News

HEADLINES:

Cyclist sues water firm over ice injuries

Sarah Limbrick, Evening Standard
14.01.08

A cyclist is suing Thames Water for £300,000 after he skidded on ice caused by a leaking water pipe and broke his leg.

Dr Matthew Spencer Brown, 48, who runs a dental practice in Poplar, was cycling slowly through Crouch End when he hit the patch of ice.

He fell heavily, breaking his left thigh in several places, according to a High Court writ.

He needed three operations to repair the complex fractures and had to take eight months off work.

Dr Spencer Brown, who lives in Holloway, suffered extensive scarring and was left in constant pain.

He says he will never again ski or play tennis - two of his passions.

The dentist, who is represented by law firm Rosenblatt, claims that Thames Water was negligent in not acting on numerous complaints from residents about the water mains pipe leak in Montenotte Road.

The utility company has admitted responsibility for the leak and liability for Dr Spencer Brown's injury, which happened in January 2005. Negotiations on the amount of compensation continue.

A spokesman said: "Thames Water takes claims of this nature very seriously.

"We are working hard to tackle the levels of leakage in London; it is our number one priority. So far we have invested more than £400 million to replace 800 kilometres of Victorian water mains, many of which are over 150 years old."

Thames Water is Britain's leakiest water company, losing 700 million litres per day - the equivalent of 2,000 25m swimming pools.

In the summer of 2006, after two years of below average rainfall, it had to impose a hosepipe ban for the first time in 15 years. Regulator Ofwat ordered it to invest £150 million in plugging the leaks.

Link to: Digg Reddit Delicious Facebook

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 

Confidence lost on Black Friday

As uncertainty continues in the US over how far the Treasury there will follow the UK in offering equity to recapitalise major banks, it has become clear that the $700 billion Paulson plan and Federal Reserve support in money markets have not succeeded in restoring investor confidence

Turbulence for Cameron as he flies Air Freud

David Cameron's latest entry in the Register of Members' Interests shows that he has a generous new pal - Rupert Murdoch's son-in-law Matthew Freud

All stories


On This is London today

Don't miss...

  • Angel Flowers

    Hard times on the high street

    The Government has begun a massive rescue operation to prop up the crumbling pillars of the City but big institutions are not the only victims of the credit crunch. Ellen Widdup heads to Islington to see how ordinary businesses are coping
  • Bangers and mash

    Upside of the downturn

    Never mind all the gloom and doom — there are still lots of things to smile about
  • Michael Spencer

    The beginning of the end says the City’s top player

    After yesterday’s £500 billion bail out to the banks, Michael Spencer, the richest self-made man in the Square Mile talks exclusively to the Standard about who’s to blame
  • Boris Johnson

    The Influentials: London's top fifty

    Our annual survey of London’s 1000 most influential people is free with today’s Evening Standard - here we reveal the chart-toppers

City Briefing

The latest top City stories and Market report emailed to you twice a day.

Read the latest bulletin

Rosamund

Urwin Podcasts

on the City Markets



Pick of the blogs

Waugh
Paul Waugh - politics
Gordon Brown's sofa shuffle
Godwin
Richard Godwin - A London Life
The ideal day for a night out