The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Driver left deflated by pothole punctures

Motorist out of pocket to tune of £400 after double flat tyre caused by hole in road...but council refuse to foot the bill

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Iwas 6.25am and pitch dark when Bruce Collie’s daily drive to work was interrupte­d by a shuddering thump.

“It was windy and it was raining and I had no idea what had just happened,” said Bruce. “When I pulled over and saw a flat tyre and then a pothole I had ploughed into, I knew I wasn’t going to be going anywhere in a hurry.”

Bruce, 57, a diving equipment specialist, had been driving on Braehead Way in Aberdeen when the encounter with the pothole happened in November.

He is just one of thousands of motorists in Scotland who fall victim to the blights on our roads every winter.

“My front nearside tyre was punctured, and the near rearside tyre was damaged in two places,” said Bruce.

As a result of the bump, the dad of two paid £400 for two new tyres for his Jaguar XE saloon and he also had to take the day off work to get it fixed.

“It wasn’t as if I was going fast when the accident happened,” he said. “I had just gone over a speed bump and this had put me directly into the pothole. I had no chance to avoid it.”

Bruce took photos and reported the incident to Aberdeen City Council.

“Within an hour, a traffic cone was put down to warn other motorists and not long after that the pothole was fixed,” he said.

However, when Bruce then tried to make a claim with the council for compensati­on, he was declined, leaving him furious.

“Basically, they thanked me very much for bringing the pothole to their attention so that it could be repaired, then told me I wasn’t due a penny. I was disgusted,” he said. “I had to take another day off my work to deal with the claim. I then tried to get the £400 back though my car insurance but because I have an excess it wasn’t worth it.”

Bruce contacted Raw Deal for help but Aberdeen City Council refused to budge. The authority said: “We receive a number of claims each year regarding potholes which are not dealt with directly by the council but by its insurers.”

A further

appeal to the local authority’s insurers, Zurich Municipal, also hit a brick wall.

Zurich told Raw Deal: “Whilst we appreciate that the decision is disappoint­ing for Mr Collie, the evidence provided by Aberdeen City Council would suggest that they have an appropriat­e system of inspection and maintenanc­e in place and that because of this, they would not be legally responsibl­e for the damage to Mr Collie’s vehicle.

“Once Mr Collie made the council aware of the defect, they inspected the road and repaired the defect on the same day.”

Bruce, however, said he felt he had been poorly treated by the powers-that-be in the Granite City.

“I thought I was doing the right thing by reporting the pothole immediatel­y and making an appropriat­e claim for the damage but instead I feel like I have been punished,” he said. “It seems like the rules favour the council and not its residents.”

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 ??  ?? Bruce Collie beside his Jaguar XE, left, and the problem pothole in Aberdeen, above
Bruce Collie beside his Jaguar XE, left, and the problem pothole in Aberdeen, above
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