Britain's roads are a mess - and could cost £14bn to fix, says 'Mr Pothole'
Motoring experts say our roads have never been in such a poor state.
Mark Morrell, who campaigns under the name Mr Pothole, put the repairs backlog at £14billion, up from 3.75bn in 2000. He believes it down to a long-term lack of investment in resurfacing.
He added: “Cuts in funding means cheaper repairs. It’s badly maintained roads that suffer in winter conditions and rain.”
Motoring disputes expert Scott Dixon blamed “cuts, a lack of trained staff and repairs that are rarely to the correct specification”.
The AA said pothole-related calls in the first four months of 2023 rose 23% compared to 2022.
Drivers warned running out of fuel could result in £100 fine and pointsThe AA wants drivers to report every road crack they see in a bid for authorities to “understand the true state of our roads”.
Jack Cousens, AA’s head of roads policy, said: “On safety grounds alone, we need to shine a light on the awful condition of UK roads.”
Dangers include damaged shock absorbers, broken springs and splits which catch cyclist wheels.