Skip to main content

End of the road this year for the UK’s Highways Term Maintenance Association

The HTMA will cease operations by the end of the year
By David Arminas March 17, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Closure ahead for the Highways Term Maintenance Association

After 15 years of representing the highways maintenance industry in the UK, the Highways Term Maintenance Association (HTMA) will cease operations by the end of the year.

A statement on the association’s website said that its members made this decision following the departure of a number of tier 1 highway maintenance contractors from the organisation. Peter McDermott, chairman of the HTMA, said that tier 1 contractors have been leaving the organisation since 2018 when the HTMA decided to be more focused on second tier suppliers.

According to the HTMA statement, other collective industry groups have emerged for specific purposes and will provide a channel for the industry to be heard and to represent the industry’s needs and offerings. The establishment of these alternative bodies to represent tier 1 companies has also been a factor that has impacted on HTMA.

The association will be formally wound up later in the year.

HTMA has achieved a significant amount for the industry over the years including establishing industry specific price indices, influencing the development of the HMEP (Highways Maintenance Efficiency Programme) standard contracts and establishing senior level engagement across the industry.

The association has also produced and published a collection of guidance and best practice documents across a range of subjects, which have been made freely available to share knowledge and foster best practice, to encourage improved standards and to increase awareness of the diversity of careers and raise the profile of highways maintenance and management.

Related Content

  • Analysing green Australian procurement practices
    December 16, 2014
    Adriana Sanchez and Keith Hampson of the Sustainable Built Environment National Research Centre (SBEnrc) discuss green procurement Procurement has a key role impacting the lifecycle of a construction project and can serve to drive many sustainability outcomes. Green procurement in particular can be used as a strategic tool to promote certain behaviour and as an environmental policy instrument to translate environmental policies into environmentally sustainable project processes, products and services. Th
  • “Bold and brave” rallying call to cash-starved UK highway maintenance teams
    July 24, 2012
    UK local authorities and other organisations must be “bold and brave” in their structuring of repair and maintenance works, delegates at a key road engineering conference in Birmingham, central England were told. Speaking at the Developments in Pavement Assessment (DIPA 2012) event Les Hawker, highways manager at Transport for London (TfL), said: “There is no extra money and only 20% of the [Government budget] cuts have taken place so far. Over the next five years the other 80% of cuts will come through. Or
  • Global credit squeeze impacts Australia's road construction
    July 13, 2012
    Roads Australia steps up in policy debate as road construction feels the pinch of the credit squeeze, as Mark Bowmer (RA media director) reports Like all markets around the world, Australia is feeling the effects of the global credit squeeze and its impact on the delivery of major infrastructure projects such as roads. In Sydney, for example, lack of funding (both from government and private sources) is seen as the major stumbling block to the construction of a much-needed eastern extension to Sydney's main
  • New strategies will help boost road safety worldwide
    November 4, 2013
    *Martin Heath, the Chair of the IRF Group of Experts working group on Engineering Measures for Infrastructure Safety, examines the expected impacts of the new ISO 39001 The excitement and enthusiasm generated by the 2011 launch of the Decade of Action for Road Safety is gradually receding amidst the gloom of an interminably slow global economic recovery. However, a fresh and challenging impetus is about to be given to international road safety management following the publication of a new quality management