The move follows pressure from the House of Commons transport committee for more stable and better planned funding for local road maintenance.
The goal is for councils to be able to deliver proper planned maintenance that reduces the occurrence of pot holes rather than using all their limited resources to run around chasing after them.
In July 2019 the committee published a report , which proposed a front-loaded, five-year funding settlement for councils to tackle the historic maintenance backlog.
"The current short-term approach to funding local road maintenance is not fit for purpose," the MPs said.
The Department for Transport (DfT) has now published its response to the committee report, supporting its main key recommendations on funding and expenditure.
Transport committee chair Lilian Greenwood MP said: 鈥淎 simple visit to the shops or the regular journey to work can result in injury or damage to someone鈥檚 vehicle from the plague of potholes on our local roads. This is an issue that affects everyone 鈥 pedestrians, cyclists and drivers 鈥 every day. We therefore welcome the commitment from the Department to work across government on giving local councils the cash and long-term funding certainty they need to tackle the effects on roads of years of neglect.
鈥淭he new DfT ministerial team鈥檚 willingness to engage with the work and recommendations of the committee is refreshing. We鈥檒l continue to press to ensure the government commits to proper funding to make sure roads are safe for all.鈥
The road maintenance lobby group Asphalt Industry Alliance (AIA) also welcomed the warm response to the recommendations. AIA chair Rick Green said: 鈥淲e agree with the transport select committee鈥檚 report and the government鈥檚 response on the need for a long-term approach to investment in highways maintenance.
鈥淥ur annual local authority road maintenance (ALARM) survey highlights that [in England only] there is an average annual shortfall of 拢4.1m per authority in highways maintenance budgets, with a 拢8bn bill to fix the backlog.
鈥淲e believe that an extra 拢1bn, each year for 10 years [England only], is needed to bring road conditions up to a level from which they can be maintained cost effectively going forward. We hope those in control of the purse strings will heed the calls for a significant long-term settlement.鈥
Cllr Darren Rodwell, the Local Government Association鈥檚 transport spokesman, concurred. 鈥淭he government鈥檚 infrastructure strategy needs to provide stable, devolved infrastructure budgets to councils, in the same way as Highways England and Network Rail," he said. "Providing councils with a five-year funding allocation would mean they can invest in road maintenance and other infrastructure projects.鈥
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