Ownership of drain
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A pond owned by a school at the rear of my property overflows via a drain into a local brook. Unfortunately for me I have a drain sited on my property which is connecting the pond to the brook. The drainage pipe is partially blocked somewhere downstream of me and the drain overflows into my garden and my neighbours when it rains heavily.
Nothing from my property is connected to this drainage system and neither are any of my neighbours connected to it. It is solely for the purpose of allowing the overflow from the school pond to outflow into a local brook below where I live. The school does not accept responsibility for unblocking this drain, and the local council have been no help. Who is actually responsible? The houses here were built in 1996.
Nothing from my property is connected to this drainage system and neither are any of my neighbours connected to it. It is solely for the purpose of allowing the overflow from the school pond to outflow into a local brook below where I live. The school does not accept responsibility for unblocking this drain, and the local council have been no help. Who is actually responsible? The houses here were built in 1996.
gljenks
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A photie would be good.
and
Have you invited the head over for an informal meet, and show him what's happening? Surely local schools (presume it's Primary) - don't want to fall out with their immediate community.
Did your original solicitor's search, come up with anything about rights of drainage, easement, rights of access etc.
When was the school built? Way before your houses I bet.
As usual, developers don't give a toss.
Which dept. of local authority have you spoken to?
If you could arrange a meeting of all three concerned parties, on site, to discuss - a solution could be arrived at.
Just my two-pence worth.
All the best.
ps - of course (being slow on the uptake) - your houses are built on the ex-playing fields of the school - sold off for short-sighted gain, 12 yrs ago by the local authority. As happened all over the country.
Unfortunately for me I have a drain sited on my property which is connecting the pond to the brook.
and
Doesn't quite tally.Nothing from my property is connected to this drainage system
The school does not accept responsibility for unblocking this drain
Have you invited the head over for an informal meet, and show him what's happening? Surely local schools (presume it's Primary) - don't want to fall out with their immediate community.
Did your original solicitor's search, come up with anything about rights of drainage, easement, rights of access etc.
When was the school built? Way before your houses I bet.
As usual, developers don't give a toss.
Which dept. of local authority have you spoken to?
If you could arrange a meeting of all three concerned parties, on site, to discuss - a solution could be arrived at.
Just my two-pence worth.
All the best.
ps - of course (being slow on the uptake) - your houses are built on the ex-playing fields of the school - sold off for short-sighted gain, 12 yrs ago by the local authority. As happened all over the country.
"Meet the new boss - same as the old boss - We all get fooled again"
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during the recent floods i remember seeing a woman giving a piece to camera in which she said she had a large culvert running under here house that drained a large hillside above here house. and is was partially blocked and the council said it was her job to clear it out.
the thing was there was no access from her land and it was a 2mx2m concrete box channel, after the media interest the council sorted it. perceiver and find the right man to speak to in the drainage department at the council or
for the sake of say £120 might be an idea to get it jetted or surveyed so you can go to the school/lea/council and say it needs replacing or was just blocked. still if you split it with your neighbor 60 quid is better than a flooded house or garden.
giles
the thing was there was no access from her land and it was a 2mx2m concrete box channel, after the media interest the council sorted it. perceiver and find the right man to speak to in the drainage department at the council or
for the sake of say £120 might be an idea to get it jetted or surveyed so you can go to the school/lea/council and say it needs replacing or was just blocked. still if you split it with your neighbor 60 quid is better than a flooded house or garden.
giles
Giles
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
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Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
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found this:
Land Drainage
The landowner is responsible for the maintenance of the watercourse itself and the flow within it. The majority of rivers, streams and ditches are the responsibility of the 'riparian' landowners who own land on either bank. If your property boundary is a ditch, river or stream you should be maintaining it regularly. This will have the benefit of reducing the risk of flooding from the watercourse at times of wet weather - both for you and your neighbours
Certain watercourses are designated as main rivers and in these instances the Environment Agency have an additional responsibility to maintain water flow, carry out Defence works and to control building near watercourses.
Land Drainage
The landowner is responsible for the maintenance of the watercourse itself and the flow within it. The majority of rivers, streams and ditches are the responsibility of the 'riparian' landowners who own land on either bank. If your property boundary is a ditch, river or stream you should be maintaining it regularly. This will have the benefit of reducing the risk of flooding from the watercourse at times of wet weather - both for you and your neighbours
Certain watercourses are designated as main rivers and in these instances the Environment Agency have an additional responsibility to maintain water flow, carry out Defence works and to control building near watercourses.
Giles
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
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That guy in Hull who died in last year's floods was doing something similar. The culvert had blocked, and he went to clear it, and the flow trapped him against the bars that were there to stop the local kids going into the culvert.GB_Groundworks wrote:during the recent floods i remember seeing a woman giving a piece to camera in which she said she had a large culvert running under here house that drained a large hillside above here house. and is was partially blocked and the council said it was her job to clear it out.
the thing was there was no access from her land and it was a 2mx2m concrete box channel, after the media interest the council sorted it. perceiver and find the right man to speak to in the drainage department at the council or
giles
John
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Always a hot potato these kind of jobs.
The grey area with the riparian ownership issue is that the drain serves a pond and it is not a culvert or underground brook etc.... and the school gets some benefit from the pipe.
There is then an issue as to whether the pond is natural or a man made feature.
It really depends on A) what the developers who purchased the land agreed with the school and B) if they knew the pipe existed in the first place.
As mentioned above for the amounts involved to get it cleared and investigated i would push on before any great damage is done and then fight your corner at a later date.
HTH
Edited By flowjoe on 1226345252
The grey area with the riparian ownership issue is that the drain serves a pond and it is not a culvert or underground brook etc.... and the school gets some benefit from the pipe.
There is then an issue as to whether the pond is natural or a man made feature.
It really depends on A) what the developers who purchased the land agreed with the school and B) if they knew the pipe existed in the first place.
As mentioned above for the amounts involved to get it cleared and investigated i would push on before any great damage is done and then fight your corner at a later date.
HTH
Edited By flowjoe on 1226345252
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Perhaps his computer broke down?
Does the forum send out emails when threads get replied to? If not, it should do - that would get people back to post I reckon.
Does the forum send out emails when threads get replied to? If not, it should do - that would get people back to post I reckon.
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