Knaresborough charity shop forced to close after fifth flood

A Knaresborough business owner has made made the “devastating” decision to close her charity shop after it flooded for the fifth time in five years.

Rachel Wills runs the Watermill Cafe at The Lido leisure park in Knaresborough.

When her niece Bella was diagnosed with leukaemia, Ms Wills wanted to support the hospital caring for her so she decided to open a charity shop within the premises.

It began as a book table in the corner of the cafe but as more people heard Bella’s story, a bigger space was needed for donations so Ms Wills converted the ground floor cellar and opened a ‘bring and buy’ shop.

Since opening three years ago, the venture and annual summer BBQs have raised more than £10,000 for Alder Hey Children’s Hospital.

But the cafe stands on the banks of the River Nidd, making it a frequent victim of flooding. Now, after last month’s storms, Ms Wills has decided she can’t keep rebuilding the shop.

The high waters during a night of flooding and then a few days later.

Each time it floods she and her partner have to rebuild the shelves and put a call-out for more donations.

Last month’s floods forced the cafe owner to throw away three-and-a-half tips of donations and food stock and pump out more than 500 litres of water.

She said:

“I was watching the waters rise on the CCTV. I could see things dropping into the water. I just knew I couldn’t go through this again, every time it happens it’s harder to build back again.

“If I keep it on and we get flooded again I’m back to square one. It’s an awful decision to make but I will keep holding events to support the hospital but keeping the shop open is just really hard when it floods so regularly.”


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Bella was diagnosed cancer-free in March 2020. Nevertheless, Ms Wills wants to continue finding ways to donate to the hospital.

Each year, she holds a summer barbecue outside the cafe on the river banks, with live music and games, which raises around £1,000 — this will continue.

Bilton and Woodfield Community Library closed due to flooding

Bilton and Woodfield Community Library will be closed for two weeks due to flooding.

A burst pipe in the nearby children’s centre caused water to enter the library (pictured above). Volunteers that operate the library noticed the problem when they arrived this morning.

Contractors are already on site to assess the damage and work to clean up the leak could start as soon as tomorrow.

However, the library will be closed for two weeks while work is carried out.

People who were due to return library books during the closure will not face fines.


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Harrogate district volunteers wanted to fill sandbags for floods

A team of volunteers hopes to fill more than a thousand sandbags in Harrogate tomorrow.

Harrogate Borough Council keeps a stockpile of around 3,000 sandbags to support communities across the Harrogate district when they’re threatened with flooding.

The recent floods have depleted its stock so the council wants to prepare for future floods by filling up sandbags from 7am at its depot on Claro Road in Harrogate.

During floods in Pateley Bridge in February, some residents reported difficulties in getting hold of sandbags to help protect their properties.

Volunteers will come from Ready for Anything, which is a database of North Yorkshire County Council volunteers that are called upon in times of emergency.

If you are interested in coming along contact Harrogate Borough Council’s emergency planning officer Ash Demaline at ash.demaline@harrogate.gov.uk


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Drainage concerns at Goldsborough housing site following Storm Franklin

Residents in Goldsborough have raised concerns over drainage on land earmarked for 36 homes following Storm Franklin.

Heavy rainfall last week caused puddles to appear on a site off Station Road in the village (pictured above), which is a mile from Knaresborough. This has renewed concerns from residents of water run off into nearby properties.

The development was approved by Harrogate Borough Council in October 2021.

However, residents say they are concerned that the surface water may affect nearby homes and that they have repeatedly warned Stonebridge Homes, the developer, and the council over flood risk.

Noel Evans, who lives next to the site, said:

“Residents have frequently over the past four years stated that the change of this field from agricultural land, where there has been recorded flooding problems, will be immensely worse once the site is filled with hard surfaces such as roofs, pathways and roadways.”

In a letter to the council, local resident Beverley Jackson added:

“These heavy rainfall events now occur every year so we cannot treat them as occasional hazards.”


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Since the heavy rainfall last week, multiple residents have submitted comments via the council’s planning portal about their concerns.

The developer lodged a drainage plan as part of its proposal, but is still awaiting approval as part of its conditions with the council.

Mr Evans said the plan would need to be “superlative” in order to reduce the risk of flooding.

New sewer system

The Stray Ferret asked both Stonebridge Homes and its parent company, Henry Boot Ltd, for comment on the concerns raised by residents at the Goldsborough site, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

However, in a letter to the council in January this year addressing public comments on drainage, Katie Purdam, senior planner at Stonebridge Homes, said drainage at the site would “not contribute to the flood risk noted by residents”.

She said:

“We have carried out the detailed technical analysis and soakaway tests to the required standards by an independent consultant, which has shown that we can provide sufficient permeability rates and therefore the development can be accommodated.

“The cause of the historic flooding noted by residents is likely the old-style sewage system which runs through the gardens on the west and east sides of Station Road, which may be poorly maintained.

“We will be providing a new sewer system, which will bypass the existing unadopted sewer system in the gardens of properties either side of Station Road. Our new foul sewer will be laid down the site access, north along Station Road and then east to connect directly into the adopted sewer at Princess Mead. 

“The drainage from our site will therefore not contribute to the flood risk noted by residents.”

Flooding reveals ‘major unresolved problem on West Park Stray’

Large swathes of The Stray in Harrogate remain flooded today after heavy rainfall from Storm Franklin.

The Stray underwent major repairs two years ago to improve drainage in the area near the Prince of Wales roundabout.

But that area, and many others, is under water, raising questions about what, if anything, can be done to improve matters.

The Stray Defence Association, which has campaigned to safeguard the Stray since the 1930s, posted on its Facebook page:

“Clearly there is a major unresolved problem on West Park Stray, whatever certain people say.

“Looking at the dire state of West Park Stray today this has never been the case over decades past … when in winter we often had 5/6 feet of accumulated snow melting on a regular basis as well as heavy rain.

“Tree roots are standing in water much of the time now, not just over this weekend. This is an environmental disaster in the making.”

£160,000 repairs ‘not money well spent’

Judy Darcy-Thompson, chair of the Stray Defence Association told the Stray Ferret.

“£160,000 was spent on repairs in 2019 and it was not money well spent since we’re still seeing flooding of this level.”

“There is also a concern about the number of trees being cut down around the area … these were protecting the area from floods, and the situation is only getting worse.”

Harrogate Borough Council, which is the protector of the Stray, was forced to repair the Stray in 2019 after the UCI World Championships caused extensive damage.

We reached out to the council for comment but did not receive a response.


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Locals also expressed their concerns over vehicles causing damage to the Stray after a van got stuck in the grass on Saturday afternoon.

https://twitter.com/HellyR1/status/1495077805964595201?s=20&t=wkvUuA4vc2wJodk1iPXEIA

Ms Darcy-Thompson said:

“These images have gone to the council and I have suggested that the driver pays for the damages they have done.”

 

Knaresborough residents assess Storm Franklin flood damage

Knaresborough residents and business owners have begun to assess the damage caused by Storm Franklin after many were forced to evacuate their homes due to flooding.

The storm brought heavy rainfall to the area over the weekend and caused the banks of the River Nidd to break, leaving many houses in the surrounding area at risk.

Samantha Small, landlady at Mother Shipton’s Inn along the river, discussed damage to the business after the cellar flooded;

“We’ve managed to save the drinks but we’re going to have to lose at least half of our dry storage.

“Thankfully we were able to stay open yesterday but all of our electrics have gone. The outside area will definitely be closed today.”

Fears rose as she also lives on-site, so risked damage to her home. She added:

“We didn’t sleep much, particularly as it was pretty loud all night.”

Ms Small hopes that the pub can open inside today with little damage to business.


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Meanwhile, Margaret Pearson, a resident of Nidderdale Lodge Park, was evacuated to Dower House Hotel on Saturday morning;

“You just have to leave as soon as it begins … some of our neighbours who haven’t lived through it before got stuck in their house and we had to call the fire brigade.

“We’ve lost a few things from the garden but hopefully they’ll show up in someone else’s.”

She has now been able to return to her home since the River Nidd passed its peak level yesterday afternoon.

The water level of the River Nidd is now reported to be falling and only light rainfall is expected, however the River Ure is expected to peak today.

Plea for better drains after Pateley Bridge floods again

Businesses and residents are calling for the drains to be improved in Pateley Bridge after the town flooded again yesterday.

Pateley has flooded frequently in recent years and the bottom of High Street was under water again in the early hours of Sunday.

Fortunately the water subsided quickly after Lee Chandler, co-owner of the Spar shop on High Street, went out in the dark with rods to unblock the drains.

Many people blame the state of the drains for not the problem. They say the drains are not cleaned often enough and therefore don’t remove water that comes down the hill fast enough, leaving shops at the bottom of High Street vulnerable.

Firefighters at Pateley Bridge floods

Firefighters help out yesterday.

The increased regularity of floods has led to calls for action.

Andrew Weatherhead, owner of butchers H Weatherhead and Sons, plans to install flood doors at the front and back of his shop after water got into the premises for the second time in a year. The shop closed yesterday but has reopened today.

He said:

“The problem is not the river flooding — it’s the state of the drains. The water comes down the High Street and it brings a load of muck down. There’s a couple of drains on either side of the road and they get blocked by the mud.

“We could do with bigger drains or the drains being cleaned more frequently.”

Elizabeth Chandler, co-owner of the Spar shop, said her husband Lee often unblocked the drains and the problem was compounded yesterday by a lack of sandbags distributed.

Pateley Bridge flood

Unblocking the drains yesterday.

Mr Chandler began tackling the flooding at 5am. It had cleared by about 7.30am and then he and his wife helped the clean-up operation on Greenwood Road, which had also flooded. They finally got home at 8pm only to notice the roof of their home was leaking.

Ms Chandler agreed to the state of the drains needed addressing — a sentiment echoed by many residents on Facebook groups in the area.


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Stanley Lumley, a Conservative councillor who represents Pateley Bridge on both Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council, told the Stray Ferret that there was a problem with the drains in the town, which along with snow meltwater and torrential rain caused a “perfect storm”.

Cllr Lumley, who took part in yesterday’s emergency response, added:

“North Yorkshire County Council has brought highways management back in-house so I hope we will be able to manage our resources better than in the past.

“The council relied on outsourced contractors in the past and they haven’t been as proactive as they should have been.

“In future, rather than do blanket cleans of gulleys that don’t always need it we will be able to undertake more targeted cleaning.”

Cllr Lumley praised the town’s emergency response, adding:

“We’ve got fantastic community spirit in Pateley Bridge.”

‘Flooding due to volume of water’

Melisa Burnham, the council’s highways manager for the Harrogate area, said the amount of rainfall was the key issue. She said:

“We had up to 80mm of rain forecast on already saturated ground in the Pateley Bridge area and there will be a point where this quantity of water is beyond the capacity of highways drainage systems; it is likely that flooding in Pateley was therefore due to this volume of water rather than the state of the drains.

“Nevertheless, once the flooding has been dealt with, particularly any immediate risk or risk to properties, any problem areas will be investigated and action taken as required in due course.”

 

 

Knaresborough cafe owner speaks of flood devastation

The owner of a riverside cafe in Knaresborough has spoken of the devastation caused by flooding this weekend.

Justine Connolly, who co-owns Marigolds Cafe on Waterside, was forced to close the cafe on Sunday morning just as Storm Franklin was approaching the district.

Heavy rain then caused flooding across the Harrogate district, forcing some residents to evacuate their homes.

Ms Connolly said:

“We’ve got CCTV that we can log in on our phones, so we saw that it was bad on Sunday morning.”


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She said coming into work this morning to empty the water from the cafe was “like emptying a bath”.

Ms Connolly added:

“We have to sweep it manually out, we haven’t got any pump systems.”

She said the floods was “as bad” as those in 2016. However, she added that there was more warning this time:

“The only difference with this one is that we saw it coming. We’ve had texts [flood alerts] for the past three days.

“Even though we know its coming and we’ve had it before, it’s still a horrible feeling. You don’t know how high it’s going to get, when it is going to go away and how much damage it is going to do.”

Despite the flooding, Ms Connolly said staff have started the clean up today and are preparing to reopen tomorrow.

She said:

“Now we’re just cleaning up, restocking and getting ready for tomorrow.”

Flood warning issued for Boroughbridge

A flood warning has been issued for Boroughbridge as rain continues to fall in the Harrogate district.

The warning for the Upper River Ouse was issued at 10.10am this morning at the start of what is expected to be a week of storms and rain.

Currently the main threat is just to the east of Boroughbridge but the situation is expected to worsen this afternoon.

The bad weather over the weekend has impacted river levels across the UK. 2 flood warnings have been issued, one in Boroughbridge and another in the Lake District. There are 28 other flood alerts.

Check here: https://t.co/ueaxxWzWWI#Flood #LakeDistrict #Boroughbridge pic.twitter.com/ew5DbhuLhN

— FloodAlerts (@FloodAlerts) February 14, 2022

It is one of two flood warnings nationally, the other one being active in Cumbria.

Less severe flood alerts were removed this morning for the Lower Nidd catchment area and the Lower Ouse but water levels remain high following days of persistent rain.

The government’s flood alert service says of the situation affecting Boroughbridge:

“Flooding of roads and farmland is expected. Areas most at risk are low lying land and roads and riverside foot and cycle paths.

“We expect levels on the River Ouse to rise through Monday and to peak late on Monday afternoon.

“Our incident response staff are closely monitoring the forecast and checking and operating defences as required.

“Please avoid using low lying footpaths near local watercourses and plan driving routes to avoid low lying roads or carparks near rivers, which may be flooded.”

 

Overnight warning for heavy rain across the district

A yellow weather warning for heavy rain is in place across the district from the early hours of the tomorrow morning.

Following a wet weekend, the Met Office has put a yellow weather warning across North West England.

The warning means heavy and persistent rain is forecast from 2am tomorrow morning.

This level of warning could mean a “few homes and business are flooded” and predicts travel delays due to potential flooding on the roads.

The warning will be in place until 23.59 on Tuesday evening.

The Met Office yellow weather warning is in place from Newcastle to Yorkshire and as far south as Norwich.

There are currently no flood warnings or alerts in place.


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