'Sewage flooded my home - I'm worried it will happen again'

Colin Fletcher smiles for a photo taken outside his house. He has neat white hair and glasses. He is wearing a white collared shirt with a red round-necked pullover on the top. His lawn and garden furniture can be seen in the background.
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Colin Fletcher had to leave his home for three months after sewage flooded the ground floor

  • Published

"It's mucky. You spot bits of loo paper inside it. It smells. And in it comes, into the house."

At his home in Bladon, Oxfordshire in November, Colin Fletcher woke up to the sight of raw sewage bubbling up from a sewer in his back garden.

"We were moving furniture upstairs as fast as we could," he said, as the mixture of rainwater and sewage entered the house. He and his wife had to move out for three months.

A Thames Water spokesperson said the company was trying to identify a resolution.

A floor is shown to be stained and flooded with grey/brown water. Wooden furniture is seen in the corner. The reflection of puddles can be seen. Image source, Colin Fletcher
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Mr Fletcher said he is concerned more heavy rainfall could lead to further flooding of his home

Mr Fletcher said the incident was partly caused by Thames Water blocking a wastewater overflow pipe that runs from his home into a small stream in his garden.

He said it meant after heavy rainfall, sewage in the pipe system overflowed from the sewer, mixing with rising water levels from the stream.

"We are looking at ways of stopping the stream flooding the house," he said.

"But we still have the problem that Thames Water are responsible for: that their sewer is inadequate, their pumping station is inadequate".

Mr Fletcher said he feared that without these issues being addressed, another deluge could lead to the same thing happening again.

"I have asked the question: when are they going to upgrade the pumping station - I've had no reply as yet".

Martin Johnson poses for a photo. He is wearing a black suit jacket over a patterned shirt, with dark glasses. He has a neatly trimmed white beard and mid-length white hair. A roundabout can be seen in the background.
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Martin Johnson believes collapsed pipework near his home is causing his toilet to nearly overflow

A short drive away in Yarnton, Martin Johnson said collapsed piping under a roundabout near his home regularly caused his downstairs toilet to nearly overflow.

A tanker, intermittently parked at the nearby pub The Turnpike, is the only thing mitigating ongoing issues with the sewer system there.

"The root cause is that the pipes have collapsed, because they're so old.

"I'm the symptom [of the problem]. It's frustrating to be a consistent symptom of a problem they don't appear to be fixing."

Calum Miller MP is showed posing for a photo outside with a large green field in the background. He is wearing a light blue smart shirt and has short brown hair.
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Bicester and Woodstock MP Calum Miller said he was "really frustrated" Thames Water were not taking the issues more seriously

Both Mr Fletcher and Mr Johnson have raised their cases with the Liberal Democrat MP for Bicester and Woodstock Calum Miller.

'Really frustrated'

Speaking to the BBC, Mr Miller said the two cases showed that the UK's water system was "broken".

"I'm really frustrated that Thames Water are not taking these issues more seriously and doing much more to support their customers.

"They tell us that's the priority for them, but their actions don't seem to live up to that."

Mr Miller said his party were calling for a "single, new water regulator with real powers that would be responsible for water companies' economic and operational management."

A Thames Water spokesperson said: "We are aware of the concerns raised by both customers, and we are sorry for the impact sewer flooding has had on them, as we understand this can be upsetting.

"We have been actively investigating both separate complex matters, with the aim of identifying a resolution.

"We will continue to keep the customers and MP updated."

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