17 May 2013
UNISON Scotland response to Accounts Commission report on
audit update on roads maintenance:
UNISON said today that the key point to emerge from the
report is the scale of the cut in expenditure on roads maintenance – down by 21
per cent.*
Dave
Watson, UNISON’s head of Bargaining and Campaigns, said that the public will be
scathing about the report concluding that road conditions have remained largely
the same in the last two years. Indeed, it concedes that the proportion of
acceptable roads is lower than in 2005.
The public services union, which represents staff involved
in planning, road maintenance and land services, also warned that some councils
are planning for up to 50 years use on road surfaces designed originally to
last 15 years.
Dave
said: “The fact is, if you cut spending by one fifth, the only way you can
maintain the illusion of maintaining standards is by patch and mend.
“Potholes
are being patched rather than surfaces being replaced. Any cyclist, let alone
motorist can feel the difference.”
He
highlighted the following points in the report:
·
council
payments to compensate drivers for pothole damage have risen, from around
£340,000 in 2007/08 to £1.2 million in 2011/12
·
Forty-five
per cent of local roads users in Scotland consider roads condition to be poor,
very poor or terrible, the worst rate in the UK.
·
Scotland
is perceived to have more potholes per mile than any other region in the UK,
and more worn or faded roads markings.
·
Drivers
in Scotland are more likely to report pothole damage, with 44 per cent saying
their cars had been damaged at some point over the last two years.
Dave
added: “Any new formats for roads asset management plans, or calls for more or
different data on the roads - or indeed if any proposals emerge for structural
change – is just tinkering around the edges. It is the scale of the cutbacks
which is the issue and people can see and feel the bumpy roads on a daily basis.”
Chris
Stephens, UNISON’s Land and Environmental Services convenor, said: “Road
surfaces are designed to last 15 years. However, in many councils this is being
stretched to 50 years.
“If
local roads were funded to the level of trunk roads we would of course see
significant improvement.”
ENDS
*
“The percentage of local
roads in acceptable condition has increased marginally from 66.1 to 66.7 per
cent over the last two years, despite a reduction in roads maintenance spending
from £492 million in 2009/10 to around £400 million in 2010/11 (a 21 per cent
reduction in real terms).”
Notes to editors:
1. UNISON is Scotland’s largest trade union representing
160,000 members working in the public sector in Scotland, including staff at
all 32 local authorities.
.
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