
Traveller site expansion refused near Chichester
Risk of future tidal flooding, over-development of the site and harm to biodiversity were some of the reasons it was refused, plus the council is already taking action over the number of mobile homes there. A council report also said the site would fail to provide satisfactory living conditions for gypsy and travellers. "When taken collectively the adverse impacts of the proposed development would significantly outweigh the benefits," it added.
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UK students: are you working a full-time job while studying?
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The Guardian
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Share your experience of getting your dream job and it not working out
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BBC News
2 minutes ago
- BBC News
New flood defence scheme unveiled in Derringham area of Hull
An £8.3m scheme has been completed which has created a network of ponds to protect homes and businesses in an area of Hull prone to project in Derringham mimics natural drainage by using the ponds, known as aquagreens, to store water in times of heavy for the work began in the aftermath of the devastating 2007 floods in Hull in which 10,000 properties were damaged and further flooding in Charles Quinn, the portfolio holder for the environment at Hull City Council, said: "These [aquagreens] not only enhance biodiversity and community green spaces but they protect some very at-risk properties from flooding." "Hull is the second most 'at risk' area to flooding in the country after London. In 2007 Derringham was one of the worst-hit areas," he Brown is general manager of the Living with Water project - a partnership between Yorkshire Water, Hull City Council, East Riding Council, the Environment Agency and the University of said £23m had been spent on flood resilience work across Hull and the East Riding in the past five years - and more work was planned."We've already seen some fantastic defence schemes built in the city and we've secured at least £26m for the next five years," she said. Rachel Glossop, Hull City Council's flood risk manager, said aquagreens stored excess water until it could slowly drain away once the sewer network had capacity."It's a scheme that's benefiting people in terms of reducing flood risk, but it's also benefiting ecology and wildlife by providing some much needed green spaces within an urban environment," she Hull is seen as especially vulnerable to surface water flooding. The floods of 2007 occurred after the city suffered the equivalent of a month's worth of rainfall in just 24 hours. The aquagreens in Derringham are designed to capture water directed down nearby alleyways, or 'ten foots' as they are known locally, and away from homes and schemes in Hull have incorporated permeable road surfaces and extra tree and bush planting to help slow the flow of water into the sewerage network. The projects are fitted with sensors and these are being monitored by scientists from The University of Stuart McLelland said the data they received would help to design future flood defences."We've got a number of probes monitoring water as it flows into the aquagreens and we're using that to see how they perform," he said."Hull is at risk from a number of different types of flooding and we need to better understand how these risks impact society."