A 12-month “post-winter recovery plan” to tackle road defects following a wet and stormy winter is being launched by Staffordshire County Council.

Progress made over the past year to fix the county’s roads has been undone by the challenging weather conditions seen in recent months, leader Cllr Alan White said.

This week he told fellow members that urgent action was needed to address the situation. The Post-Winter Highways Recovery Plan will set out how the council will “get back on top of the defects” over the coming months, his statement to the full council meeting said.

Speaking at a cabinet meeting, he said:

“As you will all be aware, this winter has been one of the wettest and stormiest on record, with six named storms and the highest rainfall in February ever recorded.

“We all know too that this has had a massive impact on highways across the UK and the situation here in Staffordshire is no different.

“Our crews did an excellent job last year to improve our roads. But because of the weather we have seen a massive increase in new reported defects compared to the same time last year.

“This means that a lot of the fantastic progress we have made over the past 12 months has been undone. After listening to our communities, it is clear that something urgently needs to be done to address this.

“That is why we are planning a major drive to tackle this situation and we are calling this our Post-Winter Highways Recovery Plan. Once finalised, we will share how our actions over the coming weeks and months will ensure people will see a difference, so please bear with us and help us support our crews to get this job done.”

Cllr Alan White

Councillor Ian Parry, speaking at Thursday’s full council meeting, said he seemed to have spent most of his time since Christmas apologising to people for local roads.

“It raises the fact that roads are the thing that affects everyone, no matter how old you are or where you live, when they turn out to be in a pretty poor state because of things outside our control and the worst winter in terms of wet weather we have seen for over 100 years.

“It’s had an amazing effect upon the condition of our roads – something I don’t think we’ve ever seen before and certainly something I haven’t seen before in terms of the impact that’s had on our roads.

“We’re not completely blameless in this. We should have realised earlier that this was the new norm and perhaps we should have re-profiled some of our work to tackle some of those flooding issues.

“We should have worked more closely perhaps with landowners on their duties as well to make sure watercourses flow and that people do not use our highways as some form of drainage ditch. They’re meant to drain off the highway rather than into the highway.

“My cabinet colleagues are living and breathing this at the moment. They are having sleepless nights over this and doing all they can pulling out the stops.

“The programme will receive additional funding yet to be specified but this isn’t necessarily just about money, its about deliverability. We’re in mid-May and it’s only recently we’ve been able to get teams out there repairing roads because you can’t repair roads when it’s flooded or it’s pouring down.

“There is a coherent plan and resources in place. What we need is for the sun to shine and us all to have a bit of patience because we will get there.”

Cllr Ian Parry

Cabinet member Councillor Mark Deaville, who has taken on responsibility for strategic highways in recent months, said:

“I read a fact that there wasn’t one single day in April that we didn’t have rainfall somewhere in the UK. We’re up against it. What it’s left is a massive task to repair our highways.

“We are addressing the winter recovery plan as if it is an emergency because it is an emergency. We’re having razor-like focus on repairing not only category one and and two defects, but the real area of concern are the category three – the defects that are deemed not dangerous.

“Some of those have been hanging about for years and years and they fill our mailboxes up with dissatisfied customers asking ‘when are you going to repair my potholes?’. This winter recovery plan is totally focusing on reducing that backlog of defects and we will be working very closely with all members to do that.”

Cllr Mark Deaville

Founder of Lichfield Live and editor of the site.

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Steven Norman
11 months ago

What happenned to “Highway Chief” Councillor David Williams?

Bob
11 months ago

All talk just get on with it.

James Hall
11 months ago

Probably all talk yet again same excuse every year need action not words.

The Gardener
11 months ago

Cllr Parry is on the right lines with flooding caused by a variety of issues allowing excess water to penetrant road surfaces and weaken them, so yes, drainage on public and private land is important, maybe invest in more gully wagons and get them out and about more regularly rather than the present where it’s on an ad hoc basis as reports come in, a bit of regular maintenence can save so much in after repairs, think, ‘a stich in time’.
I’ve also noticed many holes around islands and main roads I note that on the smaller islands in particular 40 ton lorries having to go around them in a very tight circle is just carving them up so perhaps a much stronger tarmac is requited in such areas that can withstand a 40 tonner turning on a sixpence.
Unfortunately the only real solution is resurfacing a road completely which is very expensive, however break it down into the most needy and work up from there a little at a time as budgets allow and in time most will be done.

John C
11 months ago

What a load of tosh. Whom do they think they are fooling?

We have all seen how the roads have deteriorated since austerity was introduced in 2010 and local authorities have been starved of the funds needed to maintain the roads properly. Not the result of a wet Winter. It’s a pity the Tory councillors haven’t got the courage to call the Tory government out.

Mark Webster
11 months ago

Winter recovery plan! We’re five months into the year!

Patching up defects, only to have them come back worse in the coming months. Roads needs resurfacing.

The state of the roads is the result of 14 years of austerity, a failed policy that has impoverished everything: roads, education, health, policing, the courts, prisons, defence, productivity, housing, transport …

Ken H
11 months ago

It’s all down to maintenance, water lying on roads and undermining them.
Don’t know what they would of looked like if we had weeks of snow and hard frost’s, like we used to have, the surface’s would of been blown up.
Lucky for them and us it’s only been rain.
Cut down on maintenance, pay the price on costly repairs after.
Never seen the new machine’s they are supposed to be using, all talk, pity talk didn’t get the roads repaired