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Coastal homes in Yorkshire threatened by erosion saved by £3 million grant from Europe

Coastal homes in the Yorkshire coastal town of Withernsea which are threatened by erosion have been saved by a £3 million grant from Europe.

Hundreds of chalets as well as a key coastal road have been given a lifeline after their bid to receive money from the European Regional Development Fund was approved.

Shaking with excitement

Local councillor Dave Tucker told the Yorkshire Post: “I’m shaking with excitement.

“We’ve lobbied Ministers, MPs, we’ve done everything we can.

“This is the 11th bid put in for this money and it has come in at the 12th hour.

“This £3m will secure the long term economy and the safety of south Withernsea.

“The road will be maintained and people will have access to chemists, doctors, groceries.

Catastrophic

“If we’d lost that, it would be catastrophic.

“We have the planning permission, we have the money, let’s get the rocks on the beach and get that road saved.”

The ‘Holderness coastline’ is reported to have some of the fastest eroding coast in Europe with over four metres a year of land eroding at south Withernsea.

A new rural commission was set up to examine the policy issues facing North Yorkshire and its countryside communities.

With EU funding now in the bag, the scheme will extend the current defences with 400 metres of rock armour, to protect from the on-going coastal erosion in an undefended area.

2016 referendum

The existing rock terminal structure will be re-worked and the cliff line is set to be regraded, along with the creation of a new 100metre terminal structure at the end of the defences.

Withernsea is part of the East Riding of Yorkshire administrative county.

In 2016, the borough voted to leave the EU by 60.4 per cent to 39.6 per cent.

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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