Climate change promises to bring more frequent and extreme weather and of course more floods. According to the Environment Agency winter rainfall is set to increase by a staggering 59% by 2050

I look on Flood Risk Management as a jigsaw of many pieces, all working together to reduce flood risk. With the extreme rainfall we have been experiencing in recent years, pieces of that jigsaw have been overtopped, overwhelmed, compromised, and saturated. I make no apologies for focusing on what I consider to be the centre of that jigsaw; our homes and our businesses, which are on the receiving end of the floodwater.

What about those who live in flood poverty?

I am a passionate advocate for Property Flood Resilience – which essentially means taking steps to reduce the impact a flood can have at a property level using a variety of measures and methods – but what if those who find themselves at risk just cannot afford to take those steps? Those who live in ‘flood poverty’.

Will the socially vulnerable, such as those on a limited income, older people, people with disabilities, those with chronic illness and receiving care at home, be abandoned to cope alone? Many of whom may not have flood insurance, and therefore may sadly face a life living in fear of ‘flood poverty’.

Many of those people may live in an urban environment with little capacity to store water, some may speak a different first language and maybe not understand flood warnings. Until grants for individual Property Flood Resilience become available (and with the rising threat that flooding poses, I sincerely hope it does), what can be done to reduce the awful impact a flood can have?

Community support

When we went into the first Covid-19 lockdown, communities immediately rallied round to support those most vulnerable. Many informal groups were set up on Facebook and indeed, when a flood occurs, similar groups are formed. We, as communities, know where most vulnerable people are; it’s now time to build on that and make it a lasting legacy – a positive out of a negative.

Over the years, I have encouraged the development of ‘flood buddies’, which involves people who are not located in a flood risk area, pairing up to support vulnerable people who are. So when a Flood Warning does come, help can immediately be targeted to those most in need.

In Appleby, Cumbria, Flood Volunteers knock all the doors of homes at risk and help to move their belongings to a place of safety. Now we have a real sense of community, it’s time to build on that.

Free flood warnings

Preparing for a flood is essential and can make a huge difference to damage reduction. Signing up for a FREE Environment Agency flood warning is so important. You can then receive a call on the landline, mobile phone, text and email when the Environment Agency issue a flood warning or alert – it’s easy to do online at https://www.gov.uk/sign-up-for-flood-warnings or call Floodline on 0345 988 1188.

Plan ahead

Perhaps friendly volunteers can also support others to do that too. Then plan in advance: consider what you would do when that warning arrives, where you’ll move your belongings to, what needs to be switched off. Also, get your children involved, as the last thing they want is to lose their precious toys. My young children lost theirs and it really added to the upset my family experienced.

Inexpensive practical steps

The following list of inexpensive practical steps that can be taken will give more time to move your belongings and may reduce the impact a flood will have:

  • Fit waterproof tape, which sticks to damp surfaces and tape-up the cracks around and under your external doors to just under a metre (available from most hardware or DIY stores).
  • For extra protection tape a polythene sheet over your external doors and weight this down with plastic shopping bags filled earth from your garden.
  • For a more permanent solution screw plastic secondary glazing runners either side of your external door frame cut a piece of marine ply to size and drop it in. If time permits, run a seal of fast drying silicone around all the edges.
    • Use the waterproof tape to cover your external air bricks.
  • Make sure gaps in brickwork, for instance where your wastewater pipes come through, are sealed with silicone sealer.
  • To prevent wastewater backing up through your ground-floor toilets and sinks, put a tightly knotted double thick bin liner filled with sand or soil into your loo. Make sure it’s big enough that it doesn’t go down the loo and heavy enough that it will stay in place. Or, if you have a deflated small children’s football, push that in the bottom of the toilet bowl and if possible, pump it up again.
  • Put plugs in sinks and weight down similarly and tape up the overflow. You may get some leakage still, but these measures may help keep the worst out.
  • Put old wellington boots or plastic bottles with the top cut off onto table legs and pile your belongings on top of the table.
  • If you have any bricks or blocks lying around in your garden, put them in a plastic bag ( so they don’t deposit more dirt into the flood water) and put them under your furniture to lift it out of harms way.
  • If you have any decorators trestles , lift your sofas onto them and pile more belongings on top if it feels stable enough.

Whilst none of the above are as good as using Kitemarked flood products, as the saying goes, ‘every little helps’. Knowing your flood risk and preparing for a flood is important for everyone and can help reduce the appalling misery being flooded brings.

Further reading

How to recover from a flood, if you don’t have flood insurance see page 13 of the Flood Recovery Guide