Some 38% of 3,068 drivers surveyed – representing the equivalent of 15.2m people – listed the condition and maintenance of local roads as a concern, up from 33% in 2019, putting it ahead of other issues such as drivers using handheld phones (32%), the poor standard of other motorists’ driving (27%) and the aggressive behaviour of other drivers (26%).
This year’s research highlighted a noticeable increase in the number of drivers who say local roads have deteriorated with 52% saying conditions are worse than 12 months ago, compared with 49% who said this in 2019.
Only 6% of drivers think the state of local roads has improved, a dramatic fall on last year’s 11%.
These national findings correlate with the RAC’s own data which shows that the third quarter of 2020 – July, September and October – saw 1,871 call-outs** for damaged shock absorbers, broken suspension springs or distorted wheels – breakdowns that are most likely to have been caused by poor road surfaces.
This is the highest third-quarter percentage of all RAC breakdowns seen since 2015.
The Pothole Index 2, which is the RAC’s most accurate long-term indicator of the health of the UK’s roads, now stands at 1.57. This means drivers are nearly 1.6 times as likely to suffer a pothole-related breakdown as they would have been in 2006 when the data was first analysed in this way.
While this is the lowest figure seen since Q1 2008 – the point at which a marked decline in the quality of the UK’s began – it unfortunately ends a steady reduction in the index which started to fall from 2.67 in Q2 2018.
The index’s all-time high figure was 3.5 in Q1 2010 following a very cold early winter.
Those based in rural areas are more likely to say local roads have worsened (59%), as are older drivers, with 62% of those aged 45 and over saying conditions have deteriorated.
Meanwhile, more of those living in London (10%) and other urban centres (12%) think the state of local roads is better in 2020 when compared to the previous year.
For the overwhelming majority who say conditions have deteriorated, problems with road surfaces, such as potholes, remains the number-one gripe for 97% of drivers.
But this year there has also been a sharp increase in complaints related to other factors such as the visibility of signage (cited by 46% of drivers in 2020, compared with just 17% a year ago), the amount of roadside litter (35%, up from 23%) and a lack of grass and/or foliage maintenance (34% up from 22%).
RAC head of roads policy Nicholas Lyes said: “These findings are a big concern given that last year’s relatively mild winter should not, in normal circumstances, have led to a further decline in road surface quality.
“Usually, RAC patrols see the fewest number of pothole-related breakdowns in the third quarter which coincides with the summer, with volumes having dropped steadily from the high point recorded in the first three months of the year.
"This normally correlates with councils carrying out work to repair potholes in early spring that have appeared over the winter.
“But, faced with the early stages of the pandemic, local authorities might not have been able to keep up their planned maintenance programmes, possibly due to staffing issues, and local roads suffered as a consequence.
"This also calls into question just how much progress has actually been made in fixing the 11 million ‘nuisance’ potholes cited by transport secretary Grant Shapps in May.
"On the flipside, with less traffic, there was perhaps a far better opportunity for councils to fix the roads than in previous years, so we were pleased to see that several local authorities did just that."
“It’s also important to point out that our Report on Motoring research was conducted before the re-opening of schools in September – a development that has led to a rise in vehicle use and possibly to further degradation of unrepaired road surfaces.
“While in last month’s Spending Review the Chancellor committed £1.1bn to local roads maintenance in 2021-22, including £500m to fix potholes and resurface roads, we continue to call for a long-term funding strategy for local roads under local authority control to improve and guarantee their condition into the future.
"The emphasis shouldn’t just be on filling potholes but carrying out proper maintenance that prevents them from occurring in the first place.
- The RAC guide to the Great British pothole and other road surface defects
- How to report a pothole and claim for damage online
- Pothole related call-outs persist during coronavirus lockdown despite 60%drop in traffic
“Our research for the RAC Report on Motoring identified increased support for this to be achieved by ring-fencing some funds from current fuel duty contributions.
"More than four-fifths (82%) of those surveyed were in favour of having a proportion of current taxation – duty and VAT on fuel, as well as Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) or ‘car tax’ – put aside for spending on local road maintenance.
"This compares to 77% who supported this idea in 2019. Simply ring-fencing 2ppl of existing fuel duty revenue alone would secure £4.7bn of funding over a five-year period.”
While research for the 2020 RAC Report on Motoring shows there has been no change in the number of motorists who say the condition of motorways and high-speed dual carriageways has deteriorated since 2019 (28%), only 6% believe they have actually improved, well down on last year’s 11%.
As with local roads, surface issues are the most common complaint (82%), but there has also been an increase in 2020 in the number of drivers who say that conditions are worse due to litter (37% versus 30% last year), lane marking visibility (36% versus 27%), signage visibility (30% versus 19%) and lack of grass or foliage maintenance (24% versus 18%).
Read the full report on the state of the UK's roads in 2020.
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