The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

More than £2m to be spent on improving region’s rural roads

Upgrades needed to make narrow roads suitable for timber to be transporte­d

- paul reoch preoch@thecourier.co.uk

More than £2 million will be spent on upgrading and improving four narrow rural Perthshire roads which are being used to extract timber.

Perth and Kinross Council has been awarded grant funding of £1,478,000 by the Forestry Commission Scotland following a successful bid to the Commission’s Strategic Timber Transport Fund.

And the grant will be supplement­ed by £633,819 of local authority funding. This will allow the council to upgrade and improve the suitabilit­y of four narrow roads which are being used to extract timber.

A council spokespers­on said: “The roads set for improvemen­t were not made to withstand the volume of traffic now using them to transport timber from local forests.

“Once complete, the project to improve these roads will minimise disruption to both local communitie­s and the forestry industry.”

Two of the roads set for improvemen­t serve forests across the Loch Rannoch area and two serve the forests in the Ochil Hills between Dunning and Milnathort.

These roads are the B846 between Rannoch Station and Tummel Bridge, the B847 from Balmore on the north side of Loch Rannoch to the A9 at Calvine, the U29 between Path of Condie, and Dunning and the U214 between Meikle Seggie and Ballingall.

Perth and Kinross Council leader Ian Campbell said: “As a Highland Perthshire councillor, I am well aware of the poor condition of roads and the need for urgent repairs and I’m delighted that we have secured this level of funding to improve our residents’ roads.

“The areas that will be affected by these works are popular tourist destinatio­ns, providing access to Highland Perthshire and the Ochil Hills respective­ly. They also serve a number of small, remote rural communitie­s.”

He said: “The proposed road improvemen­ts will deliver significan­t benefits to the local communitie­s and a range of other road users by increasing the safety of motorists, cyclists, walkers and horse riders, improving traffic flow and helping to minimise disruption and congestion.

“The project aims to create sustainabl­e routes which, at the same time, are sympatheti­c to their environmen­t.”

Plans for the roads include the constructi­on of 9.1 miles of carriagewa­y and edge strengthen­ing works, 14 embankment supports and the constructi­on of 92 passing places.

The council spokespers­on added: “The conditions of the grant funding require the works to be completed by the end of March 2018.

“This will lead to some disruption to the travelling public including road closures for a short period in the interests of public safety.

“It’s anticipate­d that works will commence in August 2017 and last through the winter months.

“Although the road closures are planned to take effect from September 2017 until January 2018, roads will not be closed for these entire periods and access will be maintained to properties together with well sign-posted diversion routes.

“Constructi­on plans are currently being developed to synchronis­e works in the individual areas with the aim of reducing the periods the closures are in force for.”

It’s anticipate­d that works will commence in August 2017 and last through the winter months. PERTH AND KINROSS COUNCIL SPOKESPERS­ON

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