Message from Hugh Barlow, 1st June. This first message is important and invites your contribution when you have anything to report. The various messages following are there to give you the background on how this came about.
I met Doug Parker today as arranged. He is the Environment Agency officer responsible for water quality, and in this capacity is a regular visitor to this site, among others in Seaton and elsewhere.
 I met Doug Parker today as arranged. He is the Environment Agency officer responsible for water quality, and in this capacity is a regular visitor to this site, among others in Seaton and elsewhere.
It was a pleasure to meet a professional person who  welcomes public watchfulness.
 Contractors do not usually contact the Agency if  they have a problem, but they are obliged to keep the Agency informed once the  EA has been alerted, and remedial action or continued monitoring is required by  the Agency (Doug is visiting weekly anyway).  So they are reliant on the  public for informing them of any disconcerting new observations.
 He was alerted to the flooding of the tramway car  park flower bed, and had asked the site manager to provide a sump just inside  the site boundary: once the tidally affected groundwater level had lowered, and  the salt water off the site had begun to go down, this had the effect of  lowering it more rapidly, until all that was visible was the white deposit on  the asphalt and in the flower bed.  We discussed this on the very  spot.
 We inspected the ditches alongside the tramway, and  went far enough to see how impossibly silted up the outlet to the estuary is  (the outlet is visible in his pictures, under the tramway bridge).  This is  the responsibility of the County Council, but discussion with Natural England  led to the postponement of the clearance last year during the birds' breeding  season.  He is now concerned that it has still not been done, and may  become urgent even in the breeding season, if warmer weather leads to the growth  of the potentially toxic blue-green kind of  algae.
 Currently, all that is visible in the stagnant water is ordinary blue (almost  petrol-blue) algae, and ochre staining (which might be iron stain from the site,  but is more likely from a local ground source).
 He himself is not a flooding expert, but would  recognise a potential flooding problem, and will already have advised his  colleague Steve Moore of the blocked outlet.
 So Doug would like, from any local  observations, preferably
 photos of any of the following in the  ditches:
 - bright blue salt water
- blue-green algae
- bright ochre tinting.
- serious mosquito infestation
The first is now unlikely to recur, the second is  quite possible, the last two are possibilities.  Basically, any startling  change of colour is worth notifying, because it could indicate serious  pollution.
 He is also concerned with the Harbour View pumping  station, which is close to full capacity.  Any blockage there could cause a  backflow leading to raised manhole covers.  If anyone sees  sewage leaking into the water courses, they should contact him  immediately and he will try to be on site in thirty minutes.  This  obviously applies anywhere and not just in the Tesco site.  Most of these  are problems
 of the low-lying ground, and have nothing  specifically to do with Tesco.
 Problems which happen to be thrown up by the Tesco  development are not the only problems, but we are being educated in public  awareness.  I was given to believe that, on some issues at least, the  public will be taken seriously.
 Hugh
 I have Doug's e-mail address, and the Environment  Agency is in the phone book.
 From: Doug Parker 
   To: Hugh Barlow 
      Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2011 4:50 PM
   Subject: FW: Harbour Road Development    Site - Seaton
   Dear Mr Barlow,
   Thank you for your observations, as this is our first    contact I will explain my role in this development. As a basic    Environment Officer I cover various areas from Water Quality, Water    Resources to Waste and Fisheries Enforcement. I have been aware    of the old camp site for several years and more so now with the new    development starting with me visiting the site during the demolition phase,    checking that all the various types of waste were disposed of correctly, then    the monitoring of the returning sea water and now I monitor water    quality discharges that leave the site. My main area of    interest for now is the water quality of the local watercourses around the    site, then once construction starts I will also check their disposal routes of    all their packaging and building waste.
   Please see the attached photos which were taken on    Friday the 20th of May, reference your concerns about the outlet to the    estuary. I believe that this part of the drainage ditch has not been    maintained by the LA for over 18 months plus see below part of an email    which I sent to EDDC only last week.
   Regards
   Doug Parker
   EO - EM East Devon
From: Hugh Barlow
To: Steve Moore
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2011 11:11 PM
 Subject: Re: Harbour Road, Seaton: infill consequences
 Steve
 Thanks for passing this to Doug Parker.  Can I  through you relay to him my corrected observations?
 The berm was not, as I thought at one stage,  covered over (I had misread a couple of photographs taken from the tramway by a  colleague), but it was clearly overwhelmed by the initial squeezing of sand and  water out of the fill and into the ditch.  Along the other sides of the  development, and clearly visible from the tramway by the car park, the sand heap  reaches right to the ditch, and sand obviously blows or is washed directly into  the ditch with nothing to prevent it.
 At least until the sand is fixed by grass, this  situation will continue, the ditches will be clogged with sand, and the salinity  of the adjacent area increased.  What happens in the event of a major  rainstorm?
 The increase in the salinity of the groundwater and  of the ditches must eventually affect a wider area, and I am not sure what the  impact is on the outlet to the estuary.
 I should be glad to know what you make of these  concerns.
 Hugh Barlow
From: Steve Moore, to Hugh Barlow, Doug Parker, May 24th
   Hugh , apologies for not getting back to you last week but    I've been either on training or on holiday since you    wrote. 
   In general terms I comment upon flooding related    matters in relation to planning applications for a number of    Councils  My involvement therefore typically ends when a planning    permmission is granted.  It is then for the planning authority to ensure    the dev't is built or any 'conditions' are carried out to the    satisfaction of the Council. Matters relating to site    runoff, water quality , impact upon the wider water environment ,    etc , are typically dealt with by my colleagues in Environment    Protection . In this case Doug Parker is the chap who looks after such matters    in Seaton and as such I've forwarded your e-mail to Doug for his information    and/or action.  I trust this is of assistance .  Please feel free to    get back to me if I can help you further. 
   kind regards    Steve.    
   Doug, over to you for action / update to    Hugh. Please give me  ring if I can be of any assistance to    you.  Steve.   
From: Hugh
Sent: 19 May 2011 10:38
To: Moore, Steve
Cc: James Semple
Subject: Harbour Road, Seaton: infill consequences
Dear Steve
   I am content that various consultancies and    agencies, including the Environment Agency, are monitoring and advising on    site, but I would be interested to know how you view specific aspects of the    current state of progress.
   As I see it, a gravel-filled berm was constructed    per plan between the raised site and the boundary rhyne, but the raised area    has been extended over this berm.  As it stands, then, there is nothing    to prevent sand-laden water from the saturated fill from draining directly    into the rhyne and clogging it up, as appears to have happened already.     What remedial measures can be taken or have such already been    recommended?
   Thank you for your continued interest in this    difficult development.
   Yours sincerely
   Hugh Barlow
   Chair, Seaton Development    Trust
 
 
Hugh, once again, thanks for the update.
ReplyDeleteThis does rather seem like closing the gate after the horse has bolted. I asked the EA to investigate this at the start of April and they said there would be no problems from salt water on the site.
The outline planning for the site said that it should be bunded to prevent uncontrolled discharge of saline water, silt and sediment. The point of this was to prevent polution to adjoining water courses. EDDC were aware, but the water was still allowed to flow from the site.
Check out what the Environement Agency think is the correct thing to do around a construction site at this link http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/netregs/businesses/construction/62333.aspx . Now compare this with the Harbour Road site!