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Thursday, February 09 2012

Canterbury street monitor Fred Whale astonished at spread of potholes

Video: Street inspector Fred Whale complains about the spread of potholes.

A pensioner has criticised the way the county’s roads are being fixed.

Fred Whale has spent the last 17 years campaigning to get potholes repaired around the city.

But after the coldest winter for 31 years has left some of Canterbury’s roads looking more like minefields, the 79-year-old former RAF man fears for public safety.

He said: “I reported the worst of the potholes around Victoria Road, St Mildred’s Place and Cogans Terrace in Wincheap at the start of January. But, here we are at the start of March and it was only last week that anyone came out and decided to start fixing them.

“I heard a little boy came off his bike last week in St Mildred’s Place and hurt his leg. He lost control as his wheels got caught up in a pothole.”

Street inspector Fred Whale measures a pothole in St Mildred's Place, WincheapMr Whale (pictured left), a great grandfather-of-four, is no stranger to measuring the width and depth of potholes around Wincheap.

He was in the Gazette in February 2007, highlighting the need to tackle similar sized holes.

He said: “Lots of these holes can be classified as P1, that’s priority one, meaning there’s a danger to public safety and they must be fixed within two and a half hours of being reported and inspected.

“But the workmen have been around here last weekend and only fixed half the holes, leaving the rest alone.”

KCC leader Paul CarterKent County Council leader Paul Carter stressed this week that crumbling road surfaces will be fixed as part of a major spring repair programme.

He said: “At the start of the year I announced an extra £1m to £2 m spending on a major pothole repair blitz, when the weather conditions are right. Plans are well advanced and this money can be increased substantially if needed to complete the job properly.

“We cannot hit the task as hard as we would like until the winter is over and the weather improves.

“The pothole repairs will see a much larger army of road maintenance crews mobilised in the spring to carry out a comprehensive programme of permanent repairs, which will stand the test of time.

“The work will be on a find-and-fix traditional piece-work basis to agreed quality standards.”

Specific firms will focus on fixing local areas, rather than handing out the repair job to one big contractor for the whole county.

Cllr Carter added: “The successful firms will be announced at the start of April.  Then you will quickly see the results of our foresight and planning to put the long hard winter of 2010 behind us.”

Is there a pothole problem where you live?

Send your pictures and stories to kentishgazette@thekmgroup.co.uk or Kentish Gazette at Gazette House at 5-8 Boorman Way, Estuary View Business Park, Whitstable, CT5 3SE.

Thursday, March 04 2010

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