This is a photograph purported to be from Cranbrook appearing on the Express and Echo website. Note the houses to the left of the image:

This is a photograph purported to be from Cranbrook appearing on the Express and Echo website. Note the houses to the left of the image:

““Storm Angus has flooded the controversial new offices of the Devon and Cornwall police and crime commissioner.
Staff only moved in three months ago as part of a £500,000 renovation project of the suite at police headquarters in Exeter. But they’ve been forced to move out today. It’s thought leaves clogged drains on the roof, leading water to pour in.
A source told us there was considerable damage, and it wasn’t clear how long it would take before the offices would be in use again.”
BBC Devon live website
Being planned on older flooding regulations because the application went in before they changed.
Today’s newspaper:
“The A375 between Sidford and Sidbury road is partially flooded and difficult driving conditions are reported on the A375 Sidbury Hill in both directions. Cotford and Woolbrook Road are also flooded.”
The Environment Agency is already in trouble for not spending money it was allocated for natural flood prevention schemes.
What about unnatural flood increase schemes?
If you had a child car seat that you bought a while ago that was declared unsafe for children under new regulations, would you continue to use it?
Why are developers allowed to ignore new regulations if their planning applications went in before changes which are designed to keep people and property safer?
UPDATE 5 pm: “The A375 is closed at Sidbury due to flooding and a landslip.”
“Mitie has published its second profit warning in two months after the outsourcing company’s customers continued to reduce spending due to rising costs and economic uncertainty.
The company also said it would withdraw from its healthcare business, which provides home care for the elderly. The £128m cost of writing off the business drove Mitie to a £100m pre-tax loss for the first half of the year. …
… Mitie put its healthcare division under review in September and will now look for a company to take over the business or allow its contracts to wind down. Local councils have been seeking price cuts from the loss-making business, prompting Mitie to conclude it was unviable.”
see:
https://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/event/save-exmouth-seafront-ses-meeting/
and Exmouth Splash Facebook page
“The government has been accused of being “all talk and no action” on flood defences, as the first named storm of the season brought flooding and power cuts to the south of England.
Storm Angus saw gusts of up to 106mph recorded 23 miles off the coast of Margate, while gusts of 80mph hit Langdon Bay, also in Kent.
While Met Office weather warnings connected with Storm Angus expired at 1pm on Sunday as the storm moved out to the North Sea, a new series of warnings were issued for Monday and Tuesday for heavy rain in south-west England, parts of northern England and Wales.
Andy Page, chief meteorologist at the Met Office, said Devon was likely to be most affected. “Although the more persistent rain should clear from Devon by early afternoon, heavy and possibly thundery showers are likely to follow,” he said.
UK government not funding natural flood prevention methods
“Around 20-30mm of rain is expected fall in a three- to six-hour period in places, with as much as 40-60mm possible locally through the whole of Monday. The ground has been left very wet from Saturday night’s rain and this increases the risk of further flooding.”
Page added that the band of rain affecting parts of southern England and Wales on Monday would extend to parts of northern England later on Monday and into Tuesday morning.
The warnings came as the government was accused of failing to deliver on promises to fund “natural” flood management schemes such as planting trees.
A freedom of information request by the environmental group Friends of the Earth to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) revealed that there was no funding earmarked specifically for natural flood management, despite ministers saying they would fund such measures.
Natural flood management schemes aim to slow the movement of water downstream to prevent flooding. This can involve creating water storage such as ponds, planting trees along water courses and restoring rivers to their original meandering path.
In his budget in March, then-chancellor George Osborne announced an extra £700m for “innovative flood defence measures”. Friends of the Earth understands that former floods minister Rory Stewart earmarked £20m for natural flood defences before he left Defra in the June reshuffle.
In a recent letter to environmental charities, the environment secretary, Andrea Leadsom, wrote: “I fully support natural defence initiatives such as planting trees, which can slow the flow of water.”
Guy Shrubsole, climate campaigner for Friends of the Earth, said last winter’s floods “were a powerful reminder that we need to work with nature to reduce flood risk – and ministers wholeheartedly agreed”.
“So far it’s been all talk and no action,” he said. “The government has failed to spend a single extra penny on natural flood management.”
“Ministers must replace warm words with hard cash and announce a pot of at least £20m for natural flood defence in this year’s autumn statement. Anything less will be a betrayal of the communities that flooded so terribly last winter.”
A Defra spokesman said: “We’re committed to better protecting the country from flooding and natural flood management plays an important role in our strategy.
“We’re spending a record £2.5bn on flood defences to better protect 300,000 more homes by 2021 and many of these projects are already using natural flood management measures.”
The Environment Agency also issued nine flood warnings and 57 less serious flood alerts in the south-west and parts of the north of England.
Alison Baptiste, national flood duty manager at the Environment Agency, said teams had been working through the night and were now preparing for further flooding as rain continues over the next couple of days.
“People should remember not to drive through floodwater and be aware travel may be disrupted,” she said. “Environment Agency teams will clear blockages in rivers, continue to issue flood warnings and may operate flood gates and sea defences.”
Are they all working so hard they have no time to read newspapers?
“The BMA, which today reveals the £22billion spending shortfall, said a survey found two-thirds of doctors had no input in the plans and a third had not even heard of them.
Its council chairman Dr Mark Porter added: “Given the scale of the savings required, there is a risk these plans will be used as a cover for delivering cuts… starving services of resource and patients of vital care. It is extremely concerning that the majority of doctors have not been consulted on the plans, particularly as ministers have been so keen to insist that all stakeholders would be involved.”
The Lib Dems demanded an urgent £4billion cash injection for the NHS and social care services to stop the crisis getting worse. Health spokesman Norman Lamb said: “NHS and care services are on the precipice as we approach the winter months.
“Waiting lists are growing, deficits hit record levels this year and staff are under unsustainable pressure.
“In social care, thousands of people are seeing services withdrawn and 15-minute visits have become the norm as councils struggle to make ends meet.”
A report by health think-tank the Kings Fund blasted the secrecy surrounding the Sustainability and Transformation Plans, which are being finalised by health chiefs around the UK.
Cheshire and Merseyside is one of the largest affected areas. Three hospitals could be axed and “merged” on to a single site to plug its black hole. Birmingham and Solihull trusts face a £712million shortfall, putting services at risk of closure.
Somerset’s two main hospitals in Yeovil and Taunton may merge key departments including cancer and maternity wards. In Berkshire, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, bosses are planning to cut the staff payroll by £35million to help meet a £479million deficit.
It is a similarly depressing story in most other regions as Tory austerity continues to batter services, morale and patient safety.
But NHS medical director Professor Sir Bruce Keogh insisted: “We are talking about steady incremental improvement, not a big bang, tackling things doctors and nurses have been telling us for years.”
The Department of Health added: “The NHS already has its own plan, designed by NHS leaders, which sets out how we can transform services and improve standards of care in building a more responsive, modern health system.”
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/secret-plan-22billion-nhs-cuts-9299803