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Oxford flood scheme plans will be submitted later this year

Oxford flooding WORK on a £150m flood defence scheme to protect western areas of Oxford start again by the end of the year. The Oxford Flood Alleviation Scheme is a plan to create a new stream in the floodplain, which would protect areas like Botley Road, Abingdon Road and South Hinksey from flooding. A planning application to get the scheme off the ground is due to be submitted later this year, after the works were delayed so a new bridge could be built on the southern section of the Oxford ring road. Ahead of that, the consortium which is running the scheme has started to ask members of the public what they think about the plans, which have been changed slightly.

Government needs to do more on flooding in Oxfordshire

23.07.2007. Abingdon. Flood pix. The River Thames at Abindon Bridge. Fire .Fighters from the Greater Manchester Fire & Rescue Service s Water Rescue .Unit used inflatable boats to bring stranded boaters back to dry land after the .waters rose AN OXFORDSHIRE MP has urged the Government to do more to protect residents from flooding in the future after years of streets filled with raw sewage. Layla Moran, Lib Dem MP for Oxford West and Abingdon, met with Flooding Minister Rebecca Pow, together with Defra and Environment Agency officials, to discuss flooding in her constituency. The meeting comes after Ms Moran secured an adjournment debate in February on the problem.

Obituary: The Beloved GP who fought against floods

A caring GP who was well respected by his patients and colleagues founded the Oxford Flood Alliance. Dr Peter Rawcliffe and fellow campaigners worked closely with the Environment Agency and other bodies on the proposals for the £150m Oxford Flood Alleviation Scheme. He was also alliance chairman. Peter Rawcliffe was born in Walsall, Staffordshire on November 11, 1948, the first child of James “V” Rawcliffe and his wife Barbara. Due to his father’s work, Peter spent some of his childhood living in the Gold Coast, now Ghana. While in the Gold Coast, Peter contracted polio, which was to affect his health throughout his life.

Progress is made with Oxford s £150m flood channel

By Andrew Ffrench @OxMailAndyF Business reporter covering Didcot and Wallingford. Call me on 01865 425425 Statt from the Oxford Flood Alleviation Scheme test a flood barrier Environment Agency bosses are continuing to make progress with the £150m flood channel for the city as they plan their work for 2021. The Oxford Flood Alleviation Scheme is creating a channel running around the west of the city, to prevent flooding in low lying areas like Botley Road and Abingdon Road, which have seen bad flooding in the past. A series of groundworks around the south of the city, including an archaeological survey, have been finished by scheme’s managers, to pave the way for a replacement A423 Kennington Bridge over the railway tracks.

Tributes to Dr Peter Rawcliffe who fought to combat flooding in Oxford

He studied undergraduate medicine at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and undertook his medical training at the Royal London. Dr Rawcliffe moved to Oxford in February 1976 to take a job as a house officer at the Churchill Hospital. Subsequently he worked as a registrar at the gastroenterology unit at the Radcliffe Infirmary, where he also undertook a research fellowship under Dr Sidney Truelove. He specialised in Coeliac disease, undertaking research, writing books and setting up the Oxford Coeliac clinic. In November 1986, Dr Rawcliffe began work as a GP in Botley, where he continued to work until retirement in 2000. He was extremely hard working and well respected by both patients and colleagues.

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