bu

ckin

gh

am

shir

e.

21

mo

nth

s o

f b

elo

w-a

ve

rag

e

rain

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/8

/17/1

02

24

8.h

tm

l

58

DT

11.8

.06

OM

Drought kills

fish

Oxfo

rdshire

Dro

ug

ht

take

s a

to

ll o

f O

xfo

rdsh

ire

wild

life

, w

ith

fis

h d

yin

g a

nd

fro

g/in

se

ct

bre

ed

ing

pa

tte

rns b

ein

g a

ffe

cte

d.

Lo

w o

xyg

en

du

e t

o lo

w f

low

s o

f w

ate

r in

th

e R

ive

r C

he

rwe

ll a

t B

an

bu

ry c

ou

ld s

pe

ll tr

ou

ble

fo

r w

ildlif

e. L

ow

wa

ter

flo

w

leve

ls c

ause

fis

h t

o g

asp

, po

nd

s t

urn

gre

en

, a

nd

wa

ter

inse

cts

left

str

an

de

d.

21

mo

nth

s o

f b

elo

w-a

ve

rag

e

rain

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/8

/11/1

01

78

4.h

tm

l

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy'

59

DT

11.8

.06

OM

County unites

to save water

Oxfo

rdshire

Th

am

es W

ate

r sa

id t

ha

t w

ate

r u

se

dro

ppe

d b

y 1

0.5

pe

r ce

nt d

uri

ng J

uly

. 7

3

mill

ion litre

s o

f w

ate

r sa

ve

d w

ou

ld h

ave

fill

ed

alm

ost

a m

illio

n b

ath

tub

s e

ve

ry

da

y,

sh

ow

ing

if

eve

ryo

ne m

ake

s s

mall

ch

ang

es t

o th

eir d

aily

ro

utin

es, it c

an

he

lp m

ake

a b

ig d

iffe

rence

."

Dro

ug

ht 2

1 m

ths

old

. S

ince

No

v

20

04

ha

ve

only

2

mo

nth

s o

f a

bo

ve

-a

ve

rag

e r

ain

fall

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/8

/11/1

01

76

0.h

tm

l

60

RR

PS

8.9

.06

OT

Horse

chestnuts

under attack

UK

D

ise

ase

, p

ests

an

d d

rou

gh

t end

an

ge

r U

K's

ho

rse

ch

estn

ut

tre

es, a

s a

n

estim

ate

d 4

0,0

00

-50

,00

0 -

ab

ou

t te

n p

er

ce

nt o

f th

e to

tal in

Bri

tain

– w

ere

a

ffe

cte

d b

y b

leed

ing

ca

nke

r, w

hic

h a

ttacks th

e b

ark

. L

ea

f m

ine

r m

oth

s a

re

als

o d

estr

oyin

g lea

ve

s,

turn

ing t

he

m b

row

n a

nd

sh

rive

lled

, w

hile

a s

eri

es o

f su

mm

er

dro

ugh

ts h

ave

we

aken

ed

the

tre

es th

em

selv

es.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/9

/8/1

045

57.h

tml

Page 58: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

61

RR

PS

11.9

.06

OM

£4m repair bill

for roads

Oxon

He

atw

ave

le

ft O

CC

's h

igh

wa

ys m

an

age

rs w

ith

a £

4m

re

pa

ir b

ill fo

r da

mag

ed

ro

ad

su

rfaces.

Hig

h t

em

pe

ratu

res m

elte

d r

oa

ds a

nd le

ft s

om

e p

erm

an

en

tly

da

mag

ed

. A

ffecte

d r

ou

tes in

clu

de

the

A3

29

betw

ee

n T

ha

me a

nd

M4

0,

A4

13

0 / G

an

gsd

ow

n H

ill, A

40

95

/ K

irtlin

gto

n a

nd

B4

022

/ C

harl

bu

ry.

Ve

ry

ho

t w

ea

the

r at

the

end

of Ju

ly a

ffe

cte

d r

oa

d s

urf

aces w

hic

h s

oft

en

ed

, le

adin

g

to a

bu

ild-u

p o

f bitum

en

on

the s

urf

ace

an

d a

loss o

f te

xtu

re.

http

://a

rchiv

e.t

he

oxfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

200

6/9

/11/1

04

63

1.h

tml

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

C

ou

nty

C

ou

ncil'

s

62

G /

S

12.1

0.0

6

OM

Welcome to a

Water World

Oxon

Th

ou

sa

nds o

f h

om

es a

cro

ss O

xfo

rdsh

ire

affe

cte

d b

y p

ow

er

cu

ts a

s e

lectr

ica

l sto

rms h

it.

So

uth

ern

Ele

ctr

ic e

stim

ate

d a

rou

nd

4,0

00

pro

pe

rtie

s w

ere

a

ffe

cte

d d

esp

ite in

ve

sting

heavily

in

lig

htn

ing

pro

tectio

n s

yste

ms to

min

imis

e

da

mag

e, b

ut

un

able

to

pro

tect e

qu

ipm

en

t fr

om

a d

irect str

ike

.

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

net/dis

pla

y.v

ar.

96

45

50.0

.welc

om

e_to

_w

ate

r_w

orld.p

hp

Fir

e a

nd

R

escue

/

So

uth

ern

E

lectr

ic

63

AS

24.1

0.0

6

OM

County still

blooming

Oxon

Pla

nts

and

flo

we

rs t

ricke

d in

to a

seco

nd

blo

om

as s

um

me

r e

xte

nd

ed

into

a

utu

mn

. T

ree

s s

pro

ute

d s

pri

ng b

lossom

an

d flo

we

red

. O

xfo

rd U

rba

n W

ildlif

e:

…o

dd

thin

gs in

the

wild

and

ga

rde

ns.

Th

ere

ha

ve

bee

n v

iole

ts o

ut

rece

ntly

an

d t

his

is th

e m

idd

le o

f O

cto

be

r."

Me

t O

ffic

e: "

..co

ntinu

ed

tre

nd

fro

m th

e

su

mm

er.

.unsu

rprisin

g t

o s

ee

flo

we

rs &

tre

es in

a s

econ

d b

loo

m."

Lo

ng

est sum

me

r sin

ce

16

89

. T

he

ho

t su

mm

er

plu

s a

utu

mn r

ain

=

go

od

ga

rden

co

nditio

ns

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/1

0/2

4/1

105

77.h

tm

l

64

RR

PS

24.1

0.0

6

NH

S

Oxfordshire

PCT

Emergency

Heatwave Plan

Oxon

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

PC

T’s

Em

erg

ency H

ea

twa

ve

Pla

nt:

B

y t

he

208

0s,

it is p

redic

ted

th

at

eve

nts

sim

ilar

to th

e 2

00

3 h

ea

twa

ve

will

ha

ppe

n e

ve

ry y

ea

r re

su

ltin

g in

m

an

y d

ea

ths,

the

ma

jority

old

er

pe

ople

. T

he

PC

T P

lan

pro

vid

es r

esp

on

ses

to p

rote

ct h

ealth

. P

lan

fo

llow

s g

uid

an

ce

fro

m D

ep

t o

f H

ea

lth a

nd

op

era

tes

fro

m 1

Jun

e to

15

Se

pte

mbe

r. C

ore

ele

men

ts: A

'He

at-

He

alth w

atc

h' s

yste

m,

wh

ere

by M

et.

Off

ice

fo

reca

sts

tri

gg

er

va

ryin

g le

ve

ls o

f re

sp

onse

. A

dvic

e

pro

vid

ed

dir

ect

to p

ub

lic a

nd

he

altH

/ S

ocia

l ca

re p

rofe

ssio

na

ls.

Ide

ntifica

tio

n o

f in

div

idua

ls a

t risk e

nsu

res th

ey r

ece

ive

tim

ely

ad

vic

e a

nd

su

ppo

rt.

Use

s th

e m

edia

to

sup

ply

ad

vic

e b

oth

be

fore

an

d d

uri

ng

he

atw

ave

.

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdshir

ep

ct.n

hs.u

k/

abo

ut-

us/h

ow

-th

e-p

ct-

work

s/tru

st-

boa

rd/b

oard

-pap

ers

/20

08

/july

/docum

ents

/He

at

waveP

lanJune

2008

.pd

f

65

G /

S

25.1

0.0

6

OM

County Awash

After

Rainstorm

s

Oxon,

Abin

gdon

Tw

o w

ee

ks' w

ort

h o

f ra

in fe

ll in

on

e n

ight,

flo

odin

g h

om

es a

nd

ro

ads, ca

usin

g

accid

ents

an

d fo

rcin

g s

ew

ag

e u

p f

rom

dra

ins a

rou

nd

th

e c

oun

ty.

Ab

ingd

on

w

as w

ors

t h

it,

with

hom

es,

ga

rde

ns a

nd r

oa

ds a

wa

sh

. H

om

es w

ere

sw

am

pe

d in

Ap

ple

ford

Dri

ve

an

d C

hilt

on

Clo

se

, A

bin

gdo

n T

ow

n's

fo

otb

all

gro

un

d u

nde

r six

in

ch

es o

f flo

od

ing

.

On

e-a

nd

-a-h

alf

inche

s -

ha

lf o

f O

cto

be

r's a

ve

rag

e

rain

fall

- fe

ll in

sid

e

eig

ht h

ou

rs

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/1

0/2

5/1

107

72.h

tm

l

Page 59: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

66

RR

PS

10.1

1.0

6

OM

Climate change

sends £16.4m

bill

Oxon

Clim

ate

ch

ang

e c

ost O

CC

£1

6.4

m a

s m

ore

th

an 2

60 c

ostly w

ea

the

r-re

late

d

incid

en

ts w

ere

reco

rded

ove

r 1

0 y

ea

rs. If

co

sts

to

busin

esses /

ho

use

hold

ers

w

as in

clu

de

d,

it w

ou

ld c

om

e to h

un

dre

ds o

f m

illio

ns. £

16

.4m

fig

ure

is ju

st

the

tip

of th

e ice

be

rg,

base

d o

n in

su

ran

ce

cla

ims a

nd

ro

ad r

ep

air

bill

s.

Lis

t o

f in

cid

en

ts in

clu

des: d

rou

gh

t o

f 2

00

3/4

, w

ith

more

tha

n 5

0 r

oad

s h

it b

y t

wo

e

xtr

em

ely

dry

win

ters

an

d s

um

me

rs, re

co

nstr

uction

£3

.6m

. F

loo

ds in

Ja

nua

ry 2

00

3 a

ffe

cte

d h

om

es, b

usin

esses, a

nd

tw

o s

ch

oo

ls flo

od

ed

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esco

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sse

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ut a

t £5

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twa

ve

clo

se

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ols

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ss o

f te

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ing h

ou

rs, lo

ss in

wo

rkin

g h

ou

rs,

pre

ssu

re o

n c

hild

ca

re s

erv

ice

s.

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67

R /

F

27.1

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OT

County Put On

Flood Watch

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

H

un

dre

ds o

f h

ouse

ho

lds w

ere

wa

rne

d a

bo

ut th

e t

hre

at

of flood

ing

aft

er

rece

nt

hea

vy r

ain

s le

d to

lo

cal ri

ve

rs b

urs

tin

g th

eir

ba

nks, p

uttin

g fa

rmla

nd

un

de

r w

ate

r. F

lood

wa

rnin

gs issu

ed b

y t

he

En

vir

onm

en

t A

gen

cy o

n 4

riv

ers

.

http

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rchiv

e.t

he

oxfo

rdtim

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et/

200

6/1

1/2

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165

48.h

tml

68

RR

PS

30.1

1.0

6

AH

Flood relief a

decade away

Oxon

Vic

tim

s o

f flo

odin

g w

ill h

ave

to s

tick w

ith

the

sa

nd

ba

gs f

or

a fe

w m

ore

ye

ars

a

s a

pro

po

sed

£10

0m

flo

od

relie

f ch

ann

el is

at

lea

st

a d

ecade

aw

ay.

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy o

ffe

red

little

ho

pe

to

100

0s a

t-risk.

On

e s

olu

tio

n t

o th

e

pro

ble

m is a

25m

-wid

e f

loo

d c

ha

nn

el o

n t

he R

. T

ha

mes a

t B

inse

y t

o

Sa

nd

ford

Lock. G

ovt

ap

pro

va

l a

nd

a p

lan

nin

g a

pp

lica

tio

n m

ay o

ccu

r in

20

08

. A

fte

r a

pu

blic

in

qu

iry,

co

nstr

uctio

n u

nlik

ely

to

beg

in b

efo

re 2

01

5.

http

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rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/1

1/3

0/1

174

27.h

tm

l

69

R /

F

1.1

2.0

6

BC

Rain May Bring

Fresh Flooding

Oxo

n

Th

rea

t o

f flo

odin

g h

ung

ove

r th

e c

ou

nty

as m

ore

ra

in f

ell.

Heavy d

ow

np

ou

rs

sa

w r

ive

rs f

loo

d th

eir

ba

nks th

is w

ee

k. W

ate

rwa

ys b

ein

g m

onito

red w

ere

Is

lip,

Eve

nlo

de

, W

ind

rush

, C

he

rwe

ll, R

ay,

Th

am

es,

Ch

arn

ey B

asse

tt a

nd

O

ck.

Riv

er

Che

rwe

ll b

roke

its

ba

nks a

t se

ve

ral po

ints

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.t

he

oxfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

200

6/1

2/1

/117

51

3.h

tml

70

G /

S

8.1

2.0

6

OM

County Hit By

New W

eather

Woes

Oxon

Ho

me

s w

ere

le

ft w

ith

out

ele

ctr

icity a

nd

riv

ers

bu

rst

the

ir b

anks a

s h

ea

vy r

ain

a

nd

str

ong

win

ds.

Ele

ctr

icity s

up

ply

wa

s c

ut

off

to

1,7

95 c

usto

me

rs.

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

ha

d b

een

on t

orn

ad

o w

atc

h.

Fir

efig

hte

rs a

tte

nd

ed

ele

ctr

icity

ca

ble

s b

low

n d

ow

n.

De

spite

a th

ird

mo

nth

of h

ea

vy,

we

ll a

bove

ave

rag

e

rain

fall,

Th

am

es W

ate

r in

sis

ted

a h

osep

ipe a

nd s

prinkle

r b

an

is s

till

ne

cessa

ry b

eca

use

of lo

w g

rou

nd

wa

ter

leve

ls.

40

% m

ore

ra

in fe

ll in

No

ve

mbe

r th

an

a

ve

rag

e (

87

mm

co

mp

are

d w

ith

6

2m

m)

- th

e 1

7th

w

ett

est

No

ve

mbe

r

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/1

2/8

/118

99

1.h

tm

l http

://a

rchiv

e.t

he

oxfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

200

6/1

2/4

/117

93

2.h

tml

71

RR

PS

20.1

2.0

6

AH

Homes shock

for Didcot

Vale

T

ho

usa

nds o

f n

ew

ho

me

s a

t D

idcot

loo

k s

et to

be

built

to

the

we

st

an

d s

ou

th

of

the

to

wn

. A

stu

dy c

arr

ied

out

by S

OD

C w

ith

VO

WH

an

d O

CC

lo

oke

d a

t n

ine

po

ten

tial a

rea

s fo

r de

ve

lop

me

nt

aro

un

d th

e to

wn

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

6/1

2/2

0/1

213

90.h

tm

l

Page 60: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

72

AS

11.1

.07

OT

The spider's

creeping north

Oxfo

rdshire

Th

e w

asp

sp

ide

r use

d to

occu

r ju

st o

n th

e s

ou

th c

oa

st

but

has s

pre

ad

. T

he

w

asp

sp

ide

r, A

rgio

pe

Bru

en

nic

hi h

as g

ain

ed

a fo

oth

old

in

so

uth

ern

Oxo

n.

Warm

er

sum

me

rs in

cre

ase

the

cha

nce

s o

f its h

ab

ita

t sp

readin

g. W

arm

er

co

nditio

ns w

ill b

e c

ond

uciv

e t

o s

pecie

s e

xte

nd

ing

the

ir r

an

ge

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/11/1

25

06

7.h

tm

l

73

G /

S

12.1

.07

BC

Extreme

weather causes

chaos

Oxfo

rdshire

Dri

ve

rs e

scap

ed

se

rio

us inju

ry a

s d

oze

ns o

f tr

ee

s w

ere

blo

wn

do

wn

in

th

e

ga

le-f

orc

e w

ind

s.

Cou

nty

cou

ncil

en

gin

ee

rs r

ece

ived

300

ca

lls a

bo

ut

falle

n/d

am

ag

ed

tre

es.

700

hom

es a

nd

busin

esse

s in

Abin

gdo

n,

Did

co

t a

nd

W

itn

ey lo

st p

ow

er

as d

eb

ris b

rou

gh

t lin

es d

ow

n.

Me

t O

ffic

e:

win

ds

of

64m

ph

hig

he

st

reco

rde

d fo

r th

e

co

unty

in

Be

nson

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/12/1

25

22

1.h

tm

l

74

DT

16.0

1.0

7

OM

Lift the

hosepipe ban

now!

Oxfo

rdshire

Still

no

t a d

rop

fo

r T

ham

es W

ate

r custo

me

rs’ ho

se

pip

es. T

he

re is

sp

ecu

lation

th

at

the h

ose

pip

e b

an

im

posed

last

ye

ar

is a

bo

ut to

be

lifte

d.

Riv

ers

th

rou

gho

ut

the

co

unty

are

fu

ll a

nd

ma

ny h

ave

ove

rflo

we

d a

nd

flo

od

ed

a

dja

ce

nt field

s.

Th

e b

an

has n

ow

be

en

in

pla

ce

fo

r n

ine

mo

nth

s.

Fro

m 1

0 D

ec.

and

1

0 J

an

., 1

00

.2m

m

of

rain

fe

ll in

Oxo

n

– 4

X

in

sa

me

p

eri

od last

ye

ar.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/16/1

25

78

4.h

tm

l

Th

am

es

Wate

r

75

G /

S

19.1

.07

OM

Storm

Damage

Assessed AND

Man Dies Tree

Crushes Car

Oxon

Hig

h w

ind

s to

pple

d a

tre

e o

nto

an

ele

ctr

icity lin

e in M

ilto

n,

Abin

gd

on

, le

avin

g

7,0

00

hom

es n

o p

ow

er.

Hig

h w

ind

s c

aused

tra

ve

l d

ela

ys w

ith

fa

llen

tre

es,

roa

d a

ccid

en

ts a

nd

slo

w t

rain

s.

3 lo

rrie

s t

opp

led

on M

40

. F

ire c

rew

s

rem

ove

d tre

es b

lockin

g A

415

Ab

ing

do

n.

Ma

ny s

cho

ols

clo

sed

. O

CC

re

ce

ive

d 4

50

re

po

rts o

f fa

llen

tre

es a

nd

flo

od

ing

. 7

00

0 h

om

es lost

po

we

r in

D

idco

t, M

ilto

n,

Ste

ve

nto

n, H

arw

ell,

Dra

yto

n,

Su

tto

n C

ou

rte

nay

Me

t O

ffic

e

gusts

w

ere

up

to

70m

ph

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/19/1

26

62

3.h

tm

l

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/18/1

26

45

3.h

tm

l

Fir

e R

escue

S

erv

ice

76

G /

S

22.1

.07

OT

Woman hit by

plank during

storm

South

and

West O

xon

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

wo

man

kn

ocke

d d

ow

n b

y a

n a

irb

orn

e p

lank o

f w

oo

d.

15

00

h

om

es lo

st p

ow

er

as S

E e

ngin

ee

rs r

ep

aire

d p

ow

er

lines. W

ors

t h

it losin

g

po

we

r w

ere

Bic

este

r, B

erin

sfield

& H

enle

y.

Fire

se

rvic

e in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

re

ce

ive

d 1

00

calls

, de

alt w

ith

25

fa

llen

tre

es a

nd

ma

de

six

po

we

r lin

es s

afe

.

Wors

t w

ea

the

r sin

ce

ab

ou

t 1

990

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/22/1

27

31

0.h

tm

l

So

uth

ern

E

lectr

ic

77

DT

18.1

.07

OM

Hosepipe ban

lifted

Tham

es V

alle

y

Mo

tori

sts

and

ga

rde

ne

rs w

ere

giv

en

the

all-

cle

ar

to u

se

th

eir

ho

sep

ipe

s fo

r th

e f

irst

tim

e in

nin

e m

on

ths a

fte

r T

ha

mes W

ate

r lif

ted its

dom

estic h

osep

ipe

an

d s

pri

nkle

r b

an

, in

tro

du

ced

in

Ap

ril fo

llow

ing

an 1

8-m

on

th d

rou

ght.

It h

as

taken

som

e tim

e f

or

the

ra

in to s

eep

do

wn

in

to u

nd

erg

rou

nd a

qu

ife

rs th

at

ke

ep r

ive

rs a

nd

re

se

rvoir

s to

pp

ed

up

du

rin

g th

e s

prin

g a

nd

th

e s

um

me

r.

Fro

m 1

0/1

2 t

o

10

/01

10

0m

m f

ell

– 4

tim

es t

ha

t in

th

e s

am

e p

erio

d

12

mo

nth

s e

arl

ier

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

/18/1

26

30

7.h

tm

l

Th

am

es

Wate

r

78

I /

S

8.2

.07

BC

Widespread

Disruption To

Travel

Th

am

es

Va

lley

So

me

sch

oo

ls c

lose

d d

ue

to

he

ating

pro

ble

ms, w

hile

oth

ers

de

cid

ed

to

sh

ut

be

cau

se it

wo

uld

be

to

o d

ifficu

lt f

or

pu

pils

an

d s

taff t

o g

et

to c

lasse

s.

Bu

s

an

d r

ail

se

rvic

es w

ere

dis

rup

ted

an

d d

rivin

g c

on

ditio

ns w

ere

difficu

lt f

or

mo

torists

with

fre

sh

sn

ow

fa

lling

du

rin

g th

e m

orn

ing

rush

-ho

ur.

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

re

ce

ivin

g 1

5cm

of

sn

ow

in

pla

ce

s.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/2

/8/1

306

18.h

tml

79

I /

S

8.2

.07

BB

C

Travel Delays

Due To Heavy

Snow

Th

am

es

Va

lley

Co

mm

ute

rs a

cro

ss t

he

Th

am

es V

alle

y a

re b

attlin

g r

ush

-hou

r d

ela

ys a

fte

r h

ea

vy s

no

wfa

lls a

cro

ss t

he

are

a.

Gri

tte

rs w

ere

out

ove

rnig

ht o

n m

ajo

r ro

ads

in O

xfo

rdsh

ire

an

d B

erk

sh

ire.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/lo

w/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

341

34

7.s

tm

Page 61: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

80

I /

S

9.2

.07

BB

C

Schools

Closed After

Snow

Th

am

es

Va

lley

At

least

90

sch

oo

ls a

cro

ss O

xfo

rdshir

e r

em

ain

ed c

lose

d f

or

a s

eco

nd

da

y o

n

Fri

da

y a

fte

r sn

ow

sh

ow

ers

.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

3455

79.s

tm

81

RR

PS

5.4

.07

OT

Solving the

drought

UK

P

rep

are

fo

r a

dry

sum

me

r! G

ard

en

ers

we

re in

de

sp

air

la

st

sum

me

r b

eca

use

o

f th

e h

ose

pip

e b

an

. P

len

ty o

f p

lan

ts s

hru

g o

ff d

rou

gh

t an

d n

eve

r n

ee

d

wa

teri

ng

. A

s d

rie

r sum

me

rs s

ee

m t

o b

e b

eco

min

g th

e n

orm

, se

nsib

le t

o g

row

w

ate

r-w

ise

pla

nts

th

at

actu

ally

lo

ve

ho

t, d

ry c

on

ditio

ns.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/4

/5/1

432

17.h

tml

82

RR

PS

19.4

.07

OT

Storm

y future

ahead

Oxfo

rdshire

Co

un

ty f

ace

s a

dis

co

nce

rtin

g fu

ture

of

hose

pip

e b

ans in

su

mm

er

an

d fla

sh

flo

ods in

win

ter.

UK

CIP

with

Oxfo

rd C

ity C

ou

ncil

& O

CC

to

ma

ke

th

e c

ou

nty

a

te

st

are

a f

or

reco

rdin

g "

se

vere

we

ath

er

incid

en

ts"

an

d e

va

lua

ting

the

ir

co

st, u

sin

g t

he Local Climate Impact Profile

. T

he

id

ea is t

o lo

ok a

t th

e

imm

ed

iate

pa

st to

exa

min

e h

ow

in

cid

en

ts a

re m

an

ag

ed

an

d c

oste

d.

Th

en

revie

w c

ritica

l th

resh

old

s a

nd

me

asu

re fre

que

ncie

s f

or

futu

re p

lann

ing

action

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/4

/19/1

46

49

8.h

tm

l

UK

CIP

w

ith

O

xfo

rd

City

Co

un

cil

&

OC

C

83

DT

1.5

.07

BC

Fire crews

tackle blazes

South

O

xfo

rdshire

Rest

of county

Fla

me

s d

estr

oye

d t

wo

ve

hic

les a

nd

a c

om

mun

ity c

en

tre

wa

s d

am

ag

ed in

a

sp

ate

of

fire

s a

cro

ss t

he

co

un

ty.

Fir

e c

rew

s w

ere

ca

lled

to

a c

ar

on

fire

in

w

hile

in

Ban

bu

ry a

ho

use

wa

s d

estr

oye

d b

y f

ire

. 6

acre

s o

f w

oo

dla

nd

wa

s

ab

laze

in

so

uth

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/5

/1/1

493

11.h

tml

F &

R

84

RR

PS

15.5

.07

OM

Warm

summers pose

disease threat

Oxfo

rdshire

within

UK

H

ott

er

su

mm

ers

cou

ld le

ad

to g

rea

ter

dis

ease

sp

rea

d b

y in

se

cts

. A

s

tem

pe

ratu

res r

ise,

bacte

ria

passed

on

by s

hee

p/d

ee

r ticks c

ou

ld th

reate

n

hu

man

s w

he

n th

ey v

en

ture

in

to f

ore

sts

an

d m

ea

do

ws.

Zoo

log

ists

at O

xfo

rd’s

T

ick R

ese

arc

h U

nit w

arn

ed

this

cou

ld le

ad

to

Lym

e d

ise

ase

. P

CT

’s 4

-sta

ge

h

ea

twa

ve

pla

n a

ctiva

tes w

he

n t

em

ps r

ea

ch

31

C d

uri

ng

th

e d

ay a

nd

16

C a

t n

igh

t fo

r tw

o d

ays r

un

nin

g. L

eve

l 4

of

the

pla

n a

ctiva

tes e

me

rge

ncy

resp

on

ses w

he

n t

he

re is a

cata

str

op

hic

th

rea

t to

the

wa

ter

or

po

we

r su

pply

.

Do

H r

ep

ort

w

arn

ed

th

ere

wa

s

a 1

/ 4

0 c

ha

nce

th

at

SE

Eng

lan

d

will

exp

eri

en

ce

a

se

riou

s h

ea

twa

ve

b

y 2

01

2

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/5

/15/1

52

42

4.h

tm

l

Oxo

n P

CT

85

R /

F

22.7

.07

OM

Flooding:

Clean-up 'will

take months'

Oxfo

rdshire

and B

erk

shire

Flo

od v

ictim

s m

ay n

ot

be a

ble

to

re

turn

to

th

eir

hom

es f

or

mon

ths. C

an

no

t p

red

ict

wh

en

hou

se

s w

ou

ld b

e h

ab

ita

ble

, giv

en

dry

ing

-ou

t p

eri

od

. E

nv

Ag

en

cy s

aid

at

least

700

hom

es w

ere

aff

ecte

d,

mo

st in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

and

B

erk

sh

ire

. F

loo

dw

ate

r o

n th

e tra

cks a

t K

en

nin

gto

n s

usp

end

ed

tra

in s

erv

ices.

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

net/searc

h/d

ispla

y.v

ar.

15

63

887

.0.flo

odin

g_cl

ean

up

_w

ill_ta

ke

_m

onth

s.p

hp

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

86

R /

F

25.7

.07

BB

C

Thames flood

sees homes

evacuated

Oxfo

rdshire

Hu

nd

reds o

f h

om

es e

va

cua

ted.

En

v A

ge

ncy:

le

ve

ls p

ea

ke

d in

Ab

ing

do

n,

wh

ere

58

5 h

om

es w

ere

flo

od

ed

. O

sn

ey M

ea

d s

ub

sta

tion

unde

r th

rea

t. M

ain

ro

ad

s in

to t

he c

ity,

Bo

tle

y a

nd

Ab

ing

do

n R

oa

ds c

losed

. T

ho

usa

nds o

f sa

ndb

ags w

ere

de

live

red

to

hou

se

ho

lds a

cro

ss th

e c

ou

nty

.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

9149

45.s

tm

Th

am

es

Va

lley

Po

lice

E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

Page 62: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

87

R /

F

25.7

.07

BB

C

Floods hit

about 900

properties

Oxon

Ab

ou

t 90

0 p

rop

ert

ies h

ave

bee

n f

loo

ded

in O

xfo

rdsh

ire

du

e to

th

e to

rren

tial

rain

. In

Ab

ing

do

n,

on

the

Riv

er

Ock,

57

0 p

rop

ert

ies w

ere

flo

od

ed

. N

o flo

od

d

efe

nces f

aile

d,

thou

gh r

ive

r w

ate

r / su

rface

wa

ter

ove

rwh

elm

ed

ma

ny

locatio

ns.

Kid

ling

ton

Flo

od D

efe

nce S

che

me (

Riv

er

Ch

erw

ell)

su

ccessfu

lly

pro

tecte

d m

an

y h

om

es in

no

rth

Oxfo

rd.

Th

ou

sa

nds o

f sa

nd

ba

gs d

eliv

ere

d t

o

ho

use

hold

s. O

xfo

rdsh

ire

fir

e c

hie

fs d

ivid

ed

th

e c

ou

nty

in

to 1

1 a

reas.

Prim

ary

scho

ols

fo

rce

d t

o s

hu

t e

arl

y fo

r th

e s

um

me

r h

olid

ays.

Ma

ny r

oa

ds c

losed

.

Flo

ods 2

00

0/2

00

3

de

scri

bed

as o

ne

-in

-40

-ye

ar

eve

nts

. W

ith

Ju

ly 2

00

7

flo

ods,

the

se

no

w

are

th

ree

-in

-se

ve

n-y

ea

r e

ve

nts

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

9154

07.s

tm

88

R /

F

25.7

.07

BB

C

Crews pump

out power

substation

Oxon

Wate

r flo

ode

d in

to h

om

es in

the

we

st

of

Oxfo

rd.

Fir

e c

rew

s p

um

pin

g o

ut

a

su

bsta

tio

n.

No

w s

om

e 3

,000

pro

pe

rtie

s w

ere

flo

ode

d.

Str

ate

gic

pla

nn

ing

wa

s

in p

lace f

or

Oxfo

rd a

nd

Ab

ing

do

n.

Fire

se

rvic

e is m

ee

ting

pote

ntial lif

e-

thre

ate

nin

g incid

en

ts f

rom

Abin

gd

on s

ou

th to

the

He

nle

y a

rea

.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

9130

25.s

tm

89

R /

F

26.7

.07

OM

Flooding:

Power Out To

2,000 Homes

Oxon

2,0

00

hom

es in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

are

cu

rre

ntly w

ith

ou

t e

lectr

icity. D

ecis

ion m

ad

e

to c

ut

the p

ow

er

to 2

60

ho

mes n

ea

r A

bin

gd

on

Roa

d..

Th

e E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy c

laim

s t

hin

gs a

re n

ow

sta

rtin

g to

im

pro

ve

aft

er

a w

ee

k o

f risin

g

flo

ods.

Riv

er

Th

am

es f

rom

Oxfo

rd a

nd

Ab

ing

do

n a

nd

the

Riv

er

Ock f

rom

C

ha

rne

y B

asse

tt t

o A

bin

gd

on

we

re b

oth

und

er

se

ve

re flo

od w

arn

ing

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/7

/26/1

74

08

2.h

tm

l

90

R /

F

28.7

.07

BB

C

Warning for

flood-hit

homes

Oxon

Pe

op

le c

lea

rin

g u

p a

fte

r th

e r

ece

nt flo

od

ing

in O

xfo

rdsh

ire

wa

rne

d to

pre

pa

re

for

he

avy r

ain

this

we

eken

d.

Are

as a

t risk o

ve

r th

e w

ee

ke

nd

in

clu

de

ho

me

s

ne

ar

rive

rs in C

ha

rne

y B

asse

tt,

Ab

ingd

on,

Islip

, E

yn

sh

am

and

Oxfo

rd.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

9203

32.s

tm

91

R /

F

6.8

.07

BB

C

Joint force

tackles flood

damage

Oxon

Aft

erm

ath

of la

st m

on

th's

flo

odin

g is b

ein

g d

ea

lt w

ith

by s

eve

ral a

ge

ncie

s a

re

wo

rkin

g t

oge

the

r. R

eco

ve

ry t

ea

ms inclu

de

sta

ff fro

m t

he

co

un

ty a

nd

dis

tric

t co

uncils

, e

me

rge

ncy s

erv

ice

s, h

ea

lth

tru

sts

, E

nvir

onm

en

t A

ge

ncy a

nd

loca

l b

usin

esses.

Resid

en

ts a

nd

busin

esse

s s

till

face p

ractica

l, f

ina

ncia

l an

d

he

alth

pro

ble

ms c

au

sed

by t

he f

lood

ing.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/6

9342

03.s

tm

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

NOTE: given the severity of the 2007 floods and numbers affected,

many news stories covered the recovery and wider policy issues.

These relate to the event, but are not about the direct effects of the

weather event itself.

92

RR

PS

10.8

.07

OT

A gloomy

outlook?

Oxfo

rdshire

Ian

Cu

rtis

, fo

und

er

of

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

Clim

ate

XC

ha

ng

e, ta

lke

d a

bo

ut

the

flo

od

s

with

co

llea

gue

s in

Oxfo

rd c

arr

yin

g o

ut

rese

arc

h into

clim

ate

ch

ang

e.

Ag

ree

d

tha

t it h

as b

ee

n w

et,

but

wa

s it u

nusu

ally

we

t? H

an

g G

ao

, th

e o

bse

rve

r fo

r O

xfo

rd U

niv

ers

ity's

Rad

clif

fe M

ete

oro

logic

al S

tatio

n p

rovid

es a

de

taile

d

an

aly

sis

of

rain

patt

ern

s in

Sum

me

r 2

007

.

http

://w

ww

.th

eo

xfo

rdtim

es.n

et/m

isc/p

rint.

ph

p?a

rti

d=

16

04

60

9

Clim

ate

XC

ha

ng

e,

ww

w.c

lima

te

x.o

rg

Page 63: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

93

RR

PS

15.0

8.0

7

OT

Victims' anger

over floods

Oxon

Flo

od v

ictim

s r

ou

nd

ed

on

th

e E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy d

uri

ng

a h

ea

ted

me

etin

g

to d

iscu

ss t

he f

all-

ou

t o

f th

e d

isa

ste

r. H

om

eo

wn

ers

, m

an

y o

f w

ho

m a

re s

till

mo

ppin

g u

p f

rom

th

e flo

od

s th

ree

we

eks a

go

, ven

ted

th

eir a

ng

er

at th

e

me

etin

g -

"th

ey s

ay 'n

ot o

ur

fau

lt,

too

mu

ch

ra

in,

the

wa

ter

just

ca

me

'...

I fe

el

like p

unchin

g th

em

." A

ge

ncy W

est m

ana

ge

r G

eo

ff B

ell

sa

id th

e d

rain

ag

e a

nd

m

ain

ten

an

ce

issue

s r

ais

ed

had

no

t co

ntr

ibute

d to

the

rece

nt flo

odin

g

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/8

/15/1

80

65

9.h

tm

l

94

RR

PS

17.8

.07

OM

£800,000 aid

for flood zones

All

Oxfo

rdshire

Co

un

ty is t

o g

et m

ore

th

an

£80

0,0

00

in a

id a

s p

art

of

a G

ovt

£6

.2m

flo

od

re

co

ve

ry p

ackag

e.

Extr

a c

ash

fo

r fo

ur

dis

tric

t co

uncils

th

at

will

split

£8

61,5

00

in e

me

rgen

cy a

id.

Big

gest

recip

ien

t w

ill b

e W

est O

xfo

rdsh

ire

Dis

tric

t C

oun

cil

(£6

00

,00

0);

Va

le o

f W

hite H

ors

e (

£2

00

,00

0);

Oxfo

rd C

ity C

ou

ncil

(£50

,00

0);

C

he

rwe

ll D

istr

ict

Co

uncil

(£1

1,5

00

).

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

net/searc

h/d

ispla

y.v

ar.

16

26

061

.0.8

00_0

00

_aid

_fo

r_flo

od

_zo

nes.p

hp

95

RR

PS

24.8

.07

OM

Victims offered

a £250 lifeline

H

ard

ship

pa

ym

en

ts o

f £

250

will

be g

ive

n to

resid

en

ts w

ors

t hit b

y last

mo

nth

's f

loo

d b

y s

om

e O

xfo

rdsh

ire D

istr

ict C

ou

ncils

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/8

/24/1

82

76

3.h

tm

l

WO

DC

96

RR

PS

22.8

.07

OT

County faces

ongoing flood

risk

All

Oxfo

rdshire

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

fa

cin

g f

urt

he

r flo

od

s in

th

e c

om

ing

mo

nth

s.

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

ha

s issu

ed ‘e

nh

ance

d f

loo

d w

arn

ings’ a

cro

ss E

ngla

nd b

ecau

se

wa

ter

sto

red

u

nd

erg

rou

nd

follo

win

g th

e r

ece

nt

delu

ge

s c

ould

ove

rflo

w if

furt

he

r h

ea

vy r

ain

fa

lls.

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy s

aid

it

wa

s ‘w

orr

ied’ a

bo

ut la

nd a

cro

ss t

he

UK

a

fte

r ra

in in

Ju

ly a

nd

Au

gu

st fille

d a

qu

ife

rs a

cro

ss th

e r

eg

ion

s.

So

ils w

ett

est sin

ce

re

co

rds b

eg

an in

1

96

1. 2

006

wa

s

the

wo

rst

dro

ug

ht

for

10

0 y

ea

rs

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/8

/22/1

81

89

5.h

tm

l

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

97

RR

PS

3.9

.07

OM

Team launches

flood survey

Vale

A

bin

gdo

n to

wn

co

uncill

ors

to

ure

d t

he t

ow

n's

flo

od

-hit a

rea

s to b

uild

a p

ictu

re

of

eve

nts

- a

llow

ing

resid

en

ts to

be

be

tte

r p

repa

red

. Q

ue

stio

nn

air

e d

eliv

ere

d

to d

oze

ns o

f h

om

es a

nd p

ropert

ies in

Ab

ingd

on

, m

ain

ly in

the s

ou

th o

f th

e

tow

n,

bo

rde

rin

g th

e R

ive

r O

ck. S

om

e s

tree

ts in

no

rth

Ab

ing

do

n h

it w

he

n t

he

R

ive

r S

tert

bu

rst its b

anks. In

form

atio

n s

ent

to c

oun

cils

, E

nviro

nm

en

t A

ge

ncy

an

d e

me

rge

ncy s

erv

ice

s fo

r in

clu

sio

n o

n d

ata

ba

se

s a

nd

mapp

ing

syste

ms.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/9

/3/1

844

82.h

tml

98

RR

PS

4.9

.07

BB

C

Call for public

views on

floods

UK

A

re

vie

w o

f th

is s

um

me

r's flo

od

ing

wa

nts

pe

op

le a

ffecte

d t

o o

ffe

r th

eir

vie

ws

via

th

e C

ab

inet

Off

ice

we

bsite

. S

ir M

ich

ae

l P

itt ca

lled

on

ho

me

ow

ne

rs,

bu

sin

esses t

o s

ha

re th

eir

exp

eri

en

ce

s a

nd

su

gg

estion

s fo

r a

vo

idin

g m

ore

flo

ods a

nd

to e

xa

min

e w

hy t

he f

lood

s in

Ju

ne

an

d J

uly

we

re s

o w

ide

sp

rea

d.

It w

ill lo

ok a

t th

e e

me

rgen

cy r

esp

onse

an

d th

reat

to in

frastr

uctu

re.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/uk/6

97

841

0.s

tm

ww

w.c

ab

ine

toff

ice

.go

v.u

k/f

loo

din

gre

vie

w

99

RR

PS

7.9

.07

AH

Victims To Sue

Over Floods

Oxfo

rd

A f

loo

d v

ictim

is r

ally

ing

sup

port

fo

r th

e f

irst le

gal action

aga

inst

the

E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy in

the

wa

ke

of th

is s

um

me

r's flo

od

s.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/9

/7/1

858

23.h

tml

Page 64: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

100

RR

PS

13.9

.07

OM

Traders suffer

'worst summer'

Oxfo

rd

Tra

de

rs in E

ast O

xfo

rd p

rayin

g f

or

the

stu

de

nts

’ re

turn

afte

r su

ffe

rin

g t

he

ir

wo

rst

eve

r sum

me

r. A

co

mbin

atio

n o

f po

or

we

ath

er,

ro

ad

wo

rks a

nd

th

e

tem

po

rary

clo

su

re o

f th

e Z

od

iac n

igh

tclu

b,

left

busin

esses s

tru

gg

ling

. T

ha

me

s V

alle

y C

ham

be

r o

f C

om

me

rce:

"I'm

con

fide

nt th

at th

e s

um

me

r re

ve

nu

e d

rou

gh

t w

ill p

ass a

nd it

will

pose

no

lo

ng

-te

rm th

rea

t fo

r b

usin

ess"

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/9

/13/1

86

75

8.h

tm

l

101

RR

PS

21.9

.07

OM

Coping after

the flood

Oxon

Flo

odin

g, d

ise

ase

, fo

od s

ho

rtag

es –

we

se

em

lik

e a

Th

ird

Wo

rld

co

untr

y h

it

by a

mo

nsoo

n. Ju

ly’s

delu

ge

me

ant

that

thou

gh

fa

rme

rs w

ere

re

ad

y f

or

ha

rve

stin

g,

the

gro

und

wa

terl

og

ge

d.

Cro

ps c

ou

ld n

ot b

e h

arv

este

d u

ntil th

e

wa

ter

ha

d d

rain

ed

and

lan

d d

rie

d.

Flo

od

man

ag

em

ent

is im

po

rta

nt: o

ur

clim

ate

is c

ha

ngin

g a

nd

we

have

to

ad

ap

t to

mo

re e

xtr

em

e c

on

ditio

ns.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/9

/21/1

88

25

3.h

tm

l

SE

En

gla

nd

D

eve

lop

me

nt

Ag

ency

(SE

ED

A)

gra

nts

102

RR

PS

2.1

0.0

7

OT

Flooding: 'We

have learned

lessons'

All

Oxfo

rdshire

within

most

of

UK

Em

erg

en

cy p

lan

ne

rs a

dm

itte

d th

ey s

hou

ld h

ave

de

cla

red

a m

ajo

r in

cid

ent

mo

re q

uic

kly

. O

CC

le

sso

ns lea

rne

d in

clu

de

d:

(i)

revie

win

g the

ris

ks o

f b

uild

ing o

n flo

od

pla

ins;

(ii)

more

pla

nn

ing

by u

tilit

y c

om

pa

nie

s t

o p

reve

nt

thre

at to

su

pplie

s;

(iii)

a m

ajo

r in

cid

en

t sh

ou

ld h

ave

be

en

de

cla

red

as s

oo

n

as t

he

se

ve

re f

loo

d w

arn

ing

wa

s r

ece

ive

d;

(iv)

En

vir

onm

en

t A

ge

ncy's

syste

m

- o

f flo

od

wa

tche

s,

wa

rnin

gs, se

ve

re w

arn

ing

s,

rive

r su

rges, p

ea

ks -

co

nfu

sed

pro

fessio

na

ls a

nd

resid

en

ts;

(v)

Ro

ad

clo

su

res w

ere

no

t e

nfo

rce

d

str

ictly;

(vi)

Re

po

rt m

en

tio

ns t

he

re w

as t

oo

much

fo

cus o

n s

an

db

agg

ing

at

the

exp

en

se

of

eff

ective

pre

ve

ntio

n v

ia c

ha

nne

l dig

gin

g.

n/a

http

://w

ww

.th

eo

xfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

ne

ws/flo

odin

g/d

ispl

ay.v

ar.

173

06

62.

0.flo

odin

g_

we_

have

_le

arn

ed

_le

ssons.p

hp

OC

C

103

RR

PS

2.1

0.0

7

AH

Reservoir bid

slated

Vale

Th

e G

ove

rnm

en

t sh

ou

ld r

eje

ct b

uild

ing

ne

w r

ese

rvoir

s a

s th

e a

nsw

er

to

wa

ter

sh

ort

ag

es,

a r

ep

ort

wa

rns. W

ith

Th

am

es W

ate

r p

rop

osin

g a

rese

rvo

ir

be

twe

en

Ab

ing

don

and

Wanta

ge

, th

e s

tud

y s

ays w

ate

r n

ee

ds c

an

no

t b

e m

et

by m

assiv

e n

ew

de

ve

lop

me

nts

. T

he

stu

dy f

rom

th

e C

am

paig

n T

o P

rote

ct

Ru

ral E

ngla

nd

, ju

dg

es th

e p

rop

osed

Up

per

Th

am

es R

ese

rvoir

at

Ste

ve

nto

n

to b

e p

oo

r in

te

rms o

f e

nvir

onm

en

tal im

pact a

nd

en

vir

onm

en

tal susta

ina

bili

ty.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

0/2

/190

98

8.h

tm

l

Th

am

es

Wate

r C

PR

E

104

PP

R

18.1

0.0

7

BB

C

Flooding relief

grants

unclaimed

Oxfo

rd

Tim

e is r

un

nin

g o

ut

for

flo

od

vic

tim

s to

cla

im g

ran

ts,

a c

oun

cil

ha

s w

arn

ed.

Re

sid

en

ts h

it b

y t

he

sum

me

r's flo

ods in

Oxfo

rd m

ust a

pply

fo

r a

flo

od

re

co

ve

ry g

rant

by t

he e

nd o

f O

cto

be

r.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/7

0518

93.s

tm

Oxfo

rd

City

Co

un

cil

105

RR

PS

25.1

0.0

7

BB

C

Councils short

on clean-up

money

Oxfo

rdshire

Le

ad

ers

fro

m a

ll o

f O

xfo

rdsh

ire

's c

ou

ncils

app

eale

d to

the

Go

vt

for

help

to

m

ee

t a

£3.3

m s

ho

rtfa

ll in

the

ir flo

od c

lea

n-u

p b

ill. G

ovt

ha

d p

rom

ise

d to

fully

re

imbu

rse

th

em

fo

r a

dd

itio

nal co

sts

in

vo

lve

d in

the

cle

an

-up

.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/e

ngla

nd/o

xfo

rdshir

e/7

0625

03.s

tm

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

's c

ou

ncils

106

RR

PS

27.1

0.0

7

OT

Hosepipe rules

to be tightened

Oxfo

rdshire

Wate

r cu

sto

me

rs in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

fa

ce

tou

gh

er

hose

pip

e r

estr

iction

s w

he

n

su

pplie

s n

ext

run

lo

w,

the

Go

ve

rnm

en

t ha

s a

nn

ou

nce

d.

Du

rin

g t

he c

ou

nty

's

ho

sep

ipe

ban

be

twe

en

Ap

ril 20

06

an

d J

an

ua

ry t

his

ye

ar,

th

ou

sa

nd

s o

f re

sid

en

ts w

ere

pre

ve

nte

d f

rom

usin

g h

osep

ipe

s to

wa

ter

their g

ard

en

s a

nd

w

ash

ca

rs b

ut

we

re a

llow

ed

to u

se

th

em

fo

r o

the

r p

urp

ose

s.

Th

am

es W

ate

r:

No

re

str

ictio

ns o

n

wa

ter

“in

fo

rese

ea

ble

fu

ture

"

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

0/2

7/1

968

36.h

tm

l

Page 65: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

107

G /

S

9.1

1.0

7

OM

Wind topples

trees

Oxo

n

Fa

llen

tre

es c

ause

d c

ha

os o

n r

oa

ds,

as a

sto

rm f

ront

passe

d t

hro

ugh

O

xfo

rdsh

ire

. R

oa

ds a

ffe

cte

d r

un

th

roug

h B

uckla

nd

, C

hip

pin

g N

ort

on

, K

irtlin

gto

n,

Bu

rfo

rd a

nd

Bro

ugh

ton

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.b

anbu

rycake.n

et/

2007

/11

/9/2

000

47

.htm

l

108

RR

PS

14.1

1.0

7

OM

Victims put

agencies on

the spot

Vale

Vic

tim

s o

f th

e J

uly

flo

ods a

re d

em

and

ing

answ

ers

ab

ou

t w

hy it

hap

pe

ne

d -

w

ill t

om

orr

ow

ha

ve

a c

ha

nce

to

air

th

eir o

pin

ion

s.

Hu

nd

red

s o

f p

eop

le a

re

exp

ecte

d t

o a

tten

d a

pu

blic

mee

tin

g a

t th

e G

uild

hall

in A

bin

gdo

n

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

1/1

4/2

010

08.h

tm

l

OC

C,

F &

R

VO

WH

, E

A

109

RR

PS

16.1

1.0

7

AH

Residents see

latest flood

defences

Oxfo

rd

Sta

nd

s a

t a

fa

ir c

laim

ed

to

pro

vid

e t

he

solu

tio

n to

eve

ry k

ind

of

floo

din

g

pro

ble

m.

Held

in

the

Kin

g's

Cen

tre

sta

lls o

ffe

rin

g a

n a

rra

y o

f flo

od

wa

lls,

air

b

ricks a

nd

po

rtab

le b

arr

iers

attra

cte

d s

co

res o

f O

xfo

rdsh

ire

re

sid

en

ts

an

xio

us t

o e

nsu

re th

ey w

ere

pre

pa

red f

or

the

wo

rst.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

1/1

6/2

014

55.h

tm

l

110

RR

PS

29.1

1.0

7

AH

At risk

Vale

A

pa

cke

d flo

od

ing

me

etin

g in

Ab

ing

do

n h

ighlig

hte

d c

on

ce

rns a

bo

ut

futu

re

flo

odin

g. T

wo

riv

ers

flo

w t

hro

ug

h t

he t

ow

n a

nd

wh

ilst

on

ly t

he

Ock flo

od

ed

th

is tim

e,

the

Th

am

es a

void

ed it

by just

a fe

w in

che

s.

Mu

ch

of th

e p

rob

lem

is

ca

use

d b

y f

lood

pla

in d

eve

lopm

en

t. P

eo

ple

are

un

aw

are

of

the

unsa

tisfa

cto

ry

na

ture

of

the

ris

k a

ssessm

en

t p

rocess,

assum

ing

tha

t if t

he

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy h

as n

o o

bje

ction

, th

ere

is n

o r

isk.

EA

sp

oke

sm

an a

t th

e m

ee

tin

g

str

essed

th

at

EA

co

uld

no

t cope

beca

use

it

is u

nd

erf

un

de

d.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

1/2

9/2

051

57.h

tm

l

111

PP

R

2.1

2.0

7

OT

Report

discloses flood

failures

Oxfo

rd

A r

ep

ort

in

to J

uly

's f

loo

ds p

rais

es f

ire

-fig

hte

rs a

nd

co

un

ty/c

ity c

ou

ncils

' e

me

rge

ncy te

am

s.

Flo

od

Em

erg

en

cy -

Le

sso

ns L

ea

rned

and F

utu

re O

ption

s,

wa

s d

iscu

sse

d b

y O

xfo

rd C

ity C

ou

ncil'

s B

oa

rd. F

aili

ngs h

ighlig

hte

d: (

i)

Sa

nd

bag

pro

vis

ion

wa

s c

ha

otic;

(ii)

Inco

rrect/co

nflic

ting

in

form

atio

n issu

ed

; (i

ii) L

ack o

f in

form

ation

on

he

alth

ris

ks o

f flo

od

wa

ter;

(iv

) L

ack o

f in

form

ation

o

n a

ccessin

g r

elie

f fu

nd

s;

(v)

So

me

em

erg

ency p

lan

pho

ne

nu

mbe

rs w

ere

w

ron

g;

(vi)

Pe

op

le a

nsw

eri

ng

co

uncil

pho

nes w

ere

in

exp

eri

en

ce

d (

vii)

R

esid

en

tia

l bo

ate

rs t

rap

ped

on v

essels

we

re f

org

ott

en

(viii

) La

ck o

f o

ve

rall

resp

on

sib

ility

fo

r co

-ord

ina

ting

th

e r

esp

on

se

. E

nvir

onm

ent

Age

ncy a

nd

Go

vt

will

dis

cu

ss flo

od p

reve

ntio

n m

ea

su

res, in

clu

din

g im

pro

vin

g s

up

ply

ch

ain

of

ma

teria

ls s

uch a

s s

an

d d

ep

loye

d t

o s

ite

s in

ad

va

nce o

f a

n e

me

rgen

cy.

n/a

http

://w

ww

.th

eo

xfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

ne

ws/flo

odin

g/d

ispl

ay.v

ar.

187

46

64.

0.r

epo

rt_

dis

clo

ses_floo

d_fa

ilure

s.p

hp

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rd.g

ov.u

k/file

s/m

eetin

gdo

cs/6

98

17

/ite

m%

20

17%

20

part

%20

1.p

df

Oxfo

rd

City

Co

un

cil

112

RR

PS

6.1

2.0

7

OM

The floods will

return

Oxfo

rd

Oxfo

rd's

his

toric a

nd

"se

nsitiv

e"

land

sca

pe

is h

am

pe

rin

g th

e s

ea

rch f

or

so

lutio

ns to

pre

ve

nt

futu

re flo

od

ing

. A

re

po

rt r

ele

ase

d b

y t

he

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy p

ain

ted

a b

lea

k p

ictu

re f

or

the

city,

pre

dic

ting

th

e o

nse

t of

clim

ate

ch

ang

e w

ou

ld p

ut

tho

se

liv

ing

he

re a

t a

n e

ve

n g

rea

ter

risk o

f flo

odin

g.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

7/1

2/6

/206

90

3.h

tm

l

Page 66: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

113

RR

PS

4.1

2.0

7

OT

/

AB

I

Flood strategy

needed

All

Oxfo

rdshire

Associa

tio

n o

f B

ritish

Insu

rers

urg

ed

Go

ve

rnm

ent

mu

st d

eve

lop

a 2

5-y

ea

r str

ate

gy t

o m

an

ag

e th

e U

K's

gro

win

g r

isk f

rom

flo

ods:

(i)

Go

ve

rnm

en

t to

e

mb

ark

on

an in

ve

stm

en

t p

rogra

mm

e t

ha

t re

fle

cts

clim

ate

cha

ng

e a

nd

th

e

rea

l risk o

f flo

od

ing f

rom

riv

ers

, se

a a

nd d

rain

age

syste

ms;

(ii) s

tro

ng

er

pla

nnin

g c

on

tro

ls s

o n

ew

de

ve

lop

me

nts

are

no

t b

uilt

in

are

as a

t risk;

(iii)

n

ee

d fo

r a

lo

ng

-te

rm s

tra

teg

y b

ased

aro

un

d m

ore

in

vestm

ent,

na

tio

nal co

-o

rdin

ation

and

be

tte

r la

nd

use

pla

nnin

g;

(iv)

a 2

5-y

ea

r pla

n o

utlin

ing

th

e

inve

stm

en

t n

eed

ed

; (v

) b

uild

ing

or

rep

air

wo

rk in

hig

h r

isk a

rea

s s

hou

ld b

e

ca

rrie

d o

ut

to h

igh

er

sta

nd

ard

s;

(vi)

id

en

tify

wa

ys t

o p

rote

ct

cri

tica

l in

frastr

uctu

re; (v

ii) O

ve

rha

ul o

f d

rain

ag

e s

yste

ms t

o r

ed

uce

th

e r

isk.

Mo

re

ab

ou

t A

BI

and

clim

ate

ch

an

ge

.

http

://w

ww

.th

eo

xfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

se

arc

h/d

ispla

y.v

ar.

187

82

82.0

.flo

od

_str

ate

gy_

ne

ed

ed.p

hp

AB

I

114

RR

PS

14.1

2.0

7

OM

County eyes

£115m flood

relief

All

Oxfo

rdshire

A la

rge s

lice o

f a

n E

U £

11

5m

flo

odin

g r

elie

f g

ran

t fr

om

Eu

rope

sho

uld

com

e

to O

xfo

rdsh

ire

. E

uro

pea

n m

one

y w

ill b

e s

ha

red

by a

reas o

f B

rita

in w

ors

t h

it

by t

he

su

mm

er

flo

ods.

EU

fu

nd

s w

ill g

o t

ow

ard

s r

eim

bu

rsin

g t

he

co

st o

f e

me

rge

ncy m

easu

res (

rescu

e s

erv

ices, cle

an

ing

up

, re

sto

ring

in

fra

str

uctu

re).

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

net/searc

h/d

ispla

y.v

ar.

19

04

102

.0.c

ou

nty

_e

yes_

115m

_floo

d_

relie

f.p

hp

115

23.1

.08

OM

Call for talks as

flood risk

abates

Vale

H

un

dre

ds o

f A

bin

gd

on

resid

ents

are

re

lieve

d th

eir

ho

me

s e

sca

pe

d fu

rthe

r flo

odin

g -

an

d a

re d

em

an

din

g a

no

the

r m

ee

tin

g w

ith

En

vir

onm

en

t A

ge

ncy

bo

sse

s.

Th

e R

ive

r O

ck b

roke

its

ban

ks a

nd

resid

en

ts o

n T

ithe

Fa

rm e

sta

te,

Mill

Ro

ad

an

d o

ff D

rayto

n R

oad

fe

are

d a

re

pea

t o

f July

's d

eva

sta

tio

n.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/1

/23/2

18

56

1.h

tm

l

116

RR

PS

23.1

.08

OT

Floods: Fire

chief says they

are inevitable

All

Oxfo

rdshire

Flo

odin

g a

s a

n e

ve

ryd

ay p

art

of

win

ter

life

will

pla

gue

Oxfo

rdsh

ire.

Fire

o

ffic

er

Eth

eri

dg

e n

ote

d p

eop

le m

ust b

e r

ea

listic in

th

e f

ace

of clim

ate

cha

nge

a

nd

acce

pt

flo

od

ing a

s a

co

mm

on

pro

ble

m. P

re-p

lan

nin

g fo

r flo

od

s p

aid

off

a

nd

Fir

e S

erv

ice

is p

rep

are

d s

ho

uld

wa

ter

leve

ls r

ise

. F

utu

re p

lans -

pla

ce

m

ore

dry

su

its o

n f

ire

eng

ine

s s

o c

rew

s c

on

tin

ue

wo

rkin

g a

bo

ve

kn

ee

heig

ht.

Ove

r la

st

7/8

ye

ars

, vo

lum

e o

f flo

odin

g a

cro

ss

the

co

un

ty h

as

incre

ased

http

://w

ww

.th

eo

xfo

rdtim

es.n

et/

ne

ws/flo

odin

g/d

ispl

ay.v

ar.

198

62

41.

0.flo

ods_fire

_chi

ef_

sa

ys_

the

y_

ar

e_in

evitable

.ph

p

117

RR

PS

7.2

.08

AH

Grove growth

'flood risk'

Vale

P

lan

s t

o d

ou

ble

th

e s

ize

of

Gro

ve

must

not

lea

ve

th

e v

illag

e a

t ri

sk o

f flo

odin

g, E

nv A

ge

ncy s

tresse

d.

Are

a s

et

to b

allo

on

in

the

ne

xt

5 y

ea

rs w

ith

1

,00

0 h

om

es in

th

e p

ipelin

e a

nd

an

oth

er

1,0

00

pro

pe

rtie

s b

y 2

02

1.

En

v

Ag

en

cy d

em

an

de

d a

de

taile

d s

urv

ey o

n t

he

im

pact

of

the e

xp

an

sio

n o

n

flo

od

wa

ter.

Th

ere

is a

fee

ling

in

th

e v

illa

ge

tha

t d

evelo

pm

en

t is

be

ing f

ois

ted

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/2

/7/2

228

94.h

tml

118 R

RP

S

13.2

.08

BB

C

UK 'ill-

prepared'

against floods

UK

T

he

UK

's w

ea

the

r fo

reca

stin

g n

ee

ds t

o b

e im

pro

ve

d,

acco

rdin

g t

o th

e m

an

le

adin

g a

go

ve

rnm

ent

revie

w in

to la

st sum

me

r's d

ow

np

ou

rs. S

ir M

ich

ae

l P

itt

told

a L

GA

me

etin

g th

at

pre

para

tio

ns a

nd

wa

rnin

gs f

or

su

rface

wa

ter

flo

odin

g w

ere

no

t in

pla

ce.

It is im

po

rta

nt

to id

entify

and

ma

p th

e h

ots

po

ts.

http

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi/uk/7

24

357

7.s

tm

Lo

cal

Go

ve

rnm

en

t Associa

tio

n

Page 67: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

119

RR

PS

26.1

.08

SM

S

ne

ws

Oxfordshire

Council

launches flood

text alerts via

Avanquest

Oxfo

rdshire

County

A

va

nq

ue

st,

the

glo

bal so

ftw

are

de

ve

lop

er

an

d c

om

pa

ny b

ehin

d te

xt

se

rvic

e,

ha

s la

unch

ed

a te

xt

ale

rt s

erv

ice

fo

r floo

d in

form

atio

n to

ge

the

r w

ith

O

xfo

rdsh

ire

Co

un

ty C

oun

cil.

Th

e r

ive

rs C

he

rwe

ll an

d Isis

/Th

am

es,

wh

ich

tr

ave

rse

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

, flo

ode

d fo

llow

ing

exce

ssiv

e r

ain

fall.

Adva

nce

wa

rnin

g

of

a p

ote

ntia

l floo

d g

ive

s p

rop

ert

y o

wn

ers

th

e c

ha

nce

to

pre

pa

re a

nd

take

th

e

actio

n n

ecessa

ry t

o m

inim

ise

da

mag

e.

Te

xt

ale

rts fo

r po

ssib

le im

pe

nd

ing

flo

ods w

ill b

e v

alu

ab

le f

or

resid

en

ts w

ho

se

are

as a

re p

ron

e.

http

://w

ww

.sm

st

extn

ew

s.c

om

/20

08/0

2/o

xfo

rdshir

e_coun

cil_

launc

hes_flo

od_

text_

ale

rts_via

_ava

nq

uest.

htm

l

120

RR

PS

21.2

.08

AH

Flood groups

gear up to help

Vale

N

eig

hbo

urh

oo

d W

atc

h-t

yp

e s

ch

em

e a

ims to

he

lp h

ouse

ho

lders

bea

t flo

ods.

Fiv

e e

me

rge

ncy f

loo

d g

rou

ps a

re b

ein

g s

et u

p a

cro

ss W

an

tag

e t

o h

elp

p

eo

ple

pro

tect

hom

es f

rom

rain

. W

ill b

e m

ad

e u

p o

f re

sid

en

ts w

ho

liv

e a

lon

g

the

Letc

om

be B

rook.

Th

e a

im is t

o h

elp

re

sid

en

ts b

e b

ett

er

pre

pa

red f

or

an

y

futu

re flo

od

s. G

rou

ps w

ork

to

: (i

) d

eve

lop

actio

n p

lans o

f p

ractical so

lutio

ns;

(ii)

org

an

ise

ne

igh

bou

rhoo

d f

loo

d-a

lert

syste

ms;

(iii)

bu

lk b

uy flo

odg

ate

s;

(iv)

sto

re s

and

bag

s.

So

me

solu

tion

s m

ay r

eq

uir

e th

e h

elp

of

co

un

cils

. V

OW

H’s

B

ill F

arr

ar:

we

ho

pe

the

se g

rou

ps h

elp

pe

op

le c

om

e u

p w

ith

he

lpfu

l so

lution

s

an

d p

ractical jo

int

wo

rkin

g a

rran

ge

me

nts

with

oth

er

age

ncie

s.

En

v A

ge

ncy

reco

rde

d 7

in

cid

en

ts o

f se

ve

re flo

odin

g in

th

e b

roo

k s

ince

1

89

4, th

e la

st

4

incid

en

ts s

ince

2

00

0.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/2

/21/2

26

73

9.h

tm

l

Va

le

of

White

H

ors

e

Dis

tric

t C

ou

ncil,

121

G /

S

10.3

.08.

BC

Storm

s cause

power cut

Oxo

n

Mo

re t

ha

n 1

,000

resid

en

ts n

ear

Did

cot

we

re le

ft w

ith

ou

t ele

ctr

icity t

his

m

orn

ing

aft

er

the

sto

rm b

att

erin

g B

rita

in d

am

ag

ed

po

we

r lin

es.

Re

sid

en

ts in

B

lew

bu

ry,

Asto

n T

irro

ld a

nd

Ea

st

Hen

dre

d s

uffe

red

po

we

r cu

ts.

Fa

llen

tre

es

clo

se

d C

ha

llow

Ro

ad

be

twe

en W

an

tag

e a

nd

Kin

g A

lfre

d S

cho

ol, a

nd

b

locke

d K

irtlin

gto

n c

rossro

ad

s n

ea

r K

idlin

gto

n.

A4

15

cro

ssro

ad

s a

t C

lifto

n

Ha

mp

den

blo

cke

d d

ue t

o a

fa

llen

tre

e.

Win

ds o

f u

p to

60

m

ph

122

RR

PS

18.3

.08

OT

Flood calls

'overloaded'

system

Oxfo

rdshire

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

Fir

e a

nd R

escu

e S

erv

ice

rece

ived

2,0

00

ca

lls for

assis

tance

d

uri

ng 2

00

7 f

loo

ds.

Off

icia

l re

po

rt F

acin

g T

he C

ha

lleng

e b

y th

e

Go

ve

rnm

en

t's c

hie

f fire

an

d r

escue

ad

vis

er,

Sir

Ke

n K

nig

ht,

sa

id 1

00

s o

f e

xtr

a c

alls

we

re lo

gge

d a

nd

con

tro

l ro

om

sta

ff w

ork

ed

"tire

lessly

". F

ire

an

d

Re

scue

Se

rvic

e s

pe

nt £

287

,000

de

alin

g w

ith

th

e s

itu

atio

n, in

clu

din

g

£1

89

,00

0 fo

r o

ve

rtim

e p

ay.

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

net/dis

pla

y.v

ar.

21

30

45

2.0

.fl

ood

_calls

_o

verl

oade

d_syste

m.p

hp

Fir

e

and

Re

scue

S

erv

ice

123

I /

S

6.4

.08

Snow falls

across much of

the UK

S

no

w h

as f

alle

n a

cro

ss m

uch o

f th

e U

K, d

escen

din

g o

n n

ort

h-e

ast

En

gla

nd,

with

sim

ilar

co

nd

itio

ns in

sou

the

rn E

ngla

nd.

Me

t O

ffic

e h

as issu

ed a

nu

mbe

r o

f flash

wa

rnin

gs o

f se

ve

re o

r e

xtr

em

e w

ea

the

r.

h

ttp

://n

ew

s.b

bc.c

o.u

k/1

/hi

/uk/7

33

29

86

.stm

Page 68: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

124

RR

PS

16.5

.08

OM

£1.8m flood

measures

unveiled

Oxon

Bra

nche

s o

f th

e R

ive

r T

ha

mes,

we

st

an

d s

outh

of O

xfo

rd,

are

to

be

cle

are

d

ou

t a

nd

ne

w t

em

po

rary

ba

rrie

rs b

ou

gh

t to

red

uce

the

ris

k o

f flo

odin

g.

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy fin

alis

ed

a £

1.8

m p

acka

ge

of sch

em

es. M

ore

m

ain

ten

an

ce

will

be

do

ne

on

lo

ca

l str

ea

ms.

Th

e a

ge

ncy h

as n

ot

rule

d o

ut

a

£1

00m

flo

od

re

lief

ch

ann

el fr

om

th

e T

ha

mes a

t B

inse

y t

o S

an

dfo

rd L

ock, a

nd

is

in

ve

stig

atin

g th

e c

rea

tio

n o

f fo

ur

larg

e w

ate

r sto

rag

e a

rea

s -

are

as o

f fa

rmla

nd

th

at

wo

uld

be

allo

we

d t

o flo

od -

besid

e t

he

Th

am

es a

nd

Che

rwe

ll.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/5

/16/2

45

05

4.h

tm

l

125

R /

F

20.6

.08

OT

Flood-hit

homes still

empty

Oxon

30

0 h

om

es in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

are

still

em

pty

te

n m

on

ths a

fte

r la

st

sum

me

r's

ca

tastr

oph

ic f

loo

ds.F

igu

res p

ub

lish

ed

to

da

y s

ho

we

d t

he

re a

re h

und

reds o

f p

eo

ple

acro

ss th

e c

ou

nty

liv

ing

in

ca

rava

ns o

r re

nte

d a

cco

mm

od

atio

n a

s

the

y w

ait f

or

repa

irs t

o b

e c

om

ple

ted

on t

heir

flo

od

-hit h

om

es.

Th

e s

itu

atio

n

is w

ors

e in

the

Va

le o

f W

hite

Ho

rse

wh

ere

97

hou

seh

old

s r

esp

ective

ly

rem

ain

affe

cte

d.

In A

bin

gdo

n, S

am

anth

a B

ow

rin

g a

nd

husb

an

d N

eil

Fa

wce

tt

are

co

un

tin

g d

ow

n t

he

da

ys u

ntil th

ey c

an r

etu

rn t

o th

eir

hom

e w

ith

th

eir

th

ree

ch

ildre

n.

Da

ma

ge h

ad c

ost

at

lea

st £

30

,00

0 to

rep

air

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/5

/20/2

45

83

0.h

tm

l

126

R /

F

3.6

.08

County hit by

floods - update

Oxo

n

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

su

ffe

red m

ajo

r floo

din

g f

or

the

th

ird

tim

e in a

yea

r to

da

y a

s th

e

co

unty

's in

frastr

uctu

re f

aile

d t

o c

ope

with

a h

ea

vy d

elu

ge

. R

oa

ds w

ere

clo

se

d, sch

ools

sh

ut,

riv

ers

put

on

flo

od w

arn

ing

s a

nd w

atc

he

s,

an

d h

ou

se

s

flo

ode

d.

An

ove

rru

n o

f su

rface w

ate

r w

as b

lam

ed

. O

CC

: is

do

ing

all

it c

ould

to

re

duce

th

e e

ffects

of

flo

odin

g,

rece

ntly s

pe

nt

£1.8

m t

o ta

ckle

the

pro

ble

m.

Fir

e c

rew

s d

ea

lt w

ith

12

0 e

me

rge

ncy c

alls

as a

t le

ast 1

2 r

oa

ds w

ere

clo

se

d.

Ho

me

s in

Tid

din

gto

n,

Kid

ling

ton

an

d K

en

nin

gto

n h

ad

rain

wa

ter

pum

pe

d o

ut.

Fir

e c

rew

s a

lso

dea

lt w

ith

flo

od

ing

in

Th

am

e,

Ch

inn

or,

Wheatle

y a

nd

Witne

y.

two

in

ch

es o

f ra

in

- m

ore

th

an 7

5 p

er

ce

nt o

f an

ave

rage

Ju

ne r

ain

fall

- fe

ll.

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

co.u

k/n

ew

s/flo

odin

g/flo

odin

gne

ws/2

31

66

32.

Coun

ty_

hit_

by_

flood

s__

_u

pd

ate

/

127

R /

F

3.6

.08

Flooding

closes roads

Oxo

n

A s

erie

s o

f ro

ad

s a

cro

ss t

he

co

un

ty h

ave

be

en

clo

sed

due

to f

lood

ing.

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

Hig

hw

ays c

losed

B4

04

4 b

etw

ee

n B

otle

y a

nd F

arm

oo

r, A

40

in

W

hea

tle

y,

A4

18 a

t T

iddin

gto

n a

nd

Go

ose

y L

an

e in

Go

ose

y. M

ill L

an

e in

C

ha

lgro

ve

, T

he

Ga

rth

in

Ya

rnto

n a

nd

Ha

iley R

oa

d in

Witn

ey h

ave

als

o s

hu

t d

ue

to f

loo

din

g.

San

dba

gs h

ave

be

en

pu

t d

ow

n a

lon

g a

ro

ad in

East

Ha

nn

ey

follo

win

g r

ep

ort

s o

f floo

din

g.

http

://w

ww

.oxfo

rdm

ail.

co.u

k/n

ew

s/flo

odin

g/flo

odin

gne

ws/2

31

63

57.

Flo

odin

g_clo

se

s_ro

ads/

128

R /

F

5.6

.08

Floods bring

fresh anger

Witn

ey

A t

ee

nag

er's d

ea

th in W

itn

ey lo

oks lik

e a

cce

lera

tin

g m

easu

res t

o c

om

bat

fla

sh

flo

od

ing

. M

ax S

ulli

va

n-W

eb

b d

ied

in

th

is w

ee

k's

flo

odin

g.

An

ge

r m

ou

nte

d a

s th

e c

ou

nty

's in

fra

str

uctu

re f

aile

d t

o c

ope

. A

lmost ce

rtain

tha

t flo

od s

tora

ge

po

nd

s w

ill b

e b

uilt

on

th

e e

sta

te.

Fa

ilure

s in

cle

ari

ng

dra

ins a

nd

re

pa

irin

g c

ulv

ert

s r

ais

ed

. C

onfu

sio

n o

ve

r w

he

the

r la

nd

ow

ne

rs,

co

uncils

or

the

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy a

re r

esp

on

sib

le f

or

ma

inta

inin

g w

ate

r cou

rses.

http

://a

rchiv

e.b

anbu

rycake.n

et/

2008

/6/5

/248

41

3.

htm

l

Th

am

es

Wate

r E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy

Page 69: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

129

R /

F

6.6

.08

BC

Calamitous

floods

Oxo

n

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

sub

jecte

d t

o a

se

ve

re b

ou

t o

f flash

flo

od

ing

, n

ow

alm

ost

the

n

orm

du

ring

he

avy r

ain

. D

itches h

ave

dis

ap

pea

red

fro

m f

arm

lan

d.

Dra

ins

an

d c

ulv

ert

s a

re o

ld,

ma

ny b

locked

and

no

t m

ain

tain

ed

. A

dde

d t

o th

is is t

he

p

ace o

f de

ve

lopm

ent

on f

loo

dp

lain

s.

Mo

re n

eed

s to

be

don

e t

o c

o-o

rdin

ate

a

nd

en

forc

e t

he

upkee

p o

f e

xis

ting

dra

inag

e s

yste

ms a

nd

mu

ch

mo

re n

eed

s

to b

e d

on

e t

o p

rovid

e n

ew

dra

ina

ge

syste

ms.

http

://a

rchiv

e.b

anbu

rycake.n

et/

2008

/6/6

/248

59

4.

htm

l

130

RR

PS

11.0

6.0

8

AH

Flood victims

want more

council help

Vale

F

loo

d v

ictim

s in

th

e V

ale

de

man

d p

rote

ctio

n fro

m t

he d

istr

ict co

uncil,

sa

yin

g

the

y a

re p

oo

rly s

erv

ed

by t

he

VO

WH

afte

r it u

rged

hom

eo

wn

ers

to f

und

th

eir

o

wn

flo

od

de

fences.

Vale

dis

tric

t h

ad

mo

re th

an

13

0 flo

od

ed

pro

pe

rtie

s in

W

anta

ge

, G

rove

an

d v

illa

ges, w

hile

10

0s f

loo

ded

in A

bin

gd

on

. V

OW

H: it h

ad

n

o p

lan

s t

o in

cre

ase

sa

nd

ba

g p

rovis

ion

, bu

t w

ou

ld in

ve

st in

dra

ina

ge

an

d

flo

od p

rote

ctio

n s

ch

em

es. W

he

n h

ea

vy r

ain

fell

last w

ee

k,

VO

WH

su

pplie

d

on

ly 5

00 s

an

dba

gs to

50

vu

lnera

ble

ho

me

ow

ne

rs.

Resid

en

ts s

aid

: "S

up

po

rt

ag

encie

s,

inclu

din

g th

e c

ou

ncil,

th

ey c

laim

the

y're

co

nce

rne

d, b

ut

are

n't.

We

ha

ve

no

ch

oic

e n

ow

bu

t to

so

rt o

ut

ou

r o

wn

flo

od

defe

nce

s.

Th

ere

's n

ot

be

en

e

no

ugh

sa

ndb

ags”.

VO

WH

: re

sid

en

ts s

ho

uld

kee

p s

and

ba

gs in

the

ir h

om

es

or

bu

y f

latp

ack s

and

bag

s w

hic

h in

fla

te in

wa

ter.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/11/2

49

24

8.h

tm

l

Va

le

of

White

H

ors

e

Dis

tric

t C

ou

ncil

131

RR

PS

12.6

.08

OM

Councils

warned over

flood plains

Oxon

Co

un

cils

in

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

ha

ve

be

en

wa

rne

d a

ga

inst g

ivin

g p

lan

nin

g c

on

sen

t to

"in

ap

pro

pria

te"

de

ve

lop

me

nts

on f

loo

d p

lain

s.

Pla

nn

ing M

inis

ter

Ca

rolin

e

Flin

t h

as p

ub

lish

ed

ne

w g

uid

an

ce

fo

r lo

cal a

uth

orities t

o m

ake

su

re t

oug

h

ne

w r

ule

s a

re f

ollo

we

d.

Gu

idan

ce

ca

lls o

n a

ll lo

ca

l au

tho

rities t

o id

entify

flo

od

ri

sks,

prio

ritise

non

-flo

od

are

as f

or

ne

w d

eve

lop

men

t, a

sse

ss w

he

the

r th

e

ne

ed

to

build

ou

twe

ighs t

he

flo

od

ris

k, u

se d

rain

age

and

good

desig

n t

o

co

ntr

ol flo

odin

g a

nd

ensu

re a

ll b

uild

ings a

re r

esili

en

t a

nd s

afe

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/12/2

49

33

2.h

tm

l

132

RR

PS

22.6

.08

OM

Flood hit

families to get

council tax

assistance

UK

T

he

Go

ve

rnm

en

t's f

loo

ds r

ecove

ry m

inis

ter

Jo

hn H

ea

ley h

as p

rom

ised

fa

mili

es w

ho

are

still

ou

t o

f th

eir h

om

es a

fte

r la

st

su

mm

er's flo

od

ing t

he

y w

ill

no

t b

e h

it w

ith

co

un

cil

tax b

ills.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/22/2

50

90

2.h

tm

l

133

RR

PS

24.7

.08

OT

Teenager

burgled flood

victims

Oxon

A t

ee

nag

er

wh

o b

urg

led

a c

ara

va

n b

ein

g u

sed

by a

fa

mily

of flo

od

vic

tim

s

wa

s t

od

ay w

arn

ed

he

fa

ce

d ja

il.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/24/2

51

25

2.h

tm

l

Page 70: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

134

RR

PS

24.6

.08

OT

Tax boost for

flood victims

Oxon

Fa

mili

es le

ft h

om

ele

ss b

y s

evere

flo

od

ing

giv

en

a s

urp

rise c

ash

bo

ost b

y t

he

G

ove

rnm

en

t. 1

80 O

xfo

rdsh

ire

fa

mili

es a

re u

na

ble

to

re

turn

to t

he

ir h

om

es in

th

e w

ake

of w

ide

sp

rea

d flo

ods.

Th

e G

ove

rnm

ent

inte

rve

ne

d to

pro

vid

e c

ash

to

cou

ncils

, en

ab

ling

th

em

to c

on

tinu

e w

aiv

ing

co

uncil

tax b

ills.

Hu

nd

reds o

f fa

mili

es g

ran

ted

tem

po

rary

cou

ncil

tax e

xe

mp

tio

ns,

bu

t th

e m

ajo

rity

no

w p

ay

tax a

fte

r re

turn

ing

ho

me

. O

f th

e 1

80

fa

mili

es s

till

un

able

to

retu

rn t

o t

heir

h

om

es,

50

liv

e in

th

e V

ale

dis

tric

t of

Oxfo

rdsh

ire

, fo

ur

mo

re in C

he

rwe

ll.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/24/2

51

23

3.h

tm

l

135

RR

PS

25.6

.08

26.6

.08

OM

'More flood

protection

work needed'

Flood victims

told 'protect

yourself'

UK

B

rita

in w

as n

ot p

rep

are

d fo

r floo

ds, a

n in

dep

en

de

nt

rep

ort

con

clu

de

d.

Mic

ha

el P

itt’s G

ove

rnm

ent-

revie

w c

on

tain

s 9

2 r

eco

mm

en

da

tio

ns o

n h

ow

th

e

co

untr

y c

ould

be

bett

er

eq

uip

pe

d.

Re

vie

w's

re

com

me

nda

tions inclu

de

: (i)

cre

atio

n o

f a

n e

lectr

on

ic m

ap

of

all

Bri

tain

's d

rain

age

ditche

s a

nd

str

eam

s,

sta

tin

g w

ho

ow

ns w

ha

t sectio

ns a

nd

wh

o is r

espo

nsib

le f

or

ke

ep

ing

the

m

cle

ar;

(ii)

Loca

l a

uth

ori

tie

s t

o b

e g

ive

n a

lea

de

rsh

ip r

ole

in

ove

rse

ein

g th

e

ma

inte

nan

ce

of d

rain

ag

e n

etw

ork

s, cou

nty

co

uncil

takin

g th

e le

ad r

ole

; (i

ii)

Me

t O

ffic

e /

En

vir

onm

ent

Ag

ency s

hou

ld h

ave

a jo

int

ne

rve

ce

ntr

e to

issue

b

ett

er

flo

od

wa

rnin

gs b

ased

on

colle

ctive

in

form

atio

n;

(iv)

Flo

od

wa

rnin

gs

mu

st b

eco

me

ea

sie

r to

un

de

rsta

nd

; (v

) Im

ple

men

t ne

w b

uild

ing

re

gu

latio

ns,

de

taili

ng

dra

inag

e s

yste

ms a

nd

ap

pro

pria

te c

onstr

uction

ma

teri

als

, to

make

su

re th

e r

igh

t re

furb

ish

men

ts w

ere

ma

de

aft

er

flo

od

dam

age;

(vi)

Wate

r a

nd

p

ow

er

firm

s t

o s

afe

gu

ard

ke

y s

ite

s (

vii)

vic

tim

s h

ave

to

take

re

sp

on

sib

ility

fo

r sa

vin

g th

eir p

rope

rtie

s f

rom

fu

ture

flo

od

ing

an

d n

ot

just re

ly o

n t

he

Go

vt

an

d

oth

er

au

tho

ritie

s;

(vii)

cre

atin

g a

pe

rso

nal sto

ckp

ile o

f su

pplie

s,

or

flo

od

kit.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/25/2

51

38

4.h

tm

l http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/6

/26/2

51

79

0.h

tm

l

136

RR

PS

1.7

.08

AH

Flood report

Vale

P

itt

Re

vie

w in

to th

e flo

ods a

nd t

he

92

reco

mm

end

atio

ns s

tate

th

at

we

mu

st

be

fa

r b

ette

r p

rep

are

d f

or

se

vere

we

ath

er

patt

ern

s.

All

gro

ups h

ave

a p

art

to

pla

y in

de

alin

g w

ith

th

e th

rea

t o

f se

ve

re f

loo

din

g.

Th

e r

evie

w is a

go

od

e

xa

mp

le o

f com

mon

se

nse

and

te

ch

nic

al d

eta

il. G

ove

rnm

en

t sh

ou

ld a

cce

pt

the

re

vie

w in

fu

ll a

nd

fu

lly f

un

d t

he

recom

men

da

tio

ns.

Lo

ca

lly,

flo

od

gro

up

s

are

bein

g fo

rme

d a

s s

tand

-alo

ne

org

an

isa

tio

ns a

lon

gsid

e p

arish

co

un

cils

. T

he

gro

up

in

East

Han

ne

y h

as s

ecu

red

fu

ndin

g f

rom

th

e c

oun

ty c

ou

ncil,

the

E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy a

nd

th

e d

istr

ict cou

ncil

as w

ell.

La

ndow

ne

rs a

re c

o-

op

era

tin

g fu

lly w

ith

th

e f

loo

d g

rou

p,

as w

ell

as T

ha

me

s W

ate

r. P

rob

lem

s

cre

ate

d b

y s

eve

re f

loo

din

g m

ust

be d

ealt w

ith

, no

t o

nly

na

tion

ally

, bu

t lo

cally

w

ith

co

un

ty,

dis

tric

t a

nd p

arish C

ou

ncils

wo

rkin

g to

geth

er.

East

Ha

nn

ey is

the

best e

xa

mp

le o

f h

ow

to

help

re

duce

th

e flo

od

ing o

f ho

mes in

fu

ture

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/7

/1/2

522

55.h

tml

VO

WH

137

1

.7.0

8

Villagers team

up to clear

brook

Va

le

10

0 v

olu

nte

ers

fro

m E

ast

Hann

ey c

lea

ne

d t

onn

es o

f w

ee

d f

rom

a m

ile-lo

ng

str

etc

h o

f th

e L

etc

om

be

Bro

ok, g

uid

ed

by E

nv.

Age

ncy. W

ork

wa

s s

ucce

ssfu

l o

pe

ratio

n a

s le

ve

ls o

f w

ate

r d

rop

pe

d b

y a

bou

t a

fo

ot –

the

bro

ok h

as e

xtr

a

ca

pacity.

Fu

rth

er

pla

ns o

f H

ann

ey's

Flo

od

Gro

up a

re to

cle

ar

sto

rm d

rain

s.

Vill

ag

ers

org

an

ise

d th

e e

ve

nt,

aft

er

it b

ecam

e c

lea

r re

so

urc

es f

rom

VO

WH

a

nd

OC

C h

igh

wa

ys d

ep

art

men

t w

ou

ld n

ot

be

ava

ilab

le in

the

sho

rt t

erm

.

http

://a

rchiv

e.b

anbu

rycake.n

et/

2008

/7/1

/252

16

4.

htm

l

Page 71: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

No

Event

type

and

Date

story

Media

Media

headline

Oxfordshire

locations o

r Area

reported

Incidents and Impacts on District - details from media reports

Are

as a

nd

gro

ups /

Eve

nt

evo

lutio

n /

Incid

en

ts o

ccu

rre

d /

Im

pa

cts

/

Co

nse

qu

ences

Meteorological

data & info about

causes of event

Internet

reference

Other orgs

involved

138

RR

PS

18.7

.08

OT

Objections

flood in

Vale

N

ew

co

nce

rns a

bo

ut flo

od

ing

aro

un

d t

he A

bin

gd

on

Te

sco s

ite

. P

lann

ing

o

ffic

ers

at

the

Va

le o

f W

hite

Ho

rse

Dis

tric

t C

ou

ncil

sa

id t

he

re w

as n

o r

easo

n

to r

eje

ct th

e s

ch

em

e b

ut

cou

ncill

ors

ove

rrule

d th

em

. esco

is p

lan

nin

g to

me

et

the

Va

le a

nd

the

En

vir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy.

Te

sco

will

be

loo

kin

g a

t w

ays o

f in

cre

asin

g flo

od

mitig

ation

mea

su

res s

o a

s t

o o

ve

rcom

e th

e o

bje

ction

s.

http

://a

rchiv

e.o

xf

ord

mail.

ne

t/2

00

8/7

/18/2

53

82

0.h

tm

l

139

6

.8.0

8

New calls for

flood defences

Vale

F

loo

d-h

it h

om

eo

wn

ers

ha

ve

rea

cte

d a

ng

rily

to

ne

ws A

bin

gd

on

will

no

t g

et

an

y n

ew

de

fence

s t

o p

rote

ct

ag

ain

st

futu

re d

elu

ges.

La

st

we

ek t

he

E

nvir

on

men

t A

ge

ncy (

EA

) a

dm

itte

d its

pre

ferr

ed

option

s fo

r p

reve

nting

a

rep

ea

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Page 72: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

APPENDIX 4: VOWH SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEW FORMAT

Interviewee: Department: Date: Time in post: Introduction – recap LCLIP, reasons for study - need to build capacity; warm-up issue about how interviewee understands ‘climate change’…. LCLIP designed to help gather evidence for adaptation actions; Explain policy drivers – Notting. Decl, NI 188; UKCIP; earlier LCLIPs - OCC; describe some results of media trawl. What interview covers – general relations of weather with services; then review specific events. Relationships between the weather and it’s local effects on delivery of CDC services So I understand what you do, what is your work exactly? What are the various areas and responsibilities of the team? Main remit: Specific work areas / tasks: 1 2 3 How does weather affect this service? (not emergencies or extreme events) What are the main relationships between a specific service area and a particular kind of weather? Confirmed with data? With what confidence? Other related factors? Relationship Area 1: Area 2: Area 3: Area 4: Which particular events over the last 5 years, had the biggest impact on the District / on your service: 1 2 3 The following questions need not be asked in the order they are listed. Only those questions that are appropriate need be asked. Probably only one Event Profile Sheet will be filled out per interview.

Page 73: Vale of White Horse LCLIP Report Abridged_1

Question Checklist for Interviews Event Number / Type: Date occurred: Questions about the Event: Immediate incidents or impacts occurring on area, environment to affected groups. Who and how?: Long term consequences for area / groups: Direct and indirect causes of the impacts ‘caused by the weather’ ie what or who is ‘to blame’? Reasons for that vulnerability? (if known)? Council response to the event: What was the initial response? Advice? Resources? What phases? Collaboration with other Depts / agencies? How adequate was the response according to the recipients / other observers ? (if known) Longer-term - what mitigation responses are being put in place by communities, agencies, or others affected / responsible – to reduce the impacts of this kind of event? Effects of the event on the Council: Initial emergency cost of the incident? Long term costs due to the incident? Staff time devoted to response? LT/ST Impacts of dealing with the incident on service provision? Was team reputation affected? Why? Overall management response: Rank the overall significance of incident to your team in terms of operational impact? What level of awareness / preparedness did you have before the event? How well did you cope overall with the incident? What long-term lessons were learnt through the incident? Are the risks evaluated & incorporated in our RA? Are there opportunities? Adaptations / changes to your services following the event? How effective are they? Policies or guidelines? Any threshold for action in future events? How can we decide this? Who else should we speak to about this event?