Road Maintenance Programmes – Caithness and Sutherland
22nd May 2013
The Highland Council’s Caithness and Sutherland Area Committee has approved the structural maintenance programmes for roads and bridges in the area for the coming year.
The budgets allocated to Caithness and Sutherland for structural road and bridge maintenance totalled £2.44 million. This figure includes £570,000, which is Caithness and Sutherland’s share of the additional £2 million allocated by the Council for road maintenance. The overall figure of £2.44 million does not include the allocation for winter maintenance or routine road maintenance. The Committee also welcomed confirmation that the area was to benefit from additional Scottish Government funding of £60,000, which will allow work on projects at Strathnaver and Forss.
Following a vote, the Area Committee agreed, for the current year, to reduce the spend on surface dressing and to increase the spend on drainage maintenance. The increased spend on drainage maintenance will be targeted at improving roadside drainage to keep water off the road, to help prevent longer term damage to the road surface and to ensure that future new surfacing lasts as long as possible.
Councillor Deirdre MacKay, Leader of the Caithness and Sutherland Area Committee, said: “Our roads are our most important asset. It is important to be flexible when allocating funding and to be able to target the areas of greatest need. Improved drainage on our roads is something we all want to see as it provides a real benefit, and I am sure people will welcome this focus on drainage maintenance. It is intended to return to a full surface dressing programme next year, and this should benefit from the work done to improve roadside drainage.”
Related Businesses
Related Articles
Members have considered an update on the Council's medium term financial plan and the impact of the UK and Scottish Governments’ budgets on the coming year’s funding settlement. The position is currently looking more positive than initially planned for, however more detail needs to be worked through.
In November, The Highland Council launched a public statutory consultation to seek views on the proposed introduction of a Visitor Levy scheme across the Highlands. The Council has announced an extension to this consultation period, which will now give businesses, visitors and communities until 31 March 2025, an additional seven weeks, to take part and have their say.
In the light of the financial forecast for 2025-26, Highland Council is inviting you to tell us more in the budget preparation for the coming financial year. The budget engagement builds on extensive budget participation which took place in the winter of 2023-24.
The information provided is a summary of reports from operational staff and is intended to give a general indication of typical conditions in each area at a point in time. It is not intended to imply that any individual route is entirely snow and ice free and drivers must be aware that conditions can change rapidly and make their own assessment of conditions for travelling.
Every year Highland Council invites all tenants to have their say on the rent levels for the following year. The Council encourages everyone that lives in a council house to take this chance to have their say.
Communities and Place Committee met yesterday (Wednesday 27 November 2024) and Members agreed the Highland Local Child Poverty Action Report which includes actions for delivery in 2024/25. Reducing child poverty is a priority for the Council and its partners.
The information provided is a summary of reports from operational staff and is intended to give a general indication of typical conditions in each area at a point in time. It is not intended to imply that any individual route is entirely snow and ice free and drivers must be aware that conditions can change rapidly and make their own assessment of conditions for travelling.
Members of the Highland Council's Community and Place Committee have given their support to an action plan focusing on the operating of public conveniences over the next 10 years. Whilst not a statutory function, the Council is the main provider of public conveniences located throughout Highland, operating 74 sites.
A report published on 27 November 2024 by LGIU (Local Government Information Unit) looks at the state of funding for councils by the Scottish Government. Confidence in the sustainability of council finances is critically low.
At today's (Wednesday 27 November 2024) Communities & Place Committee, Members agreed the most appropriate long-term strategic direction for residual waste management is to continue to utilise a merchant provider solution. Communities & Place Committee Chair, Cllr Graham MacKenzie said: "After careful consideration and analysis it has been agreed that a merchant provider solution is considered the most appropriate long term solution to our statutory waste management obligations, and that an energy-from- waste facility within the Highlands is not considered to be a suitable course of action.