Southport Visiter

Dispute over who owns road resurfaces

- BY LISA RAND lisa.rand@trinitymir­ror.com @SeftonEcho

ADECADES-LONG dispute over a road that nobody has claimed responsili­ty for has been reignited. In December, Sefton Council declared the ‘unadopted’ Knob Hall Lane in Southport was not the local authority’s responsibi­lity and said its maintenanc­e and upkeep was down to residents and home-owners on the street.

Disputes over the ownership and responsibi­lity for the road, originally built by the Hesketh family estate, has been going on since at least the 1930s.

According to a report approved in December by Sefton Council’s cabinet member for locality services, Cllr John Fairclough, an agreement made between Southport Corporatio­n and the Hesketh family in 1885 over the road’s maintenanc­e was breached in the 1930s.

The report said this means the local authority has no responsibi­lity for the upkeep of the road.

The council said it has been trying to negotiate with owners on the street to fund improvemen­ts which could bring it up to ‘adoption’ standard, after which point the council would agree to look after it, but that this has proved unsuccessf­ul.

According to the report, the council has over the years carried out some work on the road, which leads on to three other cul-de-sacs, in order to make it of a “keep safe” standard.

This has led to some confusion as to whether or not the council had agreed responsibi­lity for looking after it.

However, after taking legal advice and consulting archives as well as attempting an agreement with home-owners, Sefton Council said that it had to conclude the road had nothing to do with them and was the sole responsibi­lity of those living in the street.

This decision was called in by local councillor­s who said that alternativ­es had not been considered.

In a report, it states: “Many residents believe that the council have a moral obligation to the residents of Knob Hall Lane that is not being served by this new policy which will see the lane deteriorat­e even more than it already has and see hundreds of residents, including those living on adopted roads, forced to travel on unsafe and unmaintain­ed roads to access their properties.”

Liberal democrat councillor­s John Pugh, John Dodd and Leo Evans, who instigated the call-in, say possible alternativ­es could include reinstatin­g the policy of maintainin­g the road to ‘keep safe standard’, assisting homeowners to get funding for its maintenanc­e or even attempting to contact what remains of the Hesketh family in the hopes of securing some form of agreement.

The issue will now be discussed by councillor­s at a meeting of Sefton Council’s regenerati­on and skills overview and scrutiny committee, where they will decide whether to send the decision to full council for discussion or to approve the recommenda­tions.

 ?? ?? ● The condition of Knob Hall Lane’s surface is entirely residents’ responsibi­lity, Sefton Council has stated; inset, a street sign
● The condition of Knob Hall Lane’s surface is entirely residents’ responsibi­lity, Sefton Council has stated; inset, a street sign

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