UK & World News
Potholes: 'Crumbling Road Crisis' Warning
England and Wales are facing a "crumbling road crisis" according to a report that says the cost of repairing all the countries' potholes would be £10.5bn.
The road survey carried out by the Asphalt Industry Alliance (AIA) has found one in five local roads is in "poor condition", which is defined as having five years or less life remaining.
Lack of funding for road repair work is blamed by the group, with local authorities in England reporting a shortfall in their annual budgets of £829m.
Rosemarie Dutton broke her leg after tripping up on a pothole while crossing the road in Middlewich, Cheshire, last month.
She told Sky News: "I was checking on the lights that they weren't going to change on me and before I knew it I was down on the floor due to one of the large potholes on the pedestrian crossing.
"Obviously I was in excruciating pain and no-one came to help me - I was amazed."
Mark Morris' son wrote off his car after he hit a pothole and lost control of the vehicle.
He told Sky News: "He hit a pothole which appears to have disconnected the steering of the car.
"As he came down the hill and turned into the bend his steering just hasn't been engaged with the wheel - and the wheel's turned left straight into a lamp post."
The Local Government Association (LGA) is calling on Whitehall to free up money and invest it in resurfacing roads.
Councillor Peter Box, the chairman of the LGA, said: "Keeping roads safe is one of the most important jobs councils do and over the past two years they have fixed almost four million potholes - one every 16 seconds.
"Almost half a billion pounds is being taken away from us and our general fund is being reduced by some 30%.
"Now something has to give. It's no good anyone saying 'well, actually, you should be doing this despite the fact that your budget's being cut'."
But the AIA report says there is a mounting cost to councils of not repairing roads. Last year £32m was paid out in road user compensation claims.
It is estimated that poorly maintained roads are costing small and medium-sized businesses £5bn a year in reduced productivity, increased fuel consumption, damage to vehicles and delayed deliveries.
Andy Jennings runs a taxi firm in Sandbach and has recently had to spend £400 repairing the suspension on two of his vehicles
He told Sky News: "Obviously we can't afford to do this at the moment. In times of recession every penny counts."
Local Transport Minister Norman Baker said: "We are providing councils with more than £3bn between 2011 and 2015 to maintain their roads and pavements.
"In December 2012 we announced an extra £215m to help councils get the best out of their road network. This is on top of the additional £200m we gave to councils in March 2011 to repair local roads damaged by the severe winter weather in 2010.
"It is ultimately up to local highway authorities to determine how they prioritise their funding, but we want to help them get the best value for money.
"That is why we are funding the Highways Maintenance Efficiency Programme, which helps councils work together to deliver a first-class service to their residents, at the same time as saving money."
what do you think?

Andy Sillitoe
What do we pay road tax for

Bob Turnbull
I want to know where our tax money is going? I live in Wiltshire and tihe roads are a disgrace. I pay my taxes, so what do I get?

shirley sutton
same as us in cheshire - money going to subsidise all the immigrants claiming housing benefit

Mark Ashpole
So where is my road tax being spent? On peoples benefits I assume.......

shirley sutton
on benefits for all our cousins for europe who come over take low paid jobs and get their rent paid for them

John Mechelen
I have just spent hundreds of pounds having my rear suspension repaired.I thought by paying road fund tax,councils would be repairing the roads,after all they have a vast amounts of money tucked away in there banks.

shirley sutton
if they're anything like our council who've just spent £500,000 on a recycling plant only to have to pull it down as they'd not got planning permission - nothing will ever get done and the cost of councillors expenses going through the roof

Sunny Bee
Simple..cut the foreign aid budget and spend it on our roads instead!

blue side
Wonder if that cost is based on the second class repairs that have been already done - if my memory serves me right a repair carried out a few years ago lasted not as now where the contractor's guarantee is 'ten feet or ten seconds'.
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hollywoodbowden
Yes we pay road tax but no doubt that all goes abroad on syria and africa when drive around england now its so scruffy and shoddy now

blue side
Dave wonder how you make that out

Bob Turnbull
Highways agency! Highway Robbers Like the government, any government. All in it for themselves

Bob Turnbull
Highways agency! Highway Robbers Like the government, any government. All in it for themselves

Phil A
Easy. Put up road tax and put up petrol duty. The motorist has no option but to pay so squeeze him til his pips squeak.

blue side
Phil I read your post a sarcasm but some think you mean it - you don't do you? What you say appears gov policy though

Paul Grice
If they repaired the holes properly and dug down 200mm instead of 50mm the repair would hold all they do is put a stiking plaster on it it lasts a few months then has to be done again easy money job for life just keep going round and around doing the same holes . Total waste of are money

Dave Smith
This is BREACH OF CONTRACT. I want my ROAD TAX BACK.

Mark Hussey
Its how thay repair them that gets me.just chuck a bit of tarmac in than drive over it with a van.if thay did it right it would last.

blue side
As our road declined the answer was to buy a 4x4 as the suspension on most cars would not hack it now you need a tractor or tracked vehicle soon we will be back on horse back. Have not yet seen any figures where they show how road tax is spent - if a company took money for a good or service and spent it on anything else they would be done for misrepresentation

bobh_385
Whilst potholes are an inconvenience to motorists they are potentially fatal to two wheel users so I would like to know who can be hauled up in court charged with manslaughter or could the whole of the government be up for corporate manslaughter?

Juliecrumpton1234
Stop sending money abroad then, and get them sorted!





shirley sutton
6:01am on 14/3/2013
Out council has had the money for repairing the roads but they've done nothing - roads are a mess, never like this when we had county councils