Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Jonathan Geddes

Lanarkshire pensioner blames cellar damaged on council's blocked drains

A fed up Lanarkshire pensioner has blamed street drains for causing his basement to start leaking in water.

Danny Smith, of Coldstream Drive in Rutherglen, has been left exasperated by continual problems whenever there is heavy rain fall.

The 83-year-old believes that street drains near to his home are continually overflowing, sending water towards his cellar.

South Lanarkshire Council (SLC) insist the drains are not to blame, but have promised street works anyway.

Danny told Lanarkshire Live that he had to fix the problem by asking a private company to carry out repairs in his home.

He told us : "This has been going on for a while now.

"Whenever there is heavy rain and the drain floods, it comes through there, out into my driveway and it floods into my cellar.

"I've phoned the council up, but they've still not been out back about it, so I had to call a company to try and sort the cellar and fix there.

"I'm at the lowest point in the street so I get all the water that comes in - I dread checking the cellar when I see the drains are overflowing because I know there will problems.

"When I phoned them they didn't seem to bother their shirt tails about getting back to me.

"The drains always get filled up, and you ended up with rubbish and dirt coming out."

SLC have now promised to ensure the drains on the road, and on nearby Lauder Drive, are working correctly.

Colin Park, SLC's head of roads and transportation, said: “Mr Smith contacted us recently regarding a blocked gully on Coldstream Drive.

"We found some standing water on the opposite side of the road but no surface water lying outside the property.

"There is no link between road drains and the property’s cellar but we will clean the gullies on both sides of the road to ensure the road drainage system is fully operational, and we will continue to monitor it."

The local authority has also promised to contact Scottish Water to ensure the street is included in their internal flooding register in order that they check all their apparatus at the locus, and not only the water main, to ensure that it is not the cause of flooding.

**Don't miss the latest headlines from around Lanarkshire. Sign up to our newsletters here.

And did yo u know Lanarkshire Live is on Facebook? Head over to our page to give us a like and share.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.