The worst councils for potholes revealed – including posh London local authority | Politics | News


Local highway authorities have been named and shamed as drivers demand action to tackle the nationโ€™s โ€œpothole plagueโ€.ย A new โ€œtraffic light systemโ€ grades councils on the state of their roads and how they are using taxpayersโ€™ cash to fix potholes and maintain highways.

Thirteen local authorities have been graded red โ€“ Bedford, Bolton, Cumberland, Derbyshire, Greenwich, Kensington and Chelsea, Leicestershire, North Lincolnshire, Slough, Suffolk, Waltham Forest, Westmorland and Furness and West Northamptonshire.

Councils are under pressure to deliver improvements following the announcement of ยฃ7.3 billion in funding.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said: โ€œFor too long, drivers have paid the price because our roads were left to deteriorate. I have heard time and again their frustration on footing the bill because they hit a pothole โ€“ money they should never have to spend in the first place.โ€

Edmund King, the president of the AA president and a founding member of the Pothole Partnership, said: โ€œThe top transport demand for 96% of AA members is fixing potholes with increased investment in repairing and upgrading roads.โ€

Simon Williams, head of policy for the RAC, said that โ€œdrivers have for too long been left with substandard roadsโ€.

Caroline Julian, director of British Cycling, warned: โ€œFor cyclists, potholes are far more than an annoyance. One unexpected impact can cause a serious crash, life-changing injury or, in the worst cases, a fatality.

โ€œSafe riding depends on safe roads, and a smooth, well-maintained surface isnโ€™t a luxury for cyclists; itโ€™s essential for their safety.โ€

The Department for Transport has described a ‘pothole plague’ and will expect results on the new investment. It says red-rated LHAs will receive dedicated support to bring them in line with best practices, backed by ยฃ300,000 worth of “expert planning and capability assistance”.

Charlotte Hill, Derbyshire County Councilโ€™s Cabinet member for potholes, highways and transport, said her regionโ€™s red rating โ€œmakes no sense at allโ€.

She said: โ€œWe have no idea how the DfT has judged us to be in their red category. They have not told us why they judge us to be red and seem to have told the media before they have told us how they come to this conclusion.

โ€œWe strongly refute the fact that we are not an improving highways service and have asked for a meeting with officials as soon as possible.โ€™

She argued that Derbyshire had made โ€œhuge stridesโ€ over the past four years, saying: โ€œWeโ€™ve been underfunded by the Government for road maintenance for decades.โ€

Tom Hunt of the Local Government Association warned: โ€œCouncils face a ยฃ17billion backlog of road repairs.โ€

Shadow Transport Secretary Richard Holden said: โ€œThe Labour Government are waging war on their own councils. It is refreshing to have Labour ministers laying bare just how badly Labour-run councils handle basic road repairs.

โ€œIf you live in Bolton, Waltham Forest, Greenwich, or any of the other Labour councils up for election in May, this map is the warning label. Conservative-run councils like Hillingdon and Essex get on with fixing roads.โ€

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