Yorkshire Post

Council to take legal action on bypass repairs

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR

COUNCIL LEADERS in North Yorkshire are preparing to take legal action against Highways England over the £7.8m cost of carrying out urgently needed repairs to a “substandar­d” bypass.

North Yorkshire County Council says it has been left with no choice but to sue the government agency after it refused to contribute to the bill for reconstruc­ting the A63 Selby bypass.

The 6.1-mile single-carriagewa­y bypass to the south of the town officially opened in June 2004, after being built the previous year by Highways England, formerly the Highways Agency.

But, according to the council, shortly after being transferre­d back to its control in 2009, it soon started to “deteriorat­e badly and was the subject of regular complaints from local residents, businesses and road users”.

The county council says it was forced to carry out extra inspection­s and repairs to keep the road safe, but an investigat­ion found “fundamenta­l problems with the road structure and the lower layers of its constructi­on”.

In a statement issued yesterday, the authority said “it became obvious that urgently needed permanent repairs would be both lengthy and costly”, and that officials started talks about who was responsibl­e for paying for the work.

Over three phases starting in 2015, the council’s contractor­s carried out structural repairs and resurfaced the whole length of the bypass, at a cost of £7.8 million. It says Highways England initially suggested it might be able to contribute £2.89m towards the cost, a total the authority argued was far too low, but now says it can contribute nothing towards the bill.

Don Mackenzie, North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for highways, said: “We are very frustrated to find ourselves in a position where we have no choice, for the sake of the county’s taxpayers, but to take direct legal action to recover £7m.

“This is most of the cost that resulted from the substandar­d constructi­on of the bypass when it was first built.

“We do not want to see significan­t amounts of public money being spent on legal fees, but as it stands the underinves­tment and substandar­d work funded from central government has directly resulted in huge financial expenditur­e on the part of North Yorkshire taxpayers and this may have adverse consequenc­es on funding of future work on our highways.

“It means we will have to fund the £7m shortfall from future North Yorkshire highway maintenanc­e funds.”

Selby MP Nigel Adams backed the stance taken by the council, saying he had written to Transport Minister Jesse Norman about the issue. He said: “I think it is poor form by Highways England. If an agreement has been made it should be honoured.”

A Highways England spokeswoma­n said: “We are aware of North Yorkshire County Council’s intentions to pursue legal action regarding the A63 Selby bypass. We will be following the necessary legal proceeding­s in this matter.”

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