
New homes approved in 'flood-prone' Digby
Plans for 35 new homes have been approved in a village with a history of flooding despite concerns from residents about them making the problem worse.North Kesteven District Council gave the green light to Grainfield Developments Ltd's plans for Station Road, Digby, at a meeting on Tuesday.The council's planning committee said they would "almost certainly" lose an appeal if they refused the application, despite the area being flooded during Storm Babet in 2023.Martin Elvin, who lives close to the site, said Digby was a "flood-prone area".
He told the committee: "We are classed as Zone 1 [the least at risk] but that doesn't reflect the true amount of problems."Large numbers have also suffered with problems with the local sewerage system, which would be exacerbated by more homes."Councillor Marianne Overton said she felt "uneasy" about extra homes in a village with flooding problems.Councillor James Bourne, who sits on Digby Parish Council, added there needed to be a "serious overhaul of infrastructure" if new homes were being built.
He said: "This is a lovely village and we recognise it needs new development to survive."This application seems to rely on regular inspections and maintenance to protect flooding – perhaps it's not in the right place if it needs this?"However Robert Doughty, speaking for the applicant, stated the development would not increase the risk to existing local homes, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service."The previous flooding has all been down to specific circumstances which the application site isn't connected to," he said.
Several members said they had not seen proof that the development would make flooding problems any worse.Councillor Richard Wright said: "There's no reason to refuse the application that will stand up to scrutiny [during an appeal]."Twelve members of the committee voted in favour of the application, one voted against and one abstained.Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Courier
01-06-2025
- The Courier
Brechin blinds factory on the market after collapse of famous firm
A buyer is being sought for the factory of collapsed Brechin blinds firms Stevens Scotland. The long-established family firm closed at the end of 2024. Around 50 local staff lost their jobs five days before Christmas. Bosses blamed a downturn in UK sales for the decision. They said the company had struggled against reduced consumer spending on homes due to the cost-of-living crisis. The company's Denburn Way factory is now on the market. Stevens moved into the purpose-built premises around 25 years ago. Commercial property agents Colliers say the 70,379 sq ft building sits on a 2.46 acres site. It includes a steel portal frame warehouse and two-storey office to the front of the main building. There is a reception and meeting rooms at ground level, with the main open plan office area on the first floor. A mezzanine level runs through the warehouse. A staff canteen is part of an extension added in 2006. The factory also includes car parking opposite and expansion land to the east of the unit. It is close to the original site of the now converted Denburn linen works, and beside Brechin's Lidl supermarket. Stevens was set up in 1968 and grew to become one of the biggest names in the UK window blinds market. In 2015, it was bought by Dutch-based industry giant Hunter Douglas. Company accounts showed the Angus operation remained profitable at the end of 2023. Turnover for the 2023 financial year was £8.1m, a reduction from £9.2m in 2022. Pre-tax profits increased to £1.2m from £1.1m in 2022. Around 80 staff were employed during that period. The accounts also revealed a dividend payment of more than £8 million was agreed before the closure decision. Brechin faces another economy and jobs blow with confirmation of a closure date for the Matrix International engineering factory. Operations there are set to cease before the end of 2025. It follows the decision of US owners to shut the 86-year-old firm after the factory was badly affected by Storm Babet in 2023.


The Courier
30-05-2025
- The Courier
Brechin Matrix production moving to global sites as factory closure date revealed
Brechin's historic Matrix International factory is slated for closure before the end of 2025. In March, bosses at the East Mill Road engineering plant told staff their jobs were under threat. US owners of the 86-year-old company said they were considering transferring operations abroad. A consultation with the Angus workforce was launched. It has now concluded and the future of the plant has been confirmed. The decision will see parent company Regal Rexnord move Matrix International work from Brechin to other global sites. Those are Shenzhen in China, Angers in France, and New Hartford in the USA. The firm has said Angus production will run until November. The news is the latest economic hammer blow to the town in the wake of Storm Babet. Matrix – which began as a wartime engineering operation in 1939 – was swamped by the River South Esk in October 2023. It was left under feet of water. Three months later, staff were told manufacturing and production would cease there. However, assembly of highly specialised electromagnetic equipment such as brakes and clutches continued. It is thought to have employed around 100 staff in early 2024. The company has been approached for comment on the latest developments. The Matrix site is owned by local firm JJKS Estates. Last month, company director Kevin Mackie said Regal Rexnord had committed to a lease until 2038 before Storm Babet struck. He continues to press Angus Council for details of their communications with the company in the wake of the disaster. Mr Mackie and fellow JJKS director Jack Souttar have called for a full inquiry into the Matrix collapse. The authority previously said it worked alongside Scottish Enterprise to help JJKS and Matrix after the storm.


The Courier
29-05-2025
- The Courier
New council power team to hold on to £1m SNP fighting fund for Angus rebuild
Ousted SNP councillors say they will be 'watching closely' how a million-pound fund to rebuild Angus is used by the group which dumped them from power. The £1 million Angus infrastructure fund was revealed when the council set its budget in February. It was a surprise announcement by the then SNP-led administration. And the fund was the key difference between its budget and opposition proposals. Ex-leader Bill Duff planned to use it to unlock around £20m of extra borrowing capacity. He said it would 'restore basic infrastructure that has suffered from underinvestment and climate-related damage for some time.' Rebuilding Brechin after Storm Babet and combating the threat of coastal erosion at Montrose were given as examples. But it proved to be the SNP's last big move before they lost control of Angus Council. A new multi-party coalition grabbed power in April after securing a vote of no confidence in the ruling group. It is led by one-time stand-in SNP chief George Meechan and Arbroath Conservative Derek Wann. Kirriemuir councillor Mr Meechan confirmed the seven-figure fund will stay in the spending plans. 'The administration group have no plans to change the overall concept of the infrastructure fund,' he said. Former leader Mr Duff said: 'I very much welcome that the incoming administration recognise the value of the innovative infrastructure fund introduced in February's budget by the SNP/Independent administration. 'This offers over £20m of additional capital resource. 'This initial investment will start to address Angus's serious infrastructure requirements. 'Specifically, we were very conscious of the need to spend capital on dealing with the aftermath of Storm Babet and the reconstruction required in Brechin, and the impacts of coastal erosion in Montrose, both impacts of global warming. 'As the public will know, neither the then opposition budget nor the non-aligned budget addressed these two critical issues.' 'We will be watching carefully how this fund is used.'