Ryburne

Share this page

Small ads

Floods: Wellies to Westminster demo

Friday, 29 January 2016

Greenpeace campaigners, including representatives from Hebden Bridge, yesterday laid 500 muddy wellies outside the Palace of Westminster to highlight the impacts of climate change on the flood hit communities recently affected.

Greenpeace Wellies demo

Photo: Steve Morgan

Greenpeace Wellies demoHeather Morgan from Hebden Bridge represented our flood hit community and said in her letter to David Cameron, delivered along with a petition signed by nearly 100,000 people to No.10 said, "My fear is that communities like Hebden Bridge of which I am proud to be a member may struggle to survive should these devastating flood events continue to occur. We need funding and action on flood prevention."

Photo: Steve Morgan

Each wellie had a personal message from a flood affected person. Heather added, "I too had a personal message for the Prime Minister. I wrote that on Boxing day the town I live in resembled a war zone. Streets filled with sludge, windows smashed, shops and homes wrecked and piles and piles of sodden possessions, people hopes and dreams left out to dry."

One minute video

Greenpeace Wellies demo

Photo: Steve Morgan

Greenpeace says, "For far too long, ministers have disregarded scientists' warnings that climate change will drive up flood risk across the country. Now we want them to listen to the people who have paid a huge price for this complacency.

"Our survey shows nearly two-thirds of the UK public (61%) think the government handled the flood response badly. An even stronger majority (74%) say ministers should do more to prevent future floods in areas at risk, and 61% say the government is spending too little on flood defences. And it's not just Labour voters who are unhappy with the government response. A clear majority of Conservative supporters also believe the government should ramp up flood prevention (62%) and invest more in flood defences (51%).

"Scientists have long predicted that climate change would bring warmer and wetter winters to the Uk, thus increasing the risk of flood. The Committee on Climate Change and the MET Office have both highlighted the likelihood of more frequent and severe flooding across the UK, as climate change continues."

See also:

HebWeb Feature: BOXING DAY FLOODS 2015

HebWeb News: Floods aftermath

HebWeb News: The Boxing Day Floods

Facebook Group: Calder Valley Flood Support

HebWeb Forum: Floods

HebWeb News: The June 2012 Floods

HebWeb News: The July 2012 Floods