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Jobs & Education1 min ago
More good news from government. KS said councils can get on with repairing potholes, giving 1.6 billion to do so. Happy days.
No best answer has yet been selected by nicebloke1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This is only good news if they repair the holes properly. Where I live they usually just throw in loose shingle, tamp it down and consider it repaired. In a matter of days, traffic passing over pulls the shingle out and the situation is worse. The hole is still there and now there's loose shingle ready to be thrown into a few windscreens.
“All councils, all roads, everywhere.”
£1.6bn will not fix the holes in all roads everywhere. The cost of fixing all the holes in all the roads is estimated to be around £12bn and will take nine years to complete. In that time, of course, more holes will appear.:
“This is why the government stopped any new road projects.”
No it isn’t. The government has axed a number of roadbuilding projects because its priorities lie elsewhere. The Stonehenge Tunnel, for example, would have provided enormous relief from congestion for small towns and villages in that area (coincidentally at the centre of a large cluster of constituencies held by the Conservatives) and was set to cost around £2bn. The annual hotel bill for so-called asylum seekers is around £3bn.
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