Skip to main content

Pothole damage to be repaired

Councils in England will be given more than £100 million (€e117 million) of extra funding to spend on repairing potholes, Transport Secretary Philip Hammond has said.
February 21, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Opened recently: one of the UK's newest largest salt barns
Councils in England will be given more than £100 million (€117 million) of extra funding to spend on repairing potholes, Transport Secretary Philip Hammond has said.

The funding is in addition to the £831 million (€973 million) already provided to councils for road maintenance this year and the £3 billion (€3.5 billion) the government has committed over the next four years.

The severe weather at the end of 2010 has left many local roads in a poor condition. Every local authority has a responsibility to properly maintain their roads, including planning winter resilience measures, but the exceptional weather has caused significant additional damage.

The Transport Secretary said: “Millions of motorists across the country have their daily drives ruined by potholes. And the awful winter weather we had this year is only going to make that problem worse.

“That is why, despite the tough financial position we are in, we are going to give councils over £100 million extra to help carry out much needed repairs to England’s roads.

“I am determined to see the winter damage to our roads fixed as quickly as possible and we will be working with councils to make sure that happens.”

The cash injection comes as the latest data available from the UK’s 5432 Department for Transport (DfT) shows a decrease in road quality across the country. The DfT’s Highways Condition Index for all classified roads in England has fallen from 100 in the 2008–2009 period to 98 for the 2009–2010 period, an indication there has been a deterioration in road conditions.

Meanwhile, just prior to the bad winter, the 1530 Balfour Beatty Mott MacDonald joint venture, which maintains motorways and major roads in the Counties of Somerset, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire and the city of Bristol area on behalf of the 1441 UK Highways Agency, opened the newest, and one of the UK’s largest salt barns.

The barn at Bamfurlong, near Gloucester, is 11m high, and cost some £500,000 (€585,600) to build.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK’s Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance – ALARM – survey
    June 16, 2017
    Within years, one in six UK local roads will need repairs or face closure, according to the latest Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance – ALARM – survey. The cumulative effect of an ageing network, decades of underfunding, increased traffic and wetter winters has led to around 17% of all UK local roads reportedly in poor structural condition, with less than five years of life remaining. The 22nd annual ALARM survey is a comprehensive study into local road maintenance funding and conditions. Local authori
  • LGA fears UK roads pothole crisis
    November 28, 2012
    The Local Government Association (LGA) fears further cuts to its road maintenance budget, or a cold winter, may lead to potholes appearing across thousands of miles of UK roads. The LGA says that since the formation of the coalition government in 2010, its highways maintenance budget has been reduced by almost US$798.35million (£500mn). The LGA is responsible for maintaining local roads spanning 180,000miles in England and Wales.
  • UK: Pothole-free guarantee for five years?
    March 12, 2019
    Contractors and utilities companies in the UK could be guaranteeing roads to be pothole-free for five years, according to new proposals. At the moment, the guarantee is two years but the Department for Transport is conducting an eight-week public consultation on the subject. Street Works UK, which represents the utilities sector, argues that the an increase is not needed. The department is also seeking more innovation into how to better repair potholes, such as using asphalt with a higher bitumen c
  • UK Road repairs desperately needed
    May 23, 2014
    The 19th Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance (ALARM) Survey published on 3 April 2014 reported that the estimated cost to get England and Wales’ local road network back into reasonable condition has increased to €14.47 billion (£12 billion) from €12.06 billion (£10.5 billion) in 2013. For the second year in a row, more than two million potholes (2,010,749) were filled in England and Wales over the course of the previous year.