The Sunday Post (Inverness)

REVEALED £1.2 BILLION POTHOLE REPAIR BILL

Transport chiefs plot radical roads reform as repairs backlog hits £1.2bn

- By Andrew Picken APICKEN@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Aradical shake-up of the way Scotland’ s roads are repaired is being considered as transport chiefs admit they don’t have enough cash to deal with a £ 1.2 billion pothole backlog.

Fed up motorists are reporting hundreds of holes to councils every day, with the recent cold snap worsening the state of thousands of roads across the country.

A report from a Scottish Government taskforce, chaired by transport minister Humza Yousaf, says money for repairing roads has dropped by 26% over the last five years and brands spending on national highways as“not sufficient”.

Significan­tly, the report warns the scale of the country’s £ 1.2 billion pothole backlog means retaining 33 roads authoritie­s “is likely to be unsustaina­ble”.

Mr Yousaf signed off publicatio­n of the report, along with local authority umbrella group COSLA, so the interventi­on opens the door for the merging of council roads department­s, with any cash saved ploughed into repairing the creaking transport network.

Neil Greig, director of policy and research at road safety charity IAM RoadSmart, said: “This is another depressing report on the state of Scotland’s roads and backs up what I hear from IAM members – our roads have never been in such a bad state.

“I almost feel sorry for the engineers who have to watch as their roads are pulverised by the triple whammy of bad weather, increasing traffic and decreasing budgets.

“This report could not be clearer – the backlog of £ 1.2 billion cannot be fixed unless difficult political decisions are made.

“Without new money the only hope being put forward by the experts is to share services to save costs.

“This has already been shown to work in Ayrshire and Tayside and other councils need to crack on and do it.

“Reorganisa­tion alone will not be enough to save our roads but combined with long- term funding and political will we might just get the roads Scotland’s drivers,

motorcycli­sts, cyclists and pedestrian­s deserve.”

The Road Maintenanc­e Strategic Action Group ( RMSAG) was set up by Transport Scotland and is chaired by Mr Yousaf and COSLA, with the country’s chief transport officers and the Scottish RoadWorks Commission­er also on board.

The group was asked to respond to an Audit Scotland report which called for “urgent action” to improve the state of the country’s roads.

The RMSAG reports states spending on local roads has declined by 26% in real terms across five years as a result of the prioritisa­tion of education and care.

There has been a push for voluntary co-operation agreements among some council road department­s and trunk road operators, such as in Ayrshire and Tayside, but the report states, “the clear conclusion of RMSAG is that, given the projected pressures, a model for roads maintenanc­e in Scotland based on 33 roads authoritie­s is likely to be unsustaina­ble”.

RAC spokesman Rod Dennis said: “We have sympathy for councils which are an impossible position by having to do more with shrinking budgets. But with the standard of some of Scotland’s roads so poor, not committing money to fix them now is saving up problems for the future.”

Luke Bosdet, spokesman for the AA, pointed out the public purse is already raking in tens of millions a year in parking charges and fines.

He said: “These councils have made massive hauls from traffic enforcemen­t and now it’s time to spend these huge amounts of money on filling potholes.”

Among the councils planning to cut spending are East Lothian, which is considerin­g a £5.2m drop in transport spending in 2018/19.

East Renfrewshi­re, Falkirk, Inverclyde and North Lanarkshir­e also plan to trim roads spending.

In Ayrshire, an alliance has been set up between the local authoritie­s to deal with road repairs but there have been complaints that some areas get more funding than others.

One pothole on a B- road near Kilmarnock was last week measured by local residents as being 16cm at its deepest, 45cm wide and 85cm long.

Scottish Labour’s rural economy spokesman Colin Smyth MSP said: “Local authoritie­s have been forced to pass on SNP Government cuts by slashing the road maintenanc­e budget by 21% since 2011, while staff morale is at rock bottom.

“The reality is this situation will only get worse.”

A survey by Confused. com, the insurance comparison website, found 154,310 potholes were reported to councils in Scotland in 2016, with motorists flagging up more than 420 every day.

A spokesman for Transport Scotland said: “The budget for maintenanc­e of the network has increased by around £65 million to £433m for 2018/2019.

“The Audit Scotland report says 87% of trunk roads are in acceptable condition, despite several severe winters and significan­t financial constraint­s facing the Scottish Government.

“Since 2007 over £8.2 billion has been invested in our motorways and trunk road network.

“We are currently committed to the l argest road i nvestment programme Scotland has ever seen, including the £ 1.4bn Queensferr­y Crossing, the £3bn dualling of the A9 between Perth and Inverness, the £745m AberdeenWe­stern Peripheral Route project and the £ 439m M8/ M73/M74 Improvemen­ts Project.”

 ??  ?? Transport minister Humza Yousaf has come under fire for the state of our roads, which the AA’s Bob Pentland, right, says drivers find frustratin­g
Transport minister Humza Yousaf has come under fire for the state of our roads, which the AA’s Bob Pentland, right, says drivers find frustratin­g
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