Northern Ireland

Anger over Newry, Mourne and Down having ‘most potholes’ in north

Council area had over 20,000 potholes reported to Department for Infrastructure

Road repairs are set to be further affected by a squeeze on council budgets
Over 20,000 potholes are reported annually in the Newry, Mourne and Down area, the local council's chairperson has highlighted. (Joe Giddens/PA)

The Department for Infrastructure (DfI) has been criticised for a failure in road repairs that has left a council area with the “most potholes” in the north.

Newry, Mourne and Down District Council (NMDDC) chair, the SDLP’s Pete Byrne, levelled a complaint of over 20k reported potholes a year in the area to DfI southern divisional manager Mark McPeak during a recent council meeting.

However, DfI Roads alluded to a £50m black hole in its department’s Structural Maintenance Funding Plan (SMFP) as a key factor, and said the department was “trying its best”.

Mr Byrne said: “The Southern Division of DfI covers three council areas Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon (ABC), Ards and North Down and us (NMDDC). And we have by far the most amount of potholes across all councils in the North.

“We can see how many potholes councils report on. The lowest council reporting just over 3k a year, we are over 20k a year for the last five years, bar the year of Covid. And we have the most amount that are not fixed.”

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He added: “I understand that Ards and North Down is a smaller council area, it reported 4k potholes and most of them are fixed. ABC around 14k a year, and 12.5k are fixed. We have 20k to 21k a year and 16k are fixed, so that leaves every single year 4.5k potholes not being repaired because of lack of budgets.



“I understand that you might be spending more in NMDDC because you are fixing more potholes compared to other areas, but it means our roads are in a worse shape.”

In 2019, DfI published the Barton Independent Review into funding requirements for structural maintenance of the NI road network.

The report highlighted the challenges presented by current funding levels and estimated that DfI needed £140m a year to properly fund the SMFP.

The recent council meeting was told that DfI’s current SMFP budget was £89m.

Mr McPeak said: ”Potholes are a very complex issue and I appreciate there are different amounts of potholes across various areas.

“There is a difficulty with the amount of potholes you are referring to and the amount of potholes reported. That is a combination of potholes reported on the online system, which could eventually be multiple reports on top of potholes inspected by our inspectors which are also in the system.

“We also try to maximise our resources to get our potholes fixed. We have a combination of an internal team and external contractors.

“It is true to say there are more potholes in this area, but that is potentially because there are multiple reports.

“The funding that is represented across the division is done proportionately based on criteria.”

He added: “All I can say is that we are doing our best with limited funding and limited resources.”