Oxfordshire fire service confirmed it has attended over 80 flooding incidents as the Met Office issued another amber weather warning for heavy rain and possible flooding.
Today's warning (October 1) extends slightly in to the north-east of the county.
Five flood warnings have been issued by the Environment Agency mainly for areas near the River Ray at Islip and Chiselhampton.
It comes after the last third of September saw exceptional levels of rain in Oxfordshire bringing serious disruption across the county.
Oxfordshire Fire and Rescue Service said it had attended 80 incidents with a particular focus in the Thame and Wheatley area and villages, including Kidlington, Tiddington and the Bartons.
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On Saturday (September 28) the Cherwell from Kidlington to the northern by-pass and Thames upstream of Standlake had flood warnings, with flood alerts through Oxford and downstream.
The EA were watching the modelling closely as the Thames at Oxford was set to reach flood warning triggers on Sunday afternoon.
Oxford city councillor Linda Smith, cabinet member for housing and communities, said flooding was reported in Barton, Blackbird Leys, Risinghurst, Marston and Cowley earlier in the week.
In response ODS visited 50 properties, clearing drains, pumping out and providing sandbags to vulnerable people in immediate risk of flooding.
Housing teams contacted vulnerable tenants and the city council's options team placed one family in temporary accommodation.
One Monday afternoon a reception centre opened at Barton Neighbourhood Centre for the afternoon to help people who had to leave their homes.
Most people were able to return home or stay with friends and family.
A sandbag wall was deployed on Barton Village Road near the bridge to Wick Farm as the brook was running fast and high.
Residents were advised to take precautions and refer to the Oxfordshire Flood Toolkit and check the government's website, EA website and Met Office updates.
Last week (Sunday, September 22 and Monday, September 23) the county was hit with more than a month’s worth of rainfall in the space of 36 hours.
Oxford University’s Radcliffe Meteorological Observatory reported that Oxford had more rain than in any defined 24-hour period since 1968.
Osney Mead industrial estate flooded - although not as badly as during Storm Henk in January - with Booker Wholesale in Ferry Hinksey Road car park submerged.
The River Ock in Abingdon burst its banks and the car park at Tesco Express off Marcham Road flooded with more than three quarters of the spaces under water and the store closed.
There were full or partial school closures across all districts as well as Greyfriars Catholic School and Cheney School in Oxford and John Watson School in Wheatley.
Flooding at Woodstock Surgery overnight caused the ceiling to collapse on Monday morning (September 23) and took out the fire alarm system.
Oxfordshire Fire and Rescue Service advised the building was not safe for patients.
In Didcot business owners said they were in 'financial despair' after 12 units at Harrier Park on the Southmead Industrial Estate were flooded for the second time in six months.
Many roads were flooded and train tracks at Haddenham and Thame Station were submerged and Network Rail said flooding between Bicester North and Banbury had blocked all lines.
Councillor Pete Sudbury, Oxfordshire County Council’s deputy leader, said no drainage system could have coped with the record rainfall.
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He said: “We and our partner agencies have been doing a tremendous amount of hard work in the past week to seek to deal with the impacts of the huge levels of rainfall to which we and neighbouring counties have been subjected. I thank all of those professionals across our services who have been involved.
“While we, at Oxfordshire County Council, have diverted extra funding to flood prevention, and there is a national programme funding flood defences, the job we have to do is bigger than any of that.
"We know that climate change is accelerating, and this will get worse for at least 30 years while we get to net zero emissions and beyond.
“Even if it were possible or affordable, replacing all of our drainage pipes with bigger ones, they won’t work when a month’s rain can fall in a couple of hours.
“There’s a much wider landscape-scale and street by street operation needed locally and nationally to work out how you hold back rainwater wherever it lands, slowing down the rate at which it hits or flows down our streets, rivers and highways.
"In the meantime, we will do whatever is possible when these events occur, learning from each one, so we can react faster and work even more effectively together.”
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