Daily Mail

Everything’s gone to pot!

Our roads can be atrocious. They cause accidents and cost vast sums in repairs. It’s time to fight back...

- RAY MASSEY MOTORING EDITOR

BRACE yourself. As Britain marks National Pothole Day this Sunday, motoring experts are warning that the three months from January to March are the worst in the year for a rising number of holes in our crumbling roads as compensati­on claims soar.

A combinatio­n of the earlier freezing winter weather and a lack of sufficient maintenanc­e means that motorists and other road users risk paying the price with pothole damage to their cars, avoidable accidents and even — for the most unfortunat­e roadusers — their lives.

However, although a third of drivers don’t realise it, you may be eligible to claim compensati­on from your local council or roads agency if you can show they knew about a pothole before your accident, but ignored it (see left). They’re already paying out millions as claims soar.

SORRY STATE

THE AA said that during November it was attending an additional 225 breakdowns a day caused by potholes — and highlighte­d recent coroners’ reports identifyin­g two cyclists who were killed after hitting them in different parts of the country.

Admiral car insurance says the first three months of the year are the worst for potholes. Its latest data reveals compensati­on claims have increased by 67 per cent in the five years since 2016, with 931 claims reported in 2022. The average cost of repairing pothole damage has also increased by 16 per cent since 2021.

The company says December’s icy snap could cause even more cracks to open up in Britain’s roads, echoing the aftermath of ‘Beast from the East’ in 2018 when plummeting temperatur­es caused pothole claims to surge by 102 per cent.

Admiral explained: ‘Driving over a deep pothole, even at a low speed, can cause damage to a vehicle’s tyres, alloy wheels, steering alignment, wheel tracking and balancing and suspension.

‘When the steering is severely damaged, it can also make it difficult for the driver to control the vehicle, which could increase the risk of accidents.’

Admiral’s head of claims, Lorna Connelly, said: ‘Over the past seven years we’ve seen an average of over 700 pothole related claims a year. In years with extreme cold snaps we always see an increase. In 2018, when we had the Beast from the East, this increased to more than 1,000 claims.’

She added: ‘Keep a sharp eye and slow down — swerving can be more dangerous!

‘If you think you’ve hit a humdinger, get out and check for damage at the safest opportunit­y.’

TEST THE WATER

CONSUMER magazine What Car? last year revealed that British councils and road authoritie­s paid nearly £13 million in pothole compensati­on between 2018 and 2021. Their Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) requests revealed motorists across England, Scotland and Wales submitted more than 145,000 compensati­on claims — of which 37,366 paid out — with a success rate of just one in four, but an average successful claim of £347. Yet, one in three motorists don’t know they can seek compensati­on.

You can check who is responsibl­e for a pothole by putting the postcode into the official website: gov.uk/report-pothole.

RAC research says six in ten

drivers (60 per cent) believe the condition of roads they use regularly is worse than a year ago, with a similar proportion ( 55 per cent) complainin­g the standard of pothole repairs is ‘ poor’. Only one in 25 (4 per cent) think roads have improved in the past 12 months.

Nearly nine out of ten (86 per cent) drivers say they have had to steer to avoid potholes several times, rising to 90 per cent in rural locations ( 81 per cent in urban areas).

Drivers are 1.6 times more likely to experience breakdown due a pothole than they were in 2006, according to the RAC’s Pothole index.

RAC head of roads policy, Nicholas Lyes, said: ‘The local road network needs some form of ring-fenced funding to allow councils to maintain their roads properly and regularly.’

NINE-YEAR WAIT

The Asphalt Industry Alliance’s annual ALARM survey calculates that a total £12.6 billion of carriagewa­y repairs are needed across the UK — or £61,700 for every mile of local road in england and Wales — and that it would take councils nine years to clear the backlog.

This is despite 1.7 million potholes being filled in 2021 — one every 19 seconds.

But help may be at hand. British manufactur­er JCB’s giant Pothole Pro machine has fixed more than 23,000 miles of roads and taken orders from as far afield as Australia. Around the UK the number of holes the Pothole Pro has filled in over the past 12 months with what it calls ‘a speedy but long-lasting fix’ include 562 in the UK’s original ‘Motor City’ — Coventry.

The Pothole Pro has also been busy nationally: Stokeon-Trent ( 549); Cumbria ( 5,007); Northumber­land (3,191); Wales (1,742); highlands (4,964); West Sussex (2,699); Scottish Borders (2,012); North Lanarkshir­e (1,093) and Fife (1,741).

And while traditiona­l methods of repair can cost up to £60 per pothole, the giant JCB machine can permanentl­y repair a pothole in eight minutes at half the cost at £30.

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 ?? ?? Sign of the times: Potholes are blighting roads all over the country
Sign of the times: Potholes are blighting roads all over the country

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