Alderney resident and Jurat Colin Partridge OBE said the inquiry, led by Lord Eric Pickles, would "draw attention to the various sites on the island and hopefully that will encourage a programme for memorialisation suitable to the size and scale of the island".
He's also a dad and coaches a girls football team, "I think about the kids growing up. I want them to grow up somewhere safe".But he is quick to add that if disorder does break out, he'll be back on the front line.
"Yes, I don't even need to think about that one" said Insp Dack, " If that comes again - am I ready? Are the officers ready? Yes".Around eight million properties in England - or one in four - could be at risk of flooding by 2050 as the danger increases due to climate change, the Environment Agency (EA) has said.In its first assessment of how a warming world could affect flooding, the EA warned of increasing threats from heavier rainfall and rising sea levels.
The number of at-risk properties could be even higher if more houses are built on floodplains, but could be lower if flood defences are improved.Currently, 6.3 million properties are considered at risk from flooding, new figures show, which is higher than previously thought.
"The frequency and severity of the kind of flood events that we've been experiencing are likely to become more and more challenging," Julie Foley, director of flood risk strategy at the Environment Agency, said.
The EA considers flooding from three main sources: rivers, the sea and surface water - where heavy rainfall overwhelms drainage systems."Twenty-six miles, I've never done anything like that before. But for my girl, I would do 26 or 50 - whatever," he says. "The pain doesn't matter, I'm going to do it."
He is raising money to build a newwhere Alice was a pupil.
It will be dedicated to Alice and Bebe, who previously attended the school.Alexandra Aguiar, Alice's mum, says her daughter would have loved to see "her friends play on the playground that [bears] her name".