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Argonath RPG Community => Speakerbox => World and local news => Topic started by: Mikal on November 27, 2012, 03:13:10 pm

Title: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Mikal on November 27, 2012, 03:13:10 pm
(http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/64402000/jpg/_64402824_64402823.jpg)

(http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/64405000/jpg/_64405692_64405691.jpg)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20506344 (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-20506344)

St Asaph: hundreds told to leave homes in flooded city

St Asaph residents were advised to leave their homes in the early hours
Continue reading the main story

Five hundred families have been told to leave their homes in St Asaph, where flooding could endanger lives after the River Elwy broke its banks.

The Environment Agency has issued two of the highest severe flood warnings on the Elwy. Water has already entered about 100 homes in St Asaph.

The are fears of further flooding after heavy rain in northern England and north Wales overnight.

In North Yorkshire, more than 50 houses in Pickering are under threat.

In flooded homes in St Asaph, water levels are said to be 2-3ft (60-90cm) in places.

Some residents have been rescued by lifeboats and fire crews after becoming trapped in their homes, and a pregnant woman was brought out the window of her property by British Red Cross volunteers.

The fire service has had 130 emergency calls in St Asaph on Tuesday, and said it could now only respond when there was a threat to life rather than to property.

Continue reading the main story
Weather information

The Environment Agency said the Elwy had reached 14ft 3in (4.35m) at St Asaph - more than 3ft (1m) deeper than its previous record, and compared with a typical depth range of 3-6ft (1-2m).

An emergency centre has been set up at a leisure centre in St Asaph for people evacuated from their homes.

The flooding risk is also affecting the north Wales villages of Abergele, Llanfairtalhaiarn, Llangernyw and Llansannan.

Inspector Mark Davies, from North Wales Police, said: "The Environment Agency tell us water levels are rising and getting worse.

"We haven't had any reports of people in severe difficulty but it has been distressing for people flooded in their own homes."

Residents have also been evacuated from their homes as the threat of flooding increases in Ruthin, 15 miles away, where Denbighshire County Council says up to 400 properties are potentially at risk.

Environment Agency officials are monitoring levels on the River Ouse in York
A spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron said: "What we have seen in recent days is an exceptional amount of rain falling on often waterlogged ground and therefore floods happening in some cases very, very quickly.

"Actually, a lot has been done to improve flood defences since 2007 and we have prioritised flood protection and are investing considerable amounts over the next few years to ensure that homes are protected properly."

Swathes of the country suffered flooding in 2007, causing damage estimated at £3bn.



Luckily I'm in South Wales which was un-affected, high winds/rain already caused a tree to crush and kill a women who was sheltering under it, a man also died by driving into a swelled river.
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Gandalf on November 27, 2012, 03:16:55 pm
Guess that those benefits make nice homes... ;)

Such flooding is always a tragedy and it will probably not be very long before the press starts blaming the government for not doing the proper maintenance in time.
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Radagast on November 27, 2012, 03:30:42 pm
Everything's fine and dandy in my corner of the world...
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: chichibung on November 27, 2012, 03:33:48 pm
lazy to read all the words but i can just see the pictures and i see it will be bad for some families  :( looks like Santa will not go to these countries  :rofl:
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: TiMoN on November 27, 2012, 03:53:11 pm
Did sauron take a piss?
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Mikal on November 27, 2012, 07:39:19 pm
Guess that those benefits make nice homes... ;)

Such flooding is always a tragedy and it will probably not be very long before the press starts blaming the government for not doing the proper maintenance in time.
Are you trying to say everyone in the UK is on benefits? These are all houses bought by hard workers, no the average dole bumb. :roll:
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Reece on November 27, 2012, 07:44:01 pm
My village is flooded like crazy
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Hybird on November 27, 2012, 07:48:07 pm
Apartment life is safety  :)

And funny .
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Gandalf on November 27, 2012, 08:48:48 pm
Are you trying to say everyone in the UK is on benefits? These are all houses bought by hard workers, no the average dole bumb. :roll:
Yeah yeah... whenever they are in need they are hard workers... :roll:
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Darxez on November 27, 2012, 09:07:11 pm
Get some dutch in their building some dikes for the English. We always need to show how to do the job. :D.
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Petarda on November 27, 2012, 09:23:09 pm
Did sauron take a piss?
Yeah how did you knew?
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Mikal on November 27, 2012, 10:01:03 pm
My village is flooded like crazy
I hope the sheep are ok. :help:

Yeah yeah... whenever they are in need they are hard workers... :roll:
Gandalf you need to add a facepalm smiley. ;)

An elderly women was found dead in her house, probibly drowned. :neutral:
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Reece on November 27, 2012, 10:04:31 pm
(https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/266922_10151271477479549_263130714_o.jpg)
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Darxez on November 27, 2012, 10:04:59 pm
Hmm.. Is Wales making a sport from this or what ? It only happens there.

Well, I wish all of the people in there goodluck.
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Reece on November 27, 2012, 10:08:01 pm
Hmm.. Is Wales making a sport from this or what ? It only happens there.

Well, I wish all of the people in there goodluck.

Wut? The picture I posted in in my village in the middle of England.  :trust:

http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/floods/31618.aspx (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/floods/31618.aspx)
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Mikal on November 27, 2012, 10:10:07 pm
I have to add, my gramps house was so close to being flooded the council stuck NOS on their drainage drugs and got there pumping water away within minutes, they also gave everyone in his street special flood gates for their doors.
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Darxez on November 28, 2012, 05:59:46 am
Wut? The picture I posted in in my village in the middle of England.  :trust:

http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/floods/31618.aspx (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/floods/31618.aspx)

Get the Dutch in there to help with the water man !
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Dave on November 28, 2012, 08:53:22 am
Guess that those benefits make nice homes... ;)

Such flooding is always a tragedy and it will probably not be very long before the press starts blaming the government for not doing the proper maintenance in time.

Yep, the government's fault that some half-wit decided to build next to a possible overflowing water source and/or on a flood plain.
Honestly, there are reasons why the land and housing is cheap in flood prone areas....oh, and reasons that the people living in those areas can't get insurance due to companies refusing to insure accident prone areas.

As dickish as it sounds, flooding will happen. Deal with it. If you don't want to deal with it - move somewhere that isn't on bloody flood plains or right on the banks of rivers that do not have proper flood defences. There are places in this world that take the brunt of much more serious flooding.

I'm not going to sit and say "AMAGAD I HAZ NO SIMPATHEH FUR DEM" as people can lose everything up to their own life in these sorts of situations. But the same places are affected every 6 months to every year, you would think someone would have the sense to just move away. Boycotting the system seems like a much better idea than saying the government aren't doing their bit to help with flood defences, because in short there are no "flood defences" that can really help in an area where the river has been redirected by concrete and asphalt.
Title: Re: It's going to be a bad Christmas for some families.
Post by: Mikal on November 28, 2012, 03:50:23 pm
Hmm.. Is Wales making a sport from this or what ? It only happens there.

Well, I wish all of the people in there goodluck.
It's in England and Wales..

Yep, the government's fault that some half-wit decided to build next to a possible overflowing water source and/or on a flood plain.
Honestly, there are reasons why the land and housing is cheap in flood prone areas....oh, and reasons that the people living in those areas can't get insurance due to companies refusing to insure accident prone areas.

As dickish as it sounds, flooding will happen. Deal with it. If you don't want to deal with it - move somewhere that isn't on bloody flood plains or right on the banks of rivers that do not have proper flood defences. There are places in this world that take the brunt of much more serious flooding.

I'm not going to sit and say "AMAGAD I HAZ NO SIMPATHEH FUR DEM" as people can lose everything up to their own life in these sorts of situations. But the same places are affected every 6 months to every year, you would think someone would have the sense to just move away. Boycotting the system seems like a much better idea than saying the government aren't doing their bit to help with flood defences, because in short there are no "flood defences" that can really help in an area where the river has been redirected by concrete and asphalt.
The government will do something to prevent it in the future would be my guess.
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