REFORM UK councillors have approved plans to improve and invest in Staffordshire’s roads and transport over the coming year.
The “highways roadmap” aims to tackle long-standing maintenance issues and prioritises higher quality repairs to reduce disruption for road users, a report to Staffordshire County Council’s cabinet said.
The meeting was told that investment included more than £40million from developer funds, which were contributed to local areas as part of securing planning permission, to enable new developments and economic growth.
A further £15million is being invested into dealing with “low-level” road defects.
Cllr Peter Mason, cabinet member for strategic highways, said:
“For 2026-27 we’re bringing a total planned investment across highways and transport of circa £138million. The biggest proportion – about 53% of that – is in highway maintenance and about £72.8million will go into highways.
“This is to try and reflect the scale of the ageing network, the growing backlog and more frequent impactful weather events that are diminishing the quality of our roads.
“The emphasis we are placing is on long-term preventative maintenance rather than short-term fixes. We’re looking to address structural issues across our networks, tackle hotspots that are in particularly poor condition and deal with some of the drainage issues and footways.
“Additionally over the two years we ourselves, through local funding, will be investing £15million into fixing those low-level defects, particularly those potholes that blight everyday journeys of all road users.
“This is an attempt to stop the decline each year where we have more and more emergency events come the winter months.
“Alongside maintenance, 2026-27 investment supports junction upgrades, traffic signalling, local safety schemes, bus infrastructure and services, journey time reliability and connectivity. We’ve brought it all together because that presents an opportunity for us to achieve one of our goals, which is more pounds in the ground.”
Cllr Martin Rogerson asked what plans were in place to address problems with footpaths.
Cllr Mason responded:
“Our footways have deteriorated and part of that was that the maintenance programme was suspended for a number of years because of the heavy push for digital connectivity in domestic areas. They were being dug up by the utilities.
“However, that did go on for some time and only really got reinstated last year. There were some issues with it and at the back end of the year I did suspend some of the work – we weren’t getting reliable outcomes in terms of the quality.
“We’ve been away and reviewed that and I’m pleased to say in this capital programme there is £3.1million allocated to footway repairs.
“Alongside that, we’ve brought some additional changes to the way we deliver them – one being dedicated pre-works weed treatments. The second is that we’re going to do road sweeping on a daily basis at the end of each shift so we don’t see the gully issues that were arising from the works last year.
“The third one is we’re effectively bringing back a Staffordshire County Council clerk of works to oversee preventative maintenance. They were lost as part of the overall plan ten or 12 years ago when we outsourced our supply.
“This gives the county council more control, more oversight and more input to ensure the works are ready to be executed and are being executed to the standards we expect.”
Fellow cabinet members approved the combined highways and transport capital programme, which is set to be submitted to the Government’s Department for Transport as the council’s Local Transport Delivery Plan.
Cllr Andrew Mynors, cabinet member for connectivity, said:
“This time of year is very stressful for residents looking at the network and driving on rural roads. I think we’re working very well together to try and bring some common sense into the management of these networks.”
But Conservative councillors at the authority have said the highways roadmap looks more like a “car crash”.
They highlighted a three-month pause on new repairs between July and October last year, as well as deterioration of Staffordshire’s roads during the winter.
Shadow strategic highways cabinet member Cllr Simon Tagg said:
“Residents are now seeing some of the worst roads we have ever experienced and it’s no coincidence.
“You have to fix roads when conditions are right. Instead, Reform chose to slam the brakes on repairs for months during the best possible weather, leaving Staffordshire completely exposed when the wet winter arrived.
“The result? Thousands fewer potholes fixed and thousands more appearing.
“Reform are still restricting roadworks in town centres meaning repairs to many of the worst roads in the county may not happen. Nobody enjoys roadworks but people expect their roads to be safe and maintained.
“We all know that lack of Government funding has had an impact on the roads for many years, which is why we need to use what we have intelligently and effectively.
“Until Reform change their failed approach, Staffordshire residents will continue to pay the price for their mistakes.”

No doubt they’ll still adopt the crazy practice of repairing one pot hole and ignoring the others next to it ? I’ve complained to our MP and highways about this practice and to-date neither have confirmed it will stop.
Someone’s making a fortune out of our misery.
We can see with our own eyes that the roads are a disgrace. Reform have been a failure, and thankfully people are starting to realise that. Could you imagine them running a country?!
Reform have been a complete shambles.. the council has gone rapidly downhill since they came in, not helped by the constant changing of the leadership, leaving the whole council in limbo. They just don’t seem to have a clue what they’re doing?
I don’t think I’ve ever known things be so bad.. god help the country as a whole if they ever make it to government.
Mr L the council website only allows reporting of 1 pothole so to report half a dozen you have to log on half a dozen times
I’ll believe it when I see it, the start doesn’t look very good, worse now than before
That’s all they do is talk,talk,talk……
I thought the ‘amazing Pothole Pro from JCB was supposed to sort our roads out. JCB are spending vast amounts of money advertising it on TV and I’ve never witnessed it being used, probably can’t afford it.
Traffic lights in town by Tesco, fix one leave the rest! Ryknild Street by pedestrian lights fix two leave the rest! A5127 between A38 and Trent Valley island, fix some and a few months later they are as bad as ever! A51 by Whittington Barracks Island and HS2 depot fixed quite a few very but very roughly a few months ago…you’ve guessed it, the potholes are all back again…..and on and on and on it goes, nothing gets done properly. We had to walk through the town centre yesterday, some of the paving is abysmal and an accident just waiting to happen, loose paving slabs, very uneven brick paving.It’s impossible trying to report things online as COMPUTER SAYS NO.The roads /footpaths in Lichfield are absolute disgrace, so why come here.