Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership: Difference between revisions

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{{Case study status}}
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{{Project overview}}
==Background==
In 2012, Defra introduced the catchment based approach (CaBA) - a community-led approach that engages people and groups from across society to help improve our water environments. Defra drives CaBA through a national network of catchment partnerships. These partnerships are expected to identify local priorities and tackle cross-cutting issues; ensure that the work of partners is coordinated; and deliver improvements across their catchments.
 
Established in 2014, the Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership is hosted by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust with support from the East Yorkshire Rivers Trust as Joint Host. They are joined on the partnership by the Beverley and North Holderness Internal Drainage Board, East and North Yorkshire Waterways Partnership, East Riding of Yorkshire Council, Environment Agency, Hull City Council, Natural England, Ouse and Humber Drainage Board, South Holderness Internal Drainage Board and Yorkshire Water.
 
Unlike most other catchments, the Hull and East Riding catchment area comprises a series of distinct and often discrete watercourses / water bodies, known locally as: Barmston Sea Cut; Gypsey Race; Hornsea Mere; Market Weighton Canal and River Foulness; River Hull; and the South Holderness Drains (Burstwick, Keyingham, Ottringham, Thorngumbald and Winestead).
 
Most of these water bodies are separate from the main inland waterway network. Together, though, they are crucial to the drainage of the Yorkshire Wolds and the East Riding and to the unique landscape character of the region.
 
In March 2017, the Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership published its first catchment plan, which explains how partners are using the CaBA to make a difference in the water environment, in local communities and to the local economy – now and in the long term. The document also demonstrates the partnership's strong track record of collaborative working and includes case studies which illustrate the partnership's capacity for effective catchment management.
 
=='''Case studies'''==
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|File name=Skerne wet woodland creation site credit J Traill.JPG
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|Caption=Skerne Wetlands, River Hull Headwaters (Yorkshire Wildlife Trust)
|Caption=Skerne Wetlands, River Hull Headwaters (Yorkshire Wildlife Trust)
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|Caption=South Lagoon, Tophill Low Nature Reserve (Yorkshire Water)
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{{Additional links and references
|Link=environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/ManagementCatchment/3039
|Description=Hull and East Riding Environment Agency environmental data
}}
{{Additional links and references
|Link=www.catchmentbasedapproach.org/humber
|Description=CaBA website - Humber
}}
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[[File:Humber.png]]
 
==Background==
In 2012, Defra introduced the catchment based approach (CaBA) - a community-led approach that engages people and groups from across society to help improve our water environments. Defra drives CaBA through a national network of catchment partnerships. These partnerships are expected to identify local priorities and tackle cross-cutting issues; ensure that the work of partners is coordinated; and deliver improvements across their catchments.
 
Established in 2014, the Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership is hosted by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust with support from the East Yorkshire Rivers Trust as Joint Host. They are joined on the partnership by the Beverley and North Holderness Internal Drainage Board, East and North Yorkshire Waterways Partnership, East Riding of Yorkshire Council, Environment Agency, Hull City Council, Natural England, Ouse and Humber Drainage Board, South Holderness Internal Drainage Board and Yorkshire Water.
 
Unlike most other catchments, the Hull and East Riding catchment area comprises a series of distinct and often discrete watercourses / water bodies, known locally as: Barmston Sea Cut; Gypsey Race; Hornsea Mere; Market Weighton Canal and River Foulness; River Hull; and the South Holderness Drains (Burstwick, Keyingham, Ottringham, Thorngumbald and Winestead).
 
Most of these water bodies are separate from the main inland waterway network. Together, though, they are crucial to the drainage of the Yorkshire Wolds and the East Riding and to the unique landscape character of the region.
 
In March 2017, the Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership published its first catchment plan, which explains how partners are using the CaBA to make a difference in the water environment, in local communities and to the local economy – now and in the long term. The document also demonstrates the partnership's strong track record of collaborative working and includes case studies which illustrate the partnership's capacity for effective catchment management.
 
=='''Case studies'''==
{{#ask:[[Category:Case study]]
[[River basin district::Humber]]
|?Location
|?Case study
|?River basin district
|format=map
|offset=0
|limit=500
|mainlabel=
|class=sortable wikitable smwtable
|icon=red_marker.png
|markercluster=on
}}
}}




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==Upload files==
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{{Supplementary Information}}
{{Additional links and references header}}
{{Additional links and references
|Link=environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/ManagementCatchment/3039
|Description=Hull and East Riding Environment Agency environmental data
}}
{{Additional links and references
|Link=www.catchmentbasedapproach.org/humber
|Description=CaBA website - Humber
}}
{{Additional links and references
}}
{{Additional links and references footer}}

Revision as of 14:14, 8 February 2018

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Image gallery


Barmston Sea Drain (map)
River Foulness (map)
Gypsey Race (map)
Lower Hull (map)
Upper Hull (map)
South Holderness Drains (map)
Hull AquaGreens Programme (urban SuDS)
Lowthorpe Diversion Project
Barmston Drain
Gypsey Race at Boynton Bridge (D Croft)
Hornsea Mere and bird hide (Jess Charlton)
River Hull Tidal Barrier (Hull City Council)
River Hull at Wansford Bridge (Yorkshire Wildlife Trust)
Skerne Wetlands, River Hull Headwaters (Yorkshire Wildlife Trust)
Market Weighton Canal
South Lagoon, Tophill Low Nature Reserve (Yorkshire Water)
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Catchment and subcatchment



Site

Name
WFD water body codes
WFD (national) typology
WFD water body name
Pre-project morphology
Reference morphology
Desired post project morphology
Heavily modified water body
National/international site designation
Local/regional site designations
Protected species present
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Dominant hydrology
Dominant substrate
River corridor land use
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Average bankfull channel width (m)
Average bankfull channel depth category
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Project background

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Investigation and design
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Monitoring



Reasons for river restoration

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Measures

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Floodplain / River corridor
Planform / Channel pattern
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Non-structural measures
Management interventions
Social measures (incl. engagement)
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Monitoring

Hydromorphological quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Biological quality elements

Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
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Physico-chemical quality elements

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Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic

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Monitoring documents



Additional documents and videos


Additional links and references

Link Description
http://environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/ManagementCatchment/3039 Hull and East Riding Environment Agency environmental data
http://www.catchmentbasedapproach.org/humber CaBA website - Humber

Supplementary Information

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Humber.png

Background

In 2012, Defra introduced the catchment based approach (CaBA) - a community-led approach that engages people and groups from across society to help improve our water environments. Defra drives CaBA through a national network of catchment partnerships. These partnerships are expected to identify local priorities and tackle cross-cutting issues; ensure that the work of partners is coordinated; and deliver improvements across their catchments.

Established in 2014, the Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership is hosted by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust with support from the East Yorkshire Rivers Trust as Joint Host. They are joined on the partnership by the Beverley and North Holderness Internal Drainage Board, East and North Yorkshire Waterways Partnership, East Riding of Yorkshire Council, Environment Agency, Hull City Council, Natural England, Ouse and Humber Drainage Board, South Holderness Internal Drainage Board and Yorkshire Water.

Unlike most other catchments, the Hull and East Riding catchment area comprises a series of distinct and often discrete watercourses / water bodies, known locally as: Barmston Sea Cut; Gypsey Race; Hornsea Mere; Market Weighton Canal and River Foulness; River Hull; and the South Holderness Drains (Burstwick, Keyingham, Ottringham, Thorngumbald and Winestead).

Most of these water bodies are separate from the main inland waterway network. Together, though, they are crucial to the drainage of the Yorkshire Wolds and the East Riding and to the unique landscape character of the region.

In March 2017, the Hull and East Riding Catchment Partnership published its first catchment plan, which explains how partners are using the CaBA to make a difference in the water environment, in local communities and to the local economy – now and in the long term. The document also demonstrates the partnership's strong track record of collaborative working and includes case studies which illustrate the partnership's capacity for effective catchment management.

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contact us

|Main contact forename=Annabel |Main contact surname=Hanson |Main contact id=Ahanson

|Partner organisations=Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, East Yorkshire Rivers Trust, Beverley and North Holderness Internal Drainage Board, East and North Yorkshire Waterways Partnership, East Riding of Yorkshire Council, Environment Agency, Hull City Council, Natural England, Ouse and Humber Drainage Board, South Holderness Internal Drainage Board and Yorkshire Water

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