Introduction
Could you be the next dedicated and impact focused leader to help deliver local ambitions to tackle flooding and coastal erosion? Do you have the combination of excellent chairing skills, strong strategic thinking and effective leadership across different organisations at a senior level?
If so, this is an exciting opportunity, to play a key role in working with other bodies to make a more resilient future. The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs is looking to appoint Chairs to the Trent, North West and Southern Regional Flood and Coastal Committees (RFCCs).
Appointment description
RFCCs are an important part of the Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management (FCERM) community, providing a link between government, risk management authorities and the communities they serve.
The three RFCCs we are appointing Chairs for are: Trent, North West and Southern.
The Trent RFCC covers an area of approximately 10,500 km2. Land use within the catchment is dominated by agriculture which accounts for roughly 63%. However, it is also home to approximately 6.9 million people and contains many major urban centres namely Birmingham (and the wider West Midlands conurbation), Stoke-on-Trent, Derby, Leicester, and Nottingham.
There is great variation in the physical characteristics of the area, from low lying ground, such as the broad flat flood plains of the Tame and Trent, to steep dramatic landscapes, such as those found in the Peak District National Park. As a result, the response to rainfall and the mechanism of flooding differs significantly throughout the catchment. For these reasons, the Trent RFCC champions Innovation and Natural Flood Management with two dedicated sub-groups to support and explore new ways of working.
The RFCC is committed to reducing flood risk in the area, making communities more resilient and adapting to the challenges of a changing climate, which is ever more critical with Storms such as Babet, Ciaran and Henk causing significant flooding and record-breaking river levels across the Trent Catchment.
In the East Midlands alone, the Environment Agency is working on 52 flood risk projects to return assets to the condition they were before the storms last winter, and in the West Midlands area flood defences protected 8000 properties from flooding in Burton and Tamworth in January 2025, this is in conjunction with flood defence schemes in construction, such as projects in Stoke on Trent to both protect existing homes and businesses and help regeneration in the heart of the City.
The committee consists of a Chair, 9 independent members, and 15 local authority elected members.
The North West RFCC runs from the Scottish border in the north to Cheshire in the south, from its Irish Sea coast in the west, to the steep rapidly responding Pennine catchments in the east. It has a widely varied geography including the beautiful and sparsely populated areas of Cumbria, the Lake District, and rural Cheshire, flatter drained areas with high quality agricultural land in Lancashire, a changing coastline throughout Cumbria, Lancashire and Merseyside, and the industrialised and urban areas of Manchester and Liverpool.
Over 250,000 properties (residential, commercial and community) are at risk of flooding from rivers and the sea. More significantly, around 600,000 properties are at risk of flooding from surface water. The region is regularly affected by flooding with a recent history of major events having particularly significant and widespread impacts - in 2015 (Storms Desmond and Eva), 2020 (Ciara), 2021 (Christoph), 2022 (Eunice and Franklin) and New Year 2024/25.
As well as delivering a large investment programme of flood risk management schemes to better protect people and property, the North West RFCC has always sought to be a leader in developing and progressing innovative approaches. It has funded pioneering work on natural flood management and on building resilience to flooding within communities. It does this through a programme of projects which forms its business plan.
The committee consists of a Chair, 8 independent members, and 10 local authority elected members. The 10 elected members represent 24 lead local flood authorities and 12 district councils through an underpinning structure of five sub-regional strategic flood risk partnerships. There are also links with two combined authorities.
The Southern RFCC covers coastal and inland areas from West Hampshire to East Kent and from the Isle of Wight to the London boroughs of Bexley and Bromley. It also includes the unitary authorities of Southampton, Portsmouth, Brighton & Hove, and Medway. We are amongst the regions who receive the largest amounts of government funding (£100m in 2025/26) and deliver more property protection than any other region. Southern has the longest coastline of the 12 English RFCCs, which when including the Thames Estuary totals 300km. Southern RFCC covers the South East and part of the Thames River basin district with over 3,200km of main rivers. These include the Arun, Adur, Sussex Ouse, and Rother as well as the chalk streams of the Test, Itchen, Darent, Cray and Kentish Stour.
There are 6,383 flood defence assets across Southern, including 79 pumping stations, 1,529 water level control structures, 837km of raised tidal embankments and 190km of coastal flood defences. These assets and other defences reduce risk to the natural, fluvial, and coastal floodplains as well as the communities and infrastructure within them.
The committee consists of an independent Chair (appointed by the Secretary of State for the Environment), 8 independent members (including experts on conservation and coastal issues), 14 elected members from Lead Local Flood Authorities and a senior representative from the EA. Also invited to attend committee meetings are Officers from the relevant local authorities, Chairs of the South East Coastal Group and the Southern Coastal Group, senior Environment Agency staff and a representative of Southern Water.
As Chair of one of these RFCCs you will play a key role in working with local authority representatives, water companies and other committee members, helping to steer multi-million-pound investment in flood and coastal erosion risk management for the benefit of homes, businesses and local communities.
You will work in partnership to ensure that national policies and approaches are implemented whilst taking account of local circumstances and needs. Skilled in bringing together different voices and opinions, you will play a pivotal role in approving capital and revenue investment programmes, raising local levies, securing external contributions and ensuring effective community engagement.
To succeed in this challenging role, you will need strong strategic leadership, chairing and communication skills which bring together different voices, balance competing interests and embrace equality, diversity and inclusion. You will have also have a good understanding of how flood and coastal erosion risks affect local communities, working closely with the public and private sectors to deliver results.
Regulation of appointment
This post is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. For more information, please refer to the
Commissioner’s website