Council

           

 

Date of meeting: 20 July 2023

 

 

Agenda Item 30

 

 

 

                       

 


 

 

LABOUR Group Amendment

 

Southern Water

 

That the relevant changes are made to the recommendations as shown below in strikethrough and bold italics:

 

Council notes:

 

1. Outrage across the city is growing at the fact that, nationally, raw sewage continues being dumped into our seas by water companies such as Southern Water;

 

2. Residents are rightly understandably concerned that the city’s sea, waterways and water supplies are unsafe to use because and raw sewage can be damaging to natural habitats and the environment;

 

3. However Brighton and Hove has one of the best storm water facilities in the UK which includes a tunnel constructed under Brighton and Hove beach dedicated to store heavy storm flows which is three miles long and large enough to drive a double decker bus from Volks Railway station to Hove Lawns.

 

4. Southern Water was privatised in 1989, which subjects vital supplies of water to market pressures in order to generate profit for shareholders; Notwithstanding the storm overflow there is concern about outflows at Shoreham and Saltdean in particular.

 

4. The combination of defunding, deregulation and privatisation that is obliterating services across our country and allowing water companies to dump sewage with relative impunity;

 

5. Robust regulation of water companies is essential to prevent raw sewage dumping and require transformational investment in our water infrastructure, creating the conditions in which community and not-for-profit ownership can ultimately be achieved; Public ownership of water is an essential step to fix this systemic problem as it would ensure that water companies’ purpose is to deliver clean water to residents, rather than profits to shareholders

 

6. The excellent progress the new Administration has made in negotiating with Southern Water which has resulted in them agreeing to fund year-round testing of our sea-water and to design and fund the creation of more water fountains in the City’s parks. Following the work of campaign groups such as Surfers against Sewage and the previous administration, the city needs accountability and compensation from Southern Water to the city.

 

This council resolves to:

 

7. Request the Council to continue the previous administration’s effort to secure and implement a commitment for Southern Water to pay for compensation to the city in the form of paying for the city’s public toilet service, or another appropriate equivalent compensation Support the Administration’s efforts to secure year-round, weekly testing of our sea water as well as reactive testing if unusual outflows are suspected;

8. Call on every party standing in the next General Election to commit bringing water companies into public ownership.

 

Proposed by: Cllr Rowkins                                             Seconded by: Cllr Fowler

 

Recommendations to read if carried:

 

Council notes:

 

1. Outrage across the city is growing at the fact that, nationally, raw sewage continues being dumped into our seas by water companies such as Southern Water;

 

2. Residents are understandably concerned that the city’s sea, waterways and water supplies are unsafe to use because raw sewage can be damaging to natural habitats and the environment;

 

3. However Brighton and Hove has one of the best storm water facilities in the UK which includes a tunnel constructed under Brighton and Hove beach dedicated to store heavy storm flows which is three miles long and large enough to drive a double decker bus from Volks Railway station to Hove Lawns;

 

4. Notwithstanding the storm overflow there is concern about outflows at Shoreham and Saltdean in particular;

 

5. Robust regulation of water companies is essential to prevent raw sewage dumping and require transformational investment in our water infrastructure, creating the conditions in which community and not-for-profit ownership can ultimately be achieved;

 

6. The excellent progress the new Administration has made in negotiating with Southern Water which has resulted in them agreeing to fund year-round testing of our sea-water and to design and fund the creation of more water fountains in the City’s parks.

 

This council resolves to:

7. Support the Administration’s efforts to secure year-round, weekly testing of our sea water as well as reactive testing if unusual outflows are suspected.