Get on with fixing potholes, PM tells councils

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Chippy_Tea

Landlord.
Staff member
Administrator
Moderator
Joined
Mar 17, 2013
Messages
54,492
Reaction score
21,318
Location
Ulverston Cumbria.
Lets hope they do a decent job now they have the funds, round here they fill them with cold tar out of a bag use a wacker plate to compress it and that's it (bodge it and scarper) one winter and the holes are back.



Councils need to "get on" with fixing potholes, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer urged, as the government announced how it will allocate its £1.6bn budget for road maintenance.

Each local authority in England will receive a cut of the budget for the next financial year - which is £500m higher than the previous sum.

Some of this uplift is being held back "until authorities have shown that they are delivering", the government said.

The increase, announced in the Budget in October, is estimated to fix an additional seven million potholes.


Each local authority in England can use the money to identify which roads are in most need of repair and deliver "immediate fixes", the government said.

Transport is a devolved matter in the UK - so this budget only applies to England.

1734712378905.png


Announcing the figures, the Department for Transport (DfT) said it was holding back 25% of the £500m uplift as an incentive until authorities had shown that they were "delivering".

The government would, it added, make sure authorities spent the money wisely and maintained roads to avoid further potholes.

The Local Government Association (LGA) welcomed the funding, but asked the government to reconsider its decision to withhold a quarter of the uplift.

It said councils needed "greater certainty" over the funding, and asked for greater long-term investment.

Figures from monitoring group RAC show drivers encounter an average of six potholes per mile in England, and face spending around £500 on vehicle repairs because of pothole damage.

Sir Keir Starmer said damaged roads could risk lives and cost families "hundreds if not thousands" on repairs.

He wants his government's new focus to be on people's daily frustrations. Potholes is perhaps the archetypal example of an issue that enrages many.

But it is down to local councils, not national government, to deliver these repairs.

The LGA suggested more than £16bn could be needed to fix the backlog in road repairs.

According to the RAC, the UK faces a "pothole epidemic".

A pothole is a hole in a road surface caused by factors such as repeated traffic impact and water damage.

Depending on its size, it can cause significant damage to vehicles and pose a danger to motorists, cyclists and pedestrians.

The average cost of fixing a pothole is £72 in England, according to a report, external by the The Asphalt Industry Alliance.
 
Back
Top