1. Chertsey Bourne - Site survey between the M3 and the A320 Hamperstone Bridge showing elevations and where to check silt levels
2. Meadlake Ditch - Survey of the Meadlake Ditch between Thorpe Park and Green Lane ( 2003 )
3. NORLANDS LANE LANDFILL SITE - BOUNDARY LINES 1975 - 2008 ( Link to Land Registry Document )
4. SCC Flood Risk Management Strategy & Partnerships Team Roles & Responsibilities ( 08/11/2018 )
Our team sits within the Strategic Network Resilience Team which leads on the County Council’s responses to flooding and our duties as Lead Local Flood Authority.
Our main role is to develop, maintain, apply and monitor a strategy for local flood risk management within Surrey as part of the County’s statutory obligations under the Flood and Water Management Act 2010. This strategy sets out the principals and objectives for the risk management authorities to follow to deliver the long term reduction in flood risk. The strategy is set out to reflect the most recent legislative changes and incorporate in the catchment approach required to address flooding in an area of multiple agency responsibility.
In applying the strategy the team provide a lead and supporting role to community groups and flood forums and investigating flood incidents with the aim of determining who is responsible for managing the risk which caused by the incident. In this setting we provide detailed updates and responses to questions from group members and the public. We also assist in providing groups with direction and structure to best achieve their aims in relation to flooding and drainage. This takes the form of advice on legislation, links with other organisations through to detailed briefings on the studies carried out by the County Council’s engineers.
We also discharge further, non-public facing, roles in the form of briefing elected members, data management and collection and building and maintaining inter-agency relationships
5. SCC as a Mineral and Waste Planning Authority Roles & Responsibilities ( 08/11/2018 )
Surrey County Council is the mineral planning authority (MPA). The MPA deals with planning applications for waste related development. This can include landfill sites, both operational and restored and in aftercare. Restoration of a landfill site is a process of returning a site or area to its former or future use following mineral extraction. It includes processes that take place before and during mineral extraction (stripping and protection of soils) and operations after extraction up until the after-use is established on the site .
Responsibility for the restoration and aftercare of mineral sites, including financial responsibility, lies with the minerals operator and, in the case of default, with the landowner. Schedule 5 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 states that the aftercare period is five years from compliance with the restoration condition. The mineral planning authority cannot require any steps to be taken after the end of a 5 year aftercare period without the agreement of the minerals operator .
As part of routine monitoring, the MPA can visit operational landfill sites and landfill sites that have gone into restoration and aftercare. However once a site is out of aftercare, the site is no longer monitored. The majority of Norlands Lane Landfill site is now out of the formal 5 year aftercare period. The only parts of that site which are not would be the old haul route to the Coldharbour Lane landfill site, the concrete apron in front of the entrance gates and the gas compound.
8. MILTON PARK GRAVEL - Hydrogeological Risk Assessment
This diagram shows how landfill cells are sealed to prevent contamination . It was produced as part of the proposals for the proposed Milton Park Greave Extraction Project . I also shows how goundwater levels can be affected if the natrual flow path through the aquifer becomes restricted.