Breach delivery
Turd of the Week , Issue 1673
On local news sites from Yorkshire to Somerset, the EA has been boasting of its heightened "surveillance" of the water network which has included 10,000 inspections of wastewater sites in England in the past year.
Helen Wakeham, the Environment Agency's director for water, said: "We are changing how we operate, with better data, our largest ever enforcement workforce, and greater powers to do our job effectively."
The usual suspects
The regulator said 1,800 of these annual inspections were at sites belonging to Severn Trent Water such as storm tanks and sewage treatment works. How many breaches of permit conditions did these inspections uncover in the Severn Trent region? Almost a third of all those inspected – a whopping 530 breaches in total.
The EA said the findings led to "real-world" action with demands for improvement issued to Severn Trent which supplies water and sewage services to 4.6m customers across the Midlands.
Severn Trent boasted an impressive four-star environmental performance in 2024, according to the EA. But, as the latest inspections show, the firm's high rating still masks massive environmental issues.
Surfers Against Sewage says last year saw more than 36,000 separate raw sewage discharges from storm overflows in the Severn Trent region and 13 sickness reports were made to the campaigning group.
Severn Trent's worst sewage overflow was at Church Stretton sewage treatment works which leaked waste into Quinny Brook in South Shropshire for 3,434 hours – nearly five months. In the River Derwent there were 1,971 incidents of sewage dumping, an average of 5.4 times a day.
Cleaning up
Meanwhile £356m was paid out in dividends to Severn Trent Water shareholders in 2024/25 and customer bills will be rising an average of 47 percent over the five years from 2025-30, according to regulator Ofwat.
Last month marked the departure of Liv Garfield, Severn Trent's former chief executive who had stayed on to hand over to new chief executive James Jesic, who took over in January.
Jesic's basic salary is £775,000, slightly lower than Garfield's £873,000, but it will include similar bonus and incentive packages. Garfield regularly earned more than £3m a year, including long-term bonuses and pension. Great job!
More top stories in the latest issue:
EXTREME MEASURES
The government agrees there is no "causal link between autism and radicalisation" – so why does this myth persist via its own guidance?
SOFA SO BAD...
At long last, the use of toxic flame retardants in soft furnishings sold in the UK may be about to end, as regulations move closer to EU rules.
GYM NASTIES
Linked companies running kids' gymnastics activities have left employees having to chase unpaid wages and tribunal judgments over other poor treatment.
LIMITS OF CONTROL
A decade after controlling and coercive behaviour was criminalised, less than 5 percent of reports lead to police charges and just 2 percent to a conviction.
FLIGHT NIGHTS
Under its new owner Macquarie investment bank, Bristol Airport has submitted plans to increase the number of passengers by nearly 50 percent.
UNSOLD STORIES
Families are struggling to sell their late parents' retirement village homes – yet the government is encouraging more new builds instead of fixing the problem.



























