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£201 million road repair fund to resurface extra 1,000 miles

Councils in England will be given a share of more than £200 million for road maintenance and pothole repairs – enough to resurface a road between London and Budapest.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling has announced the allocation of an extra £50 million for councils for potholes and flood resilience as well as £151 million to reward examples of councils’ best practice – funding that could resurface more than 1,000 miles of road.

Councils in the Midlands have been given more than £44 million for road maintenance to reward them for best practice. In total for maintenance and repairs during 2019/20, the East Midlands will be provided with nearly £106 million and the West Midlands will have more than £100 million.

These funds come from the £6.6 billion the government is providing in the six years to 2021 to improve local roads.

As part of the government’s work to prevent potholes in the future, the Department for Transport will fund early stage research into new surface materials or pothole repair techniques, such as 3D printing. A digital hub will also be set up for experts to share and develop innovations.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling said: “Every motorist knows that potholes have been a problem in the last few years. That is why the government is continuing to step up its funding to local authorities to address this.

“It is now up to highways authorities to innovate and use new technologies to solve the problem.”

Yesterday’s investment is on top of the £725 million local authorities will receive in 2019/20, based on the infrastructure they maintain, including length of roads, number of bridges and street lights.

Road users are already seeing the benefits of extra funding for road maintenance, with £420 million spent in the past six months on resurfacing, pothole repairs and bridge renewals.

The Department for Transport, along with Cumbria County Council and highway survey firm Gaist, is also trialling low-cost sensors to monitor river levels across the region to reduce the risk of future flood damage.

In North East Lincolnshire the council and partner ENGIE have introduced a new heat and recycle system which mixes new and existing surfaces to create a thermo-bond and reduce the potential for weak points which let in water, creating potholes. As the technique recycles the existing surface, no waste is taken to landfill.

Already this year the government announced it will be providing £23 million for trials of new technologies to develop pothole-free roads, such as using kinetic energy to heat surfaces, recycling plastic waste into a harder-wearing surface or installing sensors to predicts where issues might occur.

A guide on best practice on pothole repair, developed with the Association of Directors of Environment, Economy, Planning and Transport, has also been published yesterday.

The Department for Transport is currently consulting on ensuring road repairs last longer by requiring utility companies to guarantee their roadworks for up to five years, instead of two presently.

We will also shortly be announcing a review of road condition surveying data and technology. This Call for Evidence will seek views on the current methodology used to monitor road condition as well as how councils and the wider sector can harness new forms of technology and data to improve our local roads and infrastructure.

Additionally, the Department for Transport is establishing a Review and Audit Group in liaison with the highways sector to ensure adoption of best practice.

Further details will be announced shortly.

 

Area Maintenance funding Incentive Pothole Action Fund Total
East Midlands 83,170,000 17,103,000 5,648,000 105,921,000
Derby UA 1,782,000 371,000 133,305 2,286,000
Leicester UA 2,102,000 219,000 148,727 2,470,000
Rutland UA 1,535,000 320,000 102,003 1,956,000
Nottingham UA 1,782,000 371,000 141,319 2,295,000
Derbyshire 15,273,000 3,181,000 1,014,920 19,469,000
Leicestershire 11,442,000 2,383,000 794,423 14,620,000
Lincolnshire 24,955,000 5,197,000 1,642,351 31,794,000
Northamptonshire 12,292,000 2,560,000 812,440 15,665,000
Nottinghamshire 12,006,000 2,501,000 858,967 15,366,000
     
West Midlands 79,004,000 16,255,000 5,402,000 100,661,000
Herefordshire, County of UA 9,272,000 1,931,000 603,370 11,807,000
Telford and Wrekin UA 2,778,000 579,000 185,289 3,542,000
Stoke-on-Trent UA 1,915,000 199,000 156,481 2,271,000
Shropshire UA 13,275,000 2,765,000 908,396 16,948,000
Staffordshire 16,154,000 3,365,000 1,123,967 20,643,000
Warwickshire 10,421,000 2,171,000 717,722 13,310,000
Worcestershire 12,076,000 2,515,000 764,933 15,356,000
West Midlands ITA 13,112,000 2,731,000 942,000 16,785,000
Coventry 2,225,000 463,000 157,658 2,846,000
Dudley 2,443,000 509,000 184,103 3,136,000
Sandwell 2,582,000 538,000 158,584 3,278,000
Solihull 2,108,000 439,000 149,078 2,696,000
Walsall 1,943,000 405,000 154,580 2,503,000
Wolverhampton 1,811,000 377,000 137,978 2,326,000
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