Potholes: Roads in England and
Wales at 'breaking point'
BBC News
19th March 21024
IMAGE SOURCE,PA MEDIA
Roads in England and Wales are at
"breaking point" due to potholes, with repairs at an eight-year high,
according to a new report.
The Asphalt Industry Alliance
(AIA) said councils were expected to fix two million potholes in the current
financial year.
That is up 43% on the previous
year and the highest annual total since 2015-16.
Ministers highlighted their
pledge to provide £8.3bn of extra funding over 11 years for road improvements
in England.
· Potholes: What are they and why
are they dangerous?
The AIA's annual report found
that 47% of local road miles were rated as being in good condition, with 36%
adequate and 17% poor.
The survey also found that
average highway maintenance budgets increased by 2.3% in the 2023-24 financial
year compared with the previous 12 months.
But the impact of rising costs
due to inflation meant local authorities "effectively experienced a
real-terms cut".
IMAGE SOURCE,MARTIN HEATH/BBC
Image caption,
A sign on the Daventry to Long
Buckby road claims the town should be twinned with the Grand Canyon
Meanwhile, the amount needed to
fix the backlog of local road repairs has reached a record £16.3bn, up 16% from
£14bn a year ago.
AIA chairman Rick Green said:
"Local authorities have a bit more money to spend this year but the impact
of rising costs due to inflation means they have actually been able to do less
with it.
"Couple this with the
effects of the extreme weather we are increasingly facing, and the result is
that the rate at which local roads are suffering is accelerating towards
breaking point."
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Depending on their size,
potholes can cause significant damage to vehicles and pose a danger motorists,
cyclists and pedestrians.
Although small potholes rarely
cause major accidents, if a vehicle hits a lot of them over time, it can lead
to damage to the tyres, suspension and steering system.
In Daventry, Northamptonshire,
signs have appeared from an apparently fed-up driver welcoming people to
"Pot Hole City" and "Pot Holy Island".
While on the Isle of Man, a woman has planted daffodils
in potholes, hoping the "guerrilla gardening" will
hammer home the problem.
In October 2023, the government
announced it would provide the £8.3bn of extra funding for local road
improvements.
This was part of the Network
North strategy to use money saved by scrapping the planned extension of HS2
north of Birmingham.
Mr Green said: "There's
still a mountain to climb when it comes to fixing our local roads.
"While it's great that
English local authorities should be getting more money from the government
through its Network North funding, it's clearly not going to be enough to halt
the decline."
AA president Edmund King added:
"Our breakdown data shows that 2023 was the worst year for potholes for
five years.
"Arguably the road network
is a local council's biggest asset, but not enough planned investment and
repairs are being made to make streets safer and smoother for drivers and those
on two wheels."
A Department for Transport
spokesperson said the £8.3bn spending pledge was evidence the government was
"taking decisive action to resurface roads and fix potholes".
They added: "In addition,
we have made £150m available for local authorities right now meaning funding
for most authorities has increased by almost a third compared to last year,
with a further £150m to follow in the coming financial year."
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