Tidal River Thames Citizens' Jury on Rethinking Water
Overview
The Rethinking Water Citizens’ Jury was organised by the Environment Agency and a Local Advisory Group, working with the Involve Foundation; an independent charity, who acted as the main point of contact for jury members throughout the process.
The jury, which took place in March 2022, debated local issues, shared ideas and questioned environmental experts on all aspects of the water environment. This projects aim was to involve local communities in decisions about the future of the tidal Thames.
The Tidal Thames Citizens’ Jury was made up of members of the public, who were selected at random, but live near the Thames and reflected the local demography. It was tasked with examining how communities and individuals engage with the river. They discussed development and population growth and how it impacts on the river environment. Finally, they produced recommendations that will be used to guide the future of managing water for us and our partners.
The findings, in the form of recommendations written and recorded by the jurors - Video of the recommendations from the Tidal Thames
The final six recommendations from the Tidal Thames Citizens’ Jury were:
- Public Education: more public education to help communities understand their influence and responsibilities.
- Access for all - improving public access to the river.
- Biodiversity Net Gain - Connecting net gain with wildlife and flood prevention.
- Enforcement of Environmental Standards: taking a much stronger stance on environmental enforcement
- Natural Flood Defences: Flood defences and climate change mitigation measures (sustainable urban drainage, living walls, green roofs, rainfall capture etc) need to be front and centre in all planning and urban development considerations.
- Coordinated River Management - having a single body which represents key stakeholder groups for the whole Tidal River Thames.
The findings from the juries will inform our future water management plans. This includes the Thames River Basin Management Plan and the Port of London Authority’s Thames Vision 2050: Safe, Smart, Sustainable and Inclusive consultation. These consultations were both live during the consultation. The recommendations are also being embraced by Your Tidal Thames Catchment Partnership.
The Local Advisory Group for this jury was made up of a range of organisations from public and charity sectors. They chose to present different aspirations and visions for the estuary as a way of exploring the key issues and potential future changes. The Tidal Thames jury listened to evidence from a broad range of environmental experts to ensure a balanced view including:
- Thames Estuary Partnership
- Thames 21
- Port of London Authority
- Thames Landscape Strategy
- Natural England
- Zoological Society of London
Below is a list of the evidence in the form of presentations given as part of the citizen jury:
- C&C video - Environment Agency TV
- Presentation videos:
Session 1
Michael Donnelly, Involve – introducing the jury
Toni Scarr - Environment Agency – purpose of the jury
Amy Pryor - Thames Estuary Partnership - Geography of the Tidal Thames
Allen Summerskill - Tideway Historian - History of the Tidal Thames
Session 2
Joe Pecorelli - ZSL - Wildlife under pressure
Peter Bide - Chair of the Urban CaBA group - How Planning Impacts the Tidal Thames
Jason Debney, Thames Landscape Strategy - Bringing the Community into Planning
Richard Charman - Environment Agency - Tidal Flooding and Habitat Loss
Session 3
Michael Atkins - Port of London Authority - Thames Estuary
Nick White - Natural England - Biodiversity Net Gain
Yvette de Garis - Thames Water - Abstraction and Treatment Issues
Neil Dunlop - Environment Agency - Water Quality
Sessions 4
Emily McLean - Port of London Authority - Opportunities of the port to tidal river communities
Paul Hyman - Active 360 Paddleboarding School - Recreation on the River
Hannah Gutteridge - Thames Path Group - Physical accessibility alongside the River
Rosa Clavane & Zara Visanji – Thames 21 - Stewardship: communities advocating for the River
To view our main page please click here.
For more information please contact water.story@environment-agency.gov.uk
Audiences
- Academics
- All water abstractors
- Angling trade contacts
- Business that buy salmon/supported by salmon net and rod fishing
- Businesses
- Charities
- Community groups
- District and parish councils
- Drainage associations
- Elected representatives, including MPs
- Elected representatives, including MPs
- Environment Agency customers
- Environmental bodies
- Farming associations
- Fishing clubs and representative associations
- Flood action groups
- Government family organisations
- IDBs
- Individual migratory salmonid licence holders
- Land owners
- Local authorities
- Local councils
- Members of the public
- Members of the public
- Members of the public with an interest in the river, the species and conservation
- National based fishery, conservation and landowner organisations
- Net fishing license holders
- NGOs
- Recreational and commercial river users
- Recreational and commercial river users
- RFCCs
- River based salmon angling owners/fishing clubs/organisations
- Statutory organisations
- The nuclear industry
- Water companies
Interests
- Business and industry
- Coastal management
- Drought
- Environmental permitting
- Fishing and boating
- Flood management
- Habitats and wildlife
- Installation
- Nuclear
- Permits
- Radioactive substances regulations
- Specific projects, issues, or activity pages
- Waste
- Water quality
- Water resources
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