Skibbereen floods: Council says Covid-19 delayed work on surface-water drains
Cork County Council has released a statement addressing the flooding in Skibbereen following Storm Ellen.
There was outrage in the town as the flooding last night came after the town's near âŹ18m investment in flood defences.
Cork County Council has issued a statement saying due Covid-19, minor works had to be delayed.
They said that during the delivery of the overall flood defence scheme, âa number of areas in the town were identified were surface water drains could have had the potential to cause floodingâ.
The statement said: âOne of the locations identified was the âThe Cuttingâ just off Bridge Street.
âThe OPW provided funding for a minor works project to construct a screen chamber where the overground drain entered into a piped drain.
âThis entailed construction of a large concrete chamber with a specially manufactured screen arrangement.
âThis part of the project was interrupted by Covid-19 but is now nearing completion with screen installation currently underway.
âThe screen was completed and due for installation this week with the entire process expected to take another week to complete.
âUnfortunately it was not possible to complete this work before last night's unusually severe summer storm, where the rate of rainfall reached 40mm an hour resulting in exceptional rainfall which overwhelmed the storm drain system at 'The Cutting' with the run-off overflowing onto Bridge Street causing flooding to a number of premises in the early part of the night.âÂ
Skibbereen now. #StormEllen #WestCork pic.twitter.com/ZyWoZ81lFr
— Holly Cairns TD (@HollyCairnsTD) August 19, 2020
The council added that the âscheme is substantially complete and has served this purpose wellâ.
Skibbereen has a long history of flooding, and experienced two major flood events in 2009 when over 120 residential properties and more than 70 businesses, schools, care centres, public buildings and sporting facilities were flooded.
It prompted a major tidal and fluvial flood prevention project on the River Ilen and on three tributaries flowing through Skibbereen â the Caol, Assolas and Glencurragh.
The project, which began in 2016, included the construction of almost three kilometres of flood walls, just over four kilometres of embankments and a number of storm water pumping stations.
The stark concrete finish on some of the flood walls and culverts drew criticism but engineers said the project was a 200-year flood prevention scheme that would provide protection for more than 300 homes and businesses in the town.
The scheme protected the town from flooding during sustained periods of heavy rain on a number of dates in November and December 2018.