Man arrested over tractor drive through floods

Media caption,

The tractor was driven through Tenbury Wells during floods at the weekend

  • Published

A man has been arrested after a tractor driver was seen driving through deep floodwaters in Tenbury Wells, Worcestershire, which led to damage to shops.

The town centre was flooded on Sunday after a wall collapsed by Kyre Brook.

In a video shared on social media, a wave from the tractor's wake was seen striking shops and homes overlooking the street, breaking some windows.

A 57-year-old was arrested on suspicion of criminal damage and dangerous driving and released on bail while inquiries continue, police said.

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Greetings card shop proprietors Garry and Sarah Thomas said they were worried about how long it would take businesses to recover from the flood

Insp Dave Wise, of West Mercia Police, said: "I'd like to thank everyone who brought this incident to our attention and to the local community for their cooperation and support yesterday while we carried our initial inquiries."

Adding he understood the upset and anger caused, he said: "Officers will continue to be out and about in Tenbury in the coming days to assist the local community and our partner agencies with recovery efforts following the flooding."

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A clean-up is ongoing in Tenbury Wells after the main streets flooded on Sunday

Following the wall collapse, a torrent of water deluged the town centre within seconds with rescue workers yelling to pedestrians to "get back".

Garry and Sarah Thompson's Special Occasions card shop was one of those flooded.

"There's a serious problem in Tenbury now," Mr Thompson said.

"We’ve got a risk of businesses leaving the town."

He said it had taken the town "a good two years" to recover from previous flooding in 2007.

"So that's pretty scary," he added.

Paul and Rachel Rogers, from Nature's Design Studio, described how water entered their shop for the first time after windows broke.

"It's caused so much devastation," Mrs Rogers said.

"We have buildings insurance but we don't have contents insurance. It's going to cost us."

The Crow pub also flooded after water overwhelmed sandbags and smashed through windows.

Licensee Paul Birkin described it as a "miracle" nobody was hurt.

"[The water] actually hit the back wall you know, I mean there's glass all over the place," he said. "Absolutely distraught."

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Paul and Rachel Rogers, from Nature's Design Studio, were concerned insurers wouldnot cover the cost of flood damage

Worcestershire county councillor David Chambers described his frustration over the lack of flood defences in the town.

The Conservative member said: "We're lobbying as hard as we possibly can and I have to say there's real frustration now that progress doesn't seem to be happening."

The Environment Agency said it had been complex to design a scheme in keeping with the town's heritage and funding was needed to deliver it.

"We're working tirelessly to try and get something because we see the impact that Tenbury’s had and it’s not sustainable for that community at all," said Nick Green, from the agency.

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