Great Yarmouth Borough Council

A guide to your council and services
Home | Environment | Environment Protection | Contaminated Land 
Contaminated Land


Your Council - People and Contacts | Performance and Plans - Policies and Strategies | News and Press Releases | Job Vacancies | Business | Community | Council Tax, Benefits and Business Rates | Planning and Development | Environment | Heritage, Arts and Culture | Housing | Leisure and Sport | Roads and Transport | Tourism |
Access Advice for Disabled People | Agenda 21 | Coastal & Flood Defence | Emergency Planning | Energy | Environment Protection | Environmental Health Licensing | Food Safety | Grounds Maintenance | Health & Safety | Licensing Service | Smoke Free Workplaces | Parks and Open Spaces Strategy | Pest Control | Public Toilets | Recycling & Waste | SHARP Initiative | St. George's Park Management Plan |

Air Quality | Blocked Drains and Sewers | Contaminated Land | Cooling Tower Notification | Environment Rangers | Fixed Penalty Notices | Industrial Pollution Control | Nuisance (noise, dust, smoke, odour) | Radiation Monitoring | Recreational Water Quality | Road Spillages |


The Borough Council is responsible for identifying potential sites under the contaminated land regime (detailed in Part IIA of The Environmental protection Act 1990).

The Council has developed a Contaminated Land Inspection Strategy which details the way the council will go about identifying potentially contaminated land together with timescales. Copies of the inspection strategy can be obtained from the Environment and Health Department.

In addition, the Council also ensures that land contamination is dealt with under local planning and development control procedures. If you are planning to develop any land that has previously been used, particularly for an industrial or commercial (including agricultural) use, you must consider the possibility that there may be some residual contamination. You should contact the Environment and Health Department at the earliest opportunity for advice as to the nature of any site inspection report that is likely to be required. Failure to address potential contamination issues early may cost money in the longer term when it comes to selling on.

In association with the other Norfolk Councils, the Borough has developed advice for those intending to develop sites. Developers should contact the Environment and Health Department as soon as possible.


Picture : 'PDF Icon'
 Guidance Notes on Contaminated Land (70kb) - Assessment Work for Submission to Norfolk Local Authorities


^ Back to top

Graphical Version | Printer Friendly | Change Contrast | Large Text Version | Accessibility Guide | Skip to Content

Home | Disclaimer | Contact Us | Index | Site Map

Search Yarmouth

Great Yarmouth Borough Council © Copyright 2004 - Disclaimer and Privacy Policy