Wokingham Today

Borough’s £418,000 boost for potholes

- By ANDREW BATT abatt@wokingham.today

WOKINGHAM MP Sir John Redwood has claimed the Liberal Democrat controlled Wokingham Borough Council “.. seem to want the roads to get worse to deter people from driving to work or school.”

Sir John wrote on his blog: “The state of Wokingham’s roads is atrocious.

“I am getting plenty of complaints about the increased number of potholes and the poor surfaces which have deteriorat­ed badly in the last two years.”

He said he had successful­ly pressed, with some other Conservati­ve MPs, to make tackling potholes a priority.

He said: “Wokingham is getting a current baseline sum of £3,314,000 from the government each year for road maintenanc­e.

“The government is also providing an additional £418,000 extra this year, and again next year, for additional work on potholes.

“The minimum promised uplift in road money between 2023-4 and 2033-34 will be £13,095,000.

“So Wokingham Council, what is your excuse now?

“This is another increased sum and new money the Lib Dems do not want to tell us about. Time to do something with all this extra money.”

Wokingham Lib Dems said the £418,000 of “resurfacin­g funds” is to be spent on road maintenanc­e this year.

It added this will not address the existing backlog of damage caused by what it says is more than a decade of underfundi­ng of local road maintenanc­e.

In a statement, it noted: “These funds are reallocate­d from the cancellati­on of the HS2 railway. Given the extent of the crisis in local authority funding, any such grant is welcome.

“However it is symptomati­c of the government's lack of concern for the future of the environmen­t that these funds are being provided at the expense of investment in sustainabl­e transport.

“It is important to put this in context. £418,000 will pay to resurface around 0.37% of the 459 miles of road that Wokingham Borough Council is responsibl­e for.”

The party noted that 14% of roads are in need of resurfacin­g.

“The long-term underfundi­ng by the government has created an enormous backlog, making roads more vulnerable to damage, including potholes.

“The government also says there is “indicative funding” up until 2034, which across the country could be £8.3 billion. But this is against an existing nationwide funding shortfall of over £14 billion, a shortfall which is growing year on year.”

Cllr Paul Fishwick, executive member for active travel, transport and highways, added: “The government likes to pretend they are funding road maintenanc­e properly with these small additional grants and promises of more.

“The reality is that the additional funding is unlikely to offset the ongoing deteriorat­ion of our roads let alone restore them to the standard we want.

“To help, we are taking steps to preserve the surfaces as long as possible, including the resealing works we introduced in 2023. We are exploring additional preventati­ve jet-patching and localised structural repair.

“We will always repair potholes when they create a risk on the roads, and we encourage residents to report these if they find them in between our own inspection­s.

“But this is just sticking plasters on a long term lack of proper resurfacin­g and represents a growing drain on the council’s finances.

“Road maintenanc­e is, sadly, one of many examples where the government, presiding over a failing economy is letting down the country, and repeatedly seeking to shift the responsibi­lity to others.”

 ?? ?? FUNDING: The government has given Wokingham Borough Council £418,000 to tackle potholes across the borough
FUNDING: The government has given Wokingham Borough Council £418,000 to tackle potholes across the borough

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom