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Flooding roles and responsibilities

Our flood risk and drainage pages are currently under development. This means we may be making further changes to the information on the pages below in the future.

A rural street with 5 buildings. The road and footpath is flooded.

Understanding the different types of flooding and the associated roles and responsibilities of organisations in managing flood risk can be confusing. Flood risk management is a highly complex sector that includes environmental, engineering, scientific, economic, legal, political and social considerations.

Managing different types of flood risk involves many elements of work including, but not limited to flood forecasting and warnings, flood mapping, asset maintenance, reactive works, emergency planning, flood investigations, flood modelling, design and construction of flood alleviations schemes, highway drainage works, sewerage upgrades, planning developments with consideration for flood risk, etc.

There are several bodies operating within West Berkshire in the delivery of flood risk management. These include risk management authorities, emergency responders and other flood risk partners.

Under the Flood and Water Management Act 2010 (FWMA), West Berkshire Council is designated as a Lead Local Flood Authority and has statutory powers and responsibilities for co-ordinating flood risk management in partnership with other organisations/risk management authorities.

We have provided a breakdown of the roles and responsibilities of different organisations and illustrative examples in the sections below to help members of the public understand who is responsible for what.

For information regarding the legislative background of roles and responsibilities please see our legislation and policy page.

For a more detailed breakdown of the roles and responsibilities of different organisations please see section 4 of the Icon for pdf Local Flood Risk Management Strategy 2022-2027 [4MB] .
 

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Summary roles and responsibilities

Risk Management Authorities

Risk Management Authorities (RMA's) have statutory responsibilities to work together in the delivery of flood risk management functions under the Flood and Water Management Act 2010.

Environment Agency

Responsible for strategic overview of flooding. responsible for flooding from main rivers, flood warnings, information through flood risk mapping and national flood risk assets (flood defences) normally located on main rivers.

Lead Local Flood Authority/Unitary Authority (West Berkshire Council)

Responsible for taking the lead operational role in managing flood risk at a local level. Responsible for flooding from surface water, groundwater and ordinary watercourses.

Water and sewerage companies (Thames Water)

Responsible for managing the risks of flooding from surface water and foul (or combined) public sewer systems.

Highways authorities (West Berkshire Council and National Highways)

Responsible for providing and managing highway drainage. National Highways are responsible for the M4 and A34, other roads within West Berkshire are West Berkshire Council's responsibility.

 

 

Other responsible parties

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA)

Responsible for flood risk policy and funding flood risk management through the EA and local authorities. Not to be confused with local highways maintenance funding from the Department for Transport (DfT).

Regional flood and coastal committees (Thames RFCC)

Provide a link between flood risk management authorities and other relevant bodies. Responsible for allocating funding for major flood alleviation schemes and projects.

Local Planning Authority (West Berkshire Council)

Responsible for preparing local development plans and for determining individual planning applications in line with national and local planning policy. The local planning authority consults the LLFA on major planning applications and where there are flood risk or drainage concerns. 

Canal and River Trust

A charity organisation managing the Kennet and Avon Canal which runs through West Berkshire from West to East.

Riparian owners

Responsible for maintaining the bed and banks of the watercourse and ensuring there is no obstruction, diversion or pollution to the flow of the watercourse.

Parish Councils, community groups and flood wardens

Have no formal duties in the management of flood risk, however they assist in developing community flood plans and supporting communities at risk of flooding. 

Residents and businesses

Responsible for private drainage and protecting their property. Protecting individual properties from flooding lies in the first instance with the property owner.

 

Please note that West Berkshire does not have Internal Drainage Boards (IDB). Many of the powers that would be under the IDB are transferred to West Berkshire Council as the LLFA/Unitary authority.

 

To demonstrate how these roles and responsibilities are put into practice, we have provided example illustrations on the pages below:

You can also visit our types of flood risk page.

 

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Risk management authorities and emergency responders

Risk Management Authorities (RMA's), have statutory responsibilities to work together in the delivery of flood risk management functions under the Flood and Water Management Act 2010. Risk management authorities within West Berkshire are:

  • the Environment Agency
  • West Berkshire Council (acting as Lead Local Flood Authority (LLFA), highways authority and unitary authority)
  • Thames Water (water and sewerage company)
  • National Highways (highways authority for the M4 and A34)

In addition to their roles and responsibilities as RMA's, some authorities also have a statutory duty to plan for emergencies such as floods. Under the Civil Contingencies Act 2004, the Environment Agency and West Berkshire Council are classified as Category 1 emergency responders, while National Highways and Thames Water are classified as Category 2 responders. Both Category 1 and Category 2 responders work together within Local Resilience Forums (LRFs). The members of LRFs collaborate to plan and prepare for both localized incidents and large-scale emergencies. These forums enable responders to identify potential risks and develop emergency plans aimed at preventing or reducing the impact of incidents on local communities.

 

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Flood risk partners

West Berkshire Council also works with the Canal and River Trust, Parish Councils, Riparian landowners, Flood Wardens and Flood Forums to understand the water Environment across the region.

More information regarding our partners can be found in the Icon for pdf Local Flood Risk Management Strategy 2022-2027 [4MB] .

 

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Residents and businesses

Responsibility for protecting individual properties from flooding lies in the first instance with the property owner.

While in some circumstances other organisations or property owners may be liable due to neglect of their own responsibilities, there will be many occasions when flooding occurs despite all parties meeting their responsibilities. It is therefore vitally important that householders and businesses whose homes and premises are at risk of flooding, take the following steps to ensure the impact to your home is reduced:

Information on whether households are at risk can be obtained from the Environment Agency and the Local Authority. All households in Flood Zone 2 and 3 (areas at risk from fluvial flooding from a main river) should have been contacted, to notify them of this and, unless they have chosen to opt-out, will receive flood warnings from the Environment Agency when the risk of Main River flooding is high.

You can find information about surface water flood risk from the Environment Agency on GOV.UK.

You can also find information about flood zone allocation on GOV.UK.

The Environment Agency also publish flood risk data in a format that can be downloaded for analysis or combining with other data sources. You can find the Environment Agency data on GOV.UK here.

 

Visit our 'flooding: be prepared' page for more information on preparing for flooding.

You can find further information regarding flood grants for protecting your property here.

 


Further information

You can find further information and guidance relating to flooding roles and responsibilities on the websites linked below:

Flood risk: legislation and policy

A summary of the relevant legislation and policy documents that govern the roles, responsibilities and standards for the water, flood risk and drainage sectors.

Local Flood Risk Management Strategy

View or download our Local Flood Risk Management Strategy 2022 to 2027 PDF [4MB].

Flood investigation reports and core documents

Links to and information about reports, strategies, policies and supporting documents relating to flood investigation.

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