Council to store more grit
Thursday 16th July 2009, 8:15AM BST.
Council bosses in Telford plan to store more salt in a bid to prevent the road chaos seen in the county earlier this year.
Telford & Wrekin Council was forced to slash the number of roads gritted in the borough as supplies of road salt ran out during a heavy cold snap in February.
Gritting lorries were making repeated runs throughout the night as freezing conditions gripped the country.
Telford & Wrekin Council used almost double the amount of salt it would normally use over the winter and the Government was forced to intervene in February to decide how much salt each local authority would receive due to the nationwide shortage.
Now the council has unveiled plans for an extra salt barn at its Granville House depot to store a further 300 tonnes “to help keep the borough’s network of key A and B roads and bus and school routes free of ice if future winters are as hard as the last one”.
The council maintains normal stock levels of between 1,000 and 1,400 tonnes of salt at the depot.
Councillor Stephen Bentley, cabinet member for environment, said: “Our winter service policy will see us grit the borough’s most heavily-used routes and aims to reduce the likelihood of accidents and injury. We undertake a review of the policy before the start of each winter season.
“Last winter’s experience shows we need to keep additional stocks of salt and to review gritting routes and priorities should we be faced with national shortages in future.”
The council said most schools managed to remain open during the winter, but bus services were affected.
Sylvia Herbert, council spokeswoman, said: “Despite the harsh weather conditions earlier this year, the salting of feeder roads to schools was successful in ensuring that, for the vast majority of the winter, all the schools remained open.
“While main access routes to industrial estates remained clear, the salt shortage had an effect on public transport.”
Members of the council’s cabinet are being asked to invest an extra £15,000 to build the new barn, which would supply enough grit for seven runs in cases of frost and four in cases of snow, when they meet next week.
In May, it was revealed Shropshire County Council was forced to spend more than £1.2 million extra on keeping the county’s roads open during last winter, while, in April, Powys County Council unveiled plans for a new £250,000 depot to store salt in Newtown.
By Jon Ball
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Store more grit and freezing conditions? I thought that all authorities were supposed to be on the global warming bandwagon.
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I will believe it when I see it…. they grit the roads at the totally wrong time of day, half gets stuck in tyres and the other well ends up on the footpath which is great if you are walking anywhere
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There’s nowt quite like bolting the stable door after the horse has gone is there?
Great idea, maybe they will have some spare for the numerous grit bins around the various housing estates too, so that people that live on sloping roads can also get out and do their shopping etc. Places like some roads in Brookside have horrendous sloping roads, yet no sign of any salt at all. God knows how emergency vehicles were supposed to cope then and ordinary mortals such as myself had no chance to get out due to lack of road salt available. Once upon a time there would be small trucks coming around chucking shovelfuls of salt about on road corners and near old folks bungalows, now they are all left to fend for themselves due to lack of forward planning and adequate supplies.
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You moaners do make me laugh! Im pretty sure that the highway code (sections 203-206) insists that all drivers take extreme care when driving in icy conditions because some roads could well be not gritted. However, the majority of todays driver turn into morons as soon as they pass their test. Everything that was half learned in order to pass it is immediately forgotten, roads become race tracks and the powers at be are always to blame when an accident occurs. WAKE-UP!! Just because it’s 20 degrees inside your modern shiny car doesnt mean its the same outside. If you have to scrape ice from your window screen in the morning, it doesnt take a rocket scientist to work out that the roads will be slippery, gritted on not. Take responcibility for you own actions and read the highway code!
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good idea
due to climate change i reckon a few more wacky winter weather episodes are on their way to shropshire so its sensible to plan for this and budget for this extra cost which our lust for cheap power has imposed on the tax payer
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