• Support Wokingham Today
  • Get the print edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Wokingham.Today
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • All
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
    • Riseley
    • Shinfield
    • Sindlesham
    • Sonning
    • Spencers Wood
    • Swallowfield
    • Three Mile Cross
    • Twyford
    • Wargrave
    • Winnersh
    • Wokingham
    • Wokingham Without
    • Woodley
    • Woosehill
    • Yateley
    Kings Road

    Teen motorcyclist fighting for life after Kings Road crash in Reading

    Wokingham

    Viral post sparks fury — but approval of ‘Mega Mosque’ in Wokingham is fake news

    Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle MP visits Elusive Brewery in Hogwood Lane industrial estate, Finchampstead

    From Parliament to pints: Sir Lindsay Hoyle visits Wokingham’s champion beers

    MP Clive Jones

    ‘A massive failure’: Wokingham MP Clive Jones questions government on Hongkongers’ safety

    Wokingham Town Mayor Cllr Lou Timlin presented Wendy and Nigel Preston with Civic Awards, at The WELL, Wokingham. PIcture: courtesy of Kings Church

    Local heroes transform lives: Wokingham couple wins Civic Award for community work

    Left to right, Steve Joy, Simon O'Kane, and Clive Eckett, as Wokingham 41 Club presented a cheque to Wokingham Foodbank. PIcture: Mark Poley

    Wokingham Theatre’s Lovesong was a fundraising winner for Wokingham Club 41

    Blandy & Blandy

    Blandy & Blandy shortlisted for award

    A writers group meets at Wokingham Library on the third Saturday of the month, from 10am until noon. Picture: Hannah Olinger via Unsplash

    Want to meet other writers?

    Jennett's Park Square at schoolrun time

    Could slowing down by 45 seconds save a child? Bracknell campaigners think so

  • CRIME
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Binfield FC
    • Reading FC
    Connor Richardson scored twice. Pic: Andrew Batt.

    Football round-up: Town throw away three points, Woodley United LFC earn first league victory

    Callum Lochhead. Pic: WTFC.

    Fundraiser launched in memory of Callum

    The team that took part. Pic: Andrew Batt.

    Ashridge Park women’s support for Daisy’s Dream

    Paudie O'Connor Picture: Luke Adams

    ‘Incredibly lucky, but an important win’: Late O’Connor goal snatches victory for Reading FC away at Wigan

    Andy Rinomhota

    Reading FC boost as Rinomhota returns to the pitch after family issue lay-off

    Callum Lochhead. Pic: WTFC.

    Wokingham Town FC announces passing of player

    Reading FC Picture: Luke Adams

    Reading FC look to take advantage of woeful Wigan as Latics sack manager

    GSF Awards

    Reading athletes could win big as GSF awards open for applications

    Reaidng FC Picture: Luke Adams

    Play-off hopes over? Reading FC fans criticise performance after away defeat to AFC Wimbledon

  • READING FC
  • COMMUNITY
    MP Clive Jones

    ‘A massive failure’: Wokingham MP Clive Jones questions government on Hongkongers’ safety

    Wokingham Town Mayor Cllr Lou Timlin presented Wendy and Nigel Preston with Civic Awards, at The WELL, Wokingham. PIcture: courtesy of Kings Church

    Local heroes transform lives: Wokingham couple wins Civic Award for community work

    Left to right, Steve Joy, Simon O'Kane, and Clive Eckett, as Wokingham 41 Club presented a cheque to Wokingham Foodbank. PIcture: Mark Poley

    Wokingham Theatre’s Lovesong was a fundraising winner for Wokingham Club 41

    A writers group meets at Wokingham Library on the third Saturday of the month, from 10am until noon. Picture: Hannah Olinger via Unsplash

    Want to meet other writers?

    Jennett's Park Square at schoolrun time

    Could slowing down by 45 seconds save a child? Bracknell campaigners think so

    Jackie Mouradian, local author, will be meeting members of the public at Quench bookshop, Holme Grange Craft Village. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Meet a local author at Quench

    Learn how to sew at the Eco Centre Textile Club. Picture: Cornell Fruhauf via Pixabay

    Eco Skills Learning Centre’s Textile Club is sew good!

    Wokingham Town Hall

    Two more Wokingham town councillors step down

    Heritage Day, Wokingham Town Hall Picture: WIkimedia Commons

    ‘Please don’t talk our town down’: Councillor acts to clarify myths around footfall in Wokingham town centre

  • LIFESTYLE
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Obituaries
    • People
    Wokingham

    Residents react on social media as Wokingham named as one of UK’s ‘happiest’ retirement spots

    Wokingham

    ‘It reflects the needs for a diverse society’: Residents clash over potential plans for Mosque to be built in Wokingham

    WPD's next meeting will look at ways in which businesses can be more sustainable and socially responsible. Picture: StartupStockPhoto via PIxabay

    Naturally Speaking: a talk will give fresh insight into business sustainability

    The petition.

    Campaigners declare victory as council backs Wokingham mosque plans

    Terence Ernest Carpenter

    Wokingham Picture: Wikimedia Commons

    The UK’s happiest retirement town? Wokingham features in new study

    Clive Jones, Wokingham MP, welcomes the National Cancer Plan, but warns that more funding is needed. Picture: Liberal Democrats

    Clive Jones welcomes National Cancer Plan, but adds warning

    Wokingham Half Marathon Pictures: Andrew Batt

    All you need to know about the David Cliff Wokingham half marathon

    It is expanding access to a pioneering health and fitness programme.

    Places Leisure’s new programme for those with MSK conditions

  • WHAT’S ON
    • All
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    Jackie Mouradian, local author, will be meeting members of the public at Quench bookshop, Holme Grange Craft Village. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Meet a local author at Quench

    Sonic Whip Picture: Andrew Merritt

    Raw Sounds Today: Sonic Whip, doops, Myles Addison

    Gala guests will be able to celebrate Bond?s lethal charm, martini preferences, and high-stakes missions, while at the same time raising money for My Cancer My Choices. Picture: Hakan Dahlstrom via Wikimedia commons

    Bracknell goes 007: Local charity to host glamorous Casino Royale gala

    REVIEW: “Lark Rise to Candleford” at The Watermill Theatre, Newbury

    A concert at Earley St Peter's Church will raise funds for Alexander Devine and the church. Picture: Michael Ford via Wikimedia Commons

    Enjoy an afternoon of choral music in aid of Alexander Devine

    Rewind Festival Picture: Rewind Festival 2025

    Rewind Festival returns to Henley-on-Thames this August with Human League and The Proclaimers

    Only the Poets Picture: Andrew Merritt

    RaW Sounds Today: Only The Poets, Asia, The Primitives

    Join Daisy's Dream 30th Birthday Bake-off celebrations. Picture: Daisy's Dream

    Join Daisy’s Dream’s birthday bake-off

    Wokingham Festival Picture: Andrew Merritt

    Wokingham Festival reveals acts with announcement of 2026 line-up

  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
Wokingham.Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

From the receiving end

by Tony Johnson
March 8, 2020
in Featured, Grazeley, Opinion, Wokingham
Flooding

Flooding

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

This week, Wokingham Borough Council’s (WBC’s) Local Plan team started their tour of the Borough to bring the Local Plan to the people and the first stop was introducing Grazeley Garden Town to 148 people living in and around Grazeley village.

What follows is a selection of their concerns. Thank you to those who shared them.

There may be flooding ahead

After storms Ciara and Dennis last month, the Environment Agency put out a flood warning for Grazeley Village on February 17. 

A local resident combined the EA’s flood map with the Local Plan map, showing that most of residential areas 1, 4, 5 and 10 would be underwater when Foundry Brook floods; likewise parts of eight other residential areas and a park and ride.

Perhaps the new houses might be better off being sold ‘pre-flooded’ then, or at least ‘flood-ready’ as Boris might say.

Flooding

Get me to the work on time

There’s no doubting that Grazeley is accessible, after all it’s right by the A33 dual carriageway just south of the recently rebuilt M4 junction 11 at Mereoak.

Related posts

Teen motorcyclist fighting for life after Kings Road crash in Reading

Viral post sparks fury — but approval of ‘Mega Mosque’ in Wokingham is fake news

Google travel data for February 18 showed that you could drive to work in Green Park in just 10 minutes.

Provided you’d left home at 6am.

At 8.30am the journey time was 35 minutes – and that’s with less than 300 Grazeley residents. When there’s 3,000 (let alone 30,000) then that journey’s going to take well over an hour.

But there’s good news. Google’s data showed you could walk to work in just 63 minutes – in the rain, in the cold and in winter, in the dark too.

As WBC’s proposal for a new station at Grazeley didn’t get included in the Housing Infrastructure Fund (HIF) bid, if you needed to get to Reading Station to travel further afield, by car that’s 55 minutes to cover just six miles.

Regrettably, the HIF bid documents are still secret and the draft Local Plan has no mention of a new bridge over the M4 at Grazeley to ease the pain.

Red flags anyone?

Let’s break the M4

I know it’s stating the obvious, but the M4 is part of the UK’s strategic road network. It’s the highway that keeps food, fuel and freight getting to Wokingham Borough so that the goods you want are available to buy every day of the year.

While the developer-friendly travel assumptions in WBC’s Local Plan shows that all’s well, neighbouring West Berkshire Council isn’t quite as optimistic. As to suitability, their Assessment of Sites for “Land at Grazeley” (site WOK4) says:

“Highways England have commented that there could be significant impacts to the Strategic Road Network from proposals for the Grazeley site without an appropriate package of mitigation which will likely require significant infrastructure improvements.”

That’s the same Highways England whose work to improve M4 J10 already delivered ‘significant impacts’ on Wokingham’s Motorway (the A329M) which still haven’t been fixed. It sounds like they’re right to be concerned.

Shine on you crazy diamond

The Local Plan is strangely silent on the subject of providing a new hospital. 

Over at tautology central, the Local Plan says “We want the borough to feel like a healthier place, because it will be a healthier place”.

Meanwhile, neighbouring Hampshire recently chucked out a new £150 million mini-hospital due to costs and planning objections, and Wokingham’s Local Plan gives no clues as to a new hospital and supporting medical centres being set up to share the load from the over-stretched Royal Berks.

Likewise, there’s no mention of a £268 million replacement on the scale of the Great Western Hospital in Swindon built in 2002.

But there’s going to be a health hub, whatever that is.

The Last Word

Goes to a Grazeley resident: They were told that Sir John Redwood (MP for the constituency of Wokingham – including both the WBC and West Berks bits of Grazeley), couldn’t attend the Local Plan meeting at the Village Hall as “There is a very important vote in the House on Wednesday and all MPs are required to be there – it is a three-line whip”.

Hansard’s record for divisions (votes) on February 26, shows there was jam yesterday (25th) and jam tomorrow (27th) but no jam today. Likewise, Hansard’s record of debate on the 26th on things like the “Prelegislative scrutiny of the Draft Environment (Principles and Governance) Bill” has no record of Sir John’s contribution that day.

So the resident offered to return the oak tree that Sir John planted in Grazeley 20 years ago, in opposition to development there, asking where he’d like it put?

[email protected]

The Acton Diet

Closer study of the draft Local Plan shows 940 houses being allocated across 18 sites in ten of the Borough’s 25 wards. 

Seven Conservative wards have been allocated 360 houses – an average of 51 houses each, while one Liberal Democrat ward has been allocated 250 houses alone – five times as many.

Of the Borough’s remaining wards with available space, twelve wards have been allocated zero houses.

Is this the behaviour that the Borough wishes to be known for?

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Previous Post

There’s a lot to love about March

Next Post

READERS' LETTERS: As seen in The Wokingham Paper of March 5, 2020

FOLLOW US

POPULAR THIS WEEK

Gala guests will be able to celebrate Bond?s lethal charm, martini preferences, and high-stakes missions, while at the same time raising money for My Cancer My Choices. Picture: Hakan Dahlstrom via Wikimedia commons

Bracknell goes 007: Local charity to host glamorous Casino Royale gala

February 12, 2026
Wokingham

Viral post sparks fury — but approval of ‘Mega Mosque’ in Wokingham is fake news

February 14, 2026
A writers group meets at Wokingham Library on the third Saturday of the month, from 10am until noon. Picture: Hannah Olinger via Unsplash

Want to meet other writers?

February 14, 2026
Pixabay

“I was in tears”: Wokingham pensioner scammed out of £250,000 by AI Martin Lewis video

February 9, 2026
Cllr Mark Ashwell

FROM THE CHAMBER: Working together to build a thriving, healthy and creative place

February 9, 2026

REVIEW: “Lark Rise to Candleford” at The Watermill Theatre, Newbury

February 11, 2026

ABOUT US

Wokingham Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Wokingham. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Wokingham Borough.

Wokingham.Today is a Social Enterprise and aims to ensure that everyone within the Borough has free access to independent and up-to-date news. However, providing this service is not without costs. If you are able to, please make a contribution to support our work.

CONTACT US

[email protected]

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

  • Support Us
  • Book Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: [email protected], or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
  • CRIME
  • COMMUNITY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • SPORT
  • READING FC
  • OBITUARIES
  • WHAT’S ON
  • BUSINESS
  • PHOTOS
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
  • CONTACT US
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION
  • SUPPORT US

© 2022 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.