Ellee Seymour

MCIPR, PRESS CONSULTANT, JOURNALIST, POLITICAL AND PR BLOGGER.

May 2nd, 2006

Our coastline is vanishing too…

A pic I took of coastal erosion in North Norfolk last summer

It’s not just immigrants who are vanishing, our unprotected coastline is too. Towns and villages could be at risk, warns Suffolk MP John Gummer. We will soon be Little Britain - literally!

Today’s East Anglian Daily Times carries a very worrying and thought provoking report on coastal erosion.

It says that every year, more than 3ft of the East Anglian coast is being lost to the sea - and some stretches of land is disappearing at an even faster rate. The number of exposed properties is rising every year.

In heavy storms, as much as 30ft of cliffs have been washed away in one single tide. With global warming and rising sea levels, experts predict the impact will increase further.

While the Environemnt Agency says an average of 3.3ft is being lost every year, it admits that in some causes the loss is much greater.

But how can this problem be tackled when there is so much passing the buck?

I didn’t realise that when coastal erosion involves crumbling cliffs, it is no longer the responsibility of the Environment Agency, but comes under the control of the local authority.

That’s why anxious residents, landowners and politicians have been calling for one organisation to have overall control - but no decision has been announced by the government in how our sea defences are handled.

This is naturally causing great concern to those who live and work nearby and can see with their eyes the continuing extent of erosion.

One resident believes a staggering 14 metres is being washed away from part of the unprotected shoreline in one year.

John Gummer, a Suffolk MP and president of Suffolk Coast Against Retreat, warns:

“If we do not protect the coast it will get worse and worse. Towns and villages are threatened.

“The current policy of neglect, dressedup as managed retreat, is not acceptable.”

May 2nd, 2006

Brave Trudy set to get parking bay following blog report

Trudy Lapinskis

Trudy’s shocking illness

Good news is in the pipeline for brave Trudy Lapinskis after I reported two weeks ago about the difficulties she was having in getting a disabled parking bay outside her home.

Trudy has the worst case in the country of a rare syndrome called Repetitive Sympathetic Dystrophy and is confined to a wheelchair. The use of her other limbs are at risk too.

Despite this, she runs a support group for fellow sufferers and is doing all she can to raise awareness among the medical profession to prevent others suffering the same way she has.

My report was picked up by her local councillor Martin Curtis, who also blogs, and had been working on this for her.

He immediately brought my report to the attention of Cambridgeshire County Council and he called me last night to say he was hopeful the parking bay would be approved, subject to public consultation with neighbours.

Incidentally, Trudy’s consultant has just published a comment on the original posting dated 21 April. She said:

“Trudy is an extradorinarily courageous lady and has suffered great pain and hardship. It is laudable that she is now trying to prevent others from suffering in this same way.”

Thanks Martin, your actions will make a great difference to Trudy’s everyday life.

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