The Transport Committee will investigate ways to help limit the
damage and disruption to England's roads and pavements that work
carried out by utility companies can have.
In a new inquiry launched today
(6 December), the cross-party Committee will examine how better
management, regulation and enforcement could benefit both road
users – including cyclists and pedestrians – and the local
authorities charged with maintaining road surface quality and
overseeing traffic flows.
MPs will look into the effectiveness of issuing fines to utility
companies that mismanage their street works, and of the
inspection scheme that was introduced in 2023.
They will also scrutinise the system of local authorities'
renting road lanes out to utility companies and to what extent
this incentivises timely completion of street works, as well as
scrutinising other potential examples of best practice such as
coordinating works between utility companies.
The full terms of reference for the inquiry are
below.
Chair of the Transport Committee said:
“There's nothing like having your journey delayed by road
works, especially when they seem to take far longer than needed
to complete. But often it's excavations by utility companies
rather than road maintenance that are the cause.
“Today the Transport Committee launches an inquiry that will
investigate how street works can best be managed to minimise
disruption and damage to roads and traffic, and be better
coordinated.
“The Committee now welcomes written evidence submissions that
will help us ask the right questions and get the best
answers.”
Call for written evidence
The Committee now welcomes written evidence submissions that
respond to the following terms of reference for the inquiry.
Submissions should be made via the Committee's website by
11.59 on 21 January 2025.
a. The effect of utility works on
road and pavement surface quality and on maintenance needs and
costs, and how local authorities can manage this.
b. Whether local authorities have
sufficient powers and resources to manage the effect of street
works on congestion, travel disruption, pavement access and
accessibility.
c. The effectiveness of
processes for notification of works and obtaining permits,
including the classification of emergency works and opportunities
for coordinated works, and what makes for a good working
relationship between utility companies and highway
authorities.
d. Whether fines are a sufficient
deterrent to poor practice, whether other enforcement mechanisms
would work better, and whether the inspections regime introduced
in 2023 has improved the quality of reinstatement works.
e. Whether lane rental is a
successful model, the potential merits of making it available in
more areas, and what other tools or best practices could be more
widely adopted.