Skip to main content

Fix your street with FixMyStreet

FixMyStreet Pro, which uses Yotta software, allows residents to report street and highway issues.
By David Arminas April 19, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
On the case with FixMyStreet


The FixMyStreetPro smartphone app allows UK residents to report public street issues, from potholes and unsafe highways to broken street lights and loose drain covers.

Information gathered from FixMyStreetPro - created by SocietyWorks, a local authority services provider – is sent to Yotta’s Alloy software. This triggers alerts to authority maintenance or inspection teams to take appropriate action. Finally, the app will report back to the person who had sent in the notification, explaining to he him or her the outcome of the repair.

The new integrated solution will initially be used primarily for highways and street works applications. Both companies said  the app has potential for other services, such as reporting missing waste bins, processing payments for garden waste and grounds maintenance problems.

“Both residents and local authorities want to see resources put to the best possible use in order to make public funds go as far as possible,” said Sam Orton, head of transformation accounts with Yotta, a global asset management software and services provider. He noted that the app can also help councils achieve greater transparency and accountability with residents as well help build a trust-based relationship.

David Eaton, Sales Director, SocietyWorks said “citizens benefit from getting a better delivery outcome from any queries or requests they may have which, in turn, helps strengthen the reputation of the council in the community”.

SocietyWorks is the wholly owned subsidiary of mySociety, a UK charity that has been working to improved services delivery and outputs for local authority residents.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ‘eCall’ app for Android platform launched for worldwide use
    April 23, 2012
    Alfom, a German IT company, has announced the TripGuard app (www.tripguard.de) for Android (which will shortly also be available for the iPhone) that provides an eCall service in case of emergency. The inventor of the system was driven to develop the software following the tragic death of his mother in the autumn of 2010. Late one night, her car left the road, overturned and was not visible to passing motorists. Seriously injured but still conscious, it was nearly two hours before she was discovered and rel
  • It’s a deadly business for contractors painting road markings
    August 4, 2015
    Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway. A report by Irish newspapers quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.
  • How data mining and the intelligence it creates is helping sites run more effectively and efficiently
    December 13, 2022
    In this, the third in our series of top-level roundtable discussions led by World Highways, editor Mike Woof and roundtable host Nadira Tudor talk machine control technology with three world-class experts from Leica Geosystems (part of Hexagon), Topcon, and Trimble. There’s never been a more exciting time to be in construction as innovation makes us more productive, more efficient, more sustainable, and better connected. Autonomy means opportunity.
  • CECE meets with EU Commission to discuss policy
    July 3, 2017
    Construction equipment body CECE has met with senior figures within the EU Commission to help safeguard the competitiveness of the European industrial base. This is intended to help create jobs and to instil new sustainable economic growth in Europe. As a result, the European manufacturing industry is requesting a far thinking industrial policy strategy and action plan at EU level.