Press release

Defra and local partners set up Somerset Rivers Authority

In a Memorandum of Understanding, Defra and Somerset County Council have agreed funding for the Somerset Rivers Authority.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
River Tone

Local people in Somerset will be better able to manage flood risk after the Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss announced £1.9 million funding for the Somerset Rivers Authority today enabling it to start work next year.

The Authority will receive £2.7 million in total from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), Somerset County Council and the Somerset Consortium of Drainage Boards to reduce the flood risk in the region.

As a result, the Somerset Rivers Authority will be established by the end of January next year and will give local people the power to control and manage local flood risk in their area.

In a Memorandum of Understanding, Defra and Somerset County Council have agreed Defra will provide £1.9 million, the Council will provide £600,000 and the Somerset Consortium of Drainage Boards, along with the county’s five district councils, will provide £200,000 for the first year of funding. A review will be carried out to identify a long-term, local funding solution from 2016/17.

Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss, said:

Last winter’s floods were unprecedented. We experienced the wettest winter in 200 years, which took its toll on flood prone communities such as Somerset.

We have worked hard to protect Somerset from future flooding and to get those affected last winter back on their feet. The dredging of the rivers Parrett and Tone is complete and crucial works to raise key roads in the area has begun.

This funding will enable the newly formed Somerset Rivers Authority to make a real difference in its first year.

At a national level, we are spending £3.2 billion on flood management and defences over the course of this parliament. That is more than ever before and half a billion pounds more than in the last parliament.

The Somerset Rivers Authority forms part of the 20-year Somerset Action Plan which was developed at the request of the government in response to the exceptional floods last winter.

Councillor John Osman, Chairman of the Flood Action Plan Leaders Implementation Group and Leader of Somerset County Council, said:

This is an historic milestone for the Flood Action Plan.

The creation of the Somerset Rivers Authority is the result of intensive work and close co-operation between partners, with a strong determination on everybody’s part to make this happen so that we can better protect our county from the impact of flooding.

Following the exceptional flooding in the area last winter, government provided £20.5m to Somerset to help get those affected back on their feet and to improve flood resilience in the area. With the majority of Somerset below sea level the land is vulnerable to both tidal and land-based flooding. The widespread flooding of the Somerset Levels and Moors over the winter of 2014 was just one occurrence in a long record of flood events.

The Authority will focus on enhanced maintenance of river channels and flood banks along the county’s waterways, including maintaining the 2014 dredge on the Rivers Parrett and Tone.

Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss and local partners at the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding.

Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss and local partners at the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding.

Published 8 December 2014