Paddling pool during Silver JulibeeRon Bell/PA Archive/Press Association Images

A hosepipe ban, teamed with a warm weekend, has led to a crisis in middle England, as neighbour is pitted against neighbour in the war of the paddling pool.

So what are the rules, and what is happening to those parents who fall foul of them - and are shopped by the neighbours?

Are they allowed?

As the first warm weekend since the hosepipe ban started, there was always going to be trouble. There will always be some hot children who need to be hosed down and placed in a couple of inches of freezing water to keep them on the right side of a meltdown.


However, with a hosepipe ban covering roughly one half of England, the issue is dividing neighbourhoods. The first question is whether or not paddling pools have been outlawed altogether. The answer is that in the South East Water and Southern Water areas they have. Even if you fill them diligently using buckets and an outdoor tap (which could take hours) you still fall foul of the water company rules.

All the other companies operating bans, which include Thames Water, Anglian Water, Veolia Central, Veolia South East and Sutton and East Surrey Water, will allow you to use a paddling pool as long as you don't fill it with a hosepipe - presumably on the basis you are less likely to be bothered doing it, and you are likely to put less in.

Consequences

All the companies are threatening customers with a £1,000 ban if they break the rules. Many are also offering hotlines which allow neighbours to report one another if they are flouting the ban. Some of the water companies are investigating a number of paddling pool users which have already been reported to them.

A spokesperson from hosepipeban.org.uk says the different interpretations of the rules are naturally confusing customers, saying: "Again this is very frustrating for us as we have given advice previously that is now contradicted by these changes. Another example of hosepipe ban laws being applied differently by each company as they see fit and totally confusing the general public."

It is true that the rules are not easy to track down. Anglian Water, for example, says on its main pages that customers are not allowed to fill a paddling pool with a hosepipe. However, it is only when you click through to the document it calls "the legal bit" that the exemption for using a bucket is revealed.

Divisive

However, the issue is clearly very divisive, as families without children sit and watch their lawn burn to a crisp while their neighbours flood the area with paddling pool water.

In the past, the depth of feeling has boiled over. In one shocking incident in Australia in 2007, a pensioner in a Sydney suburb died after a fight broke out with a neighbour over his hosepipe use.

But what do you think? Would you shop a neighbour for using a hosepipe? Let us know in the comments.



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