Land Drainage Act 1961

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Long titleAn Act to enable river boards and catchment boards to raise drainage charges for the purpose of meeting part of their expenses; and to make further provision relating to the drainage of land and to drainage boards.
Royal assent27 July 1961
Land Drainage Act 1961
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to enable river boards and catchment boards to raise drainage charges for the purpose of meeting part of their expenses; and to make further provision relating to the drainage of land and to drainage boards.
Citation9 & 10 Eliz. 2. c. 48
Dates
Royal assent27 July 1961
Other legislation
Repealed byLand Drainage Act 1976
Relates to
Status: Repealed

The Land Drainage Act 1961 (9 & 10 Eliz. 2. c. 48) was an Act of Parliament passed by the United Kingdom Government which provided mechanisms for river boards to raise additional finance to fund their obligations. It built upon the provisions of the Land Drainage Act 1930 and the River Boards Act 1948.

Prior to the 1930s, land drainage in the United Kingdom was regulated by the Statute of Sewers, passed by King Henry VIII in 1531, and several further acts which built upon that foundation. However, there was some dissatisfaction with these powers, as the administrative bodies responsible for the drainage of low-lying areas had insufficient resources to do this effectively.[1] A royal commission was convened to review the situation, and produced a final report on 5 December 1927.[2] This formed the basis for a bill[3] which became the Land Drainage Act 1930 on 1 August 1930.[4] It created catchment boards, with overall authority for some of the main rivers of England and Wales, and internal drainage boards which would manage the drainage of smaller areas. For the first time since the passing of the Statute of Sewers by King Henry VIII in 1531, the funding of drainage activities was not restricted solely to those whose land or property would be flooded without the work of the authority.[5] Catchment boards could levy rates on the county councils and county borough councils throughout their entire catchment,[6] not just on the low-lying parts of it, and could also levy rates on the internal drainage boards within their area.[7]

The royal commission had identified one hundred catchment areas, based on the main rivers of England and Wales.[3] When the Act was published, it contained only 47 catchment areas.[8] This was altered by the passing of the River Boards Act 1948, which defined thirty-two river board areas, covering almost the whole of England and Wales, and created a river board for each one. The Boards inherited the land drainage, fisheries and river pollution functions of the catchment boards.[9]

The Act

Subsequent development

Bibliography

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