• Anger as "dangerous" potholes repaired on World Championships route whi

    From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jul 31 05:54:32 2023
    πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

    As the days left ticker drops below three days to go until the UCI Cycling World Championships begins in Scotland, the state of Glasgow roads has again been thrust into the spotlight. This time as politicians, pothole campaigners, a taxi federation
    chairman, as well as numerous locals, have hit out at the council fixing defects on roads used by the event as others nearby remain "appalling" and "dangerous".

    In a piece published this weekend by the Scottish Sun (link is external), it was reported how council contractors had been spotted undergoing last-minute repairs to roads on the route, near to where the finish line of the road race events in Glasgow will
    be found. Nearby, but not on the route, the newspaper snapped photos of pothole-hit roads and "craters" that had not been fixed.

    Commenting on the situation, Conservative MSP Graham Simpson, called the Scottish National Party-controlled council's repairs "a kick in the teeth for motorists" and said it was "appalling" that potholes on the route were seemingly being prioritised.

    In response to the story, Glasgow City Council insisted that "no specific funding had been set aside for road repairs ahead of the event" and explained how the UCI "requires routes to be in an appropriate condition to hold the races, which we continue to
    do as part of our usual roads maintenance programme."

    However, MSP and former shadow transport secretary Simpson hit out at the "dangerous conditions" locals see every day and called the state of Glasgow's roads "abysmal", comments backed up by pothole activist Mr Pothole, real name Mark Morrell.

    "Glasgow is the pothole capital of the UK," he said. "Now you've got the local council desperately trying to patch up the roads when clearly they've known about it long enough. It's appalling. Does it mean we need to have a big cycling event for them to
    fix our roads? It seems like a bid to prevent bad publicity.

    "But residents and visitors are suffering damage to their vehicles due to roads not being maintained to a satisfactory standard."

    Scottish Taxi Federation chairman John Kyle added: "Roads all over Glasgow and the outskirts are in such a bad condition. This is just a temporary fix. I'd like to see the workforce focusing on not just filling in potholes but sorting them properly."

    "I'm happy they are fixing roads for the cyclists," a Glasgow nightclub boss also told the newspaper. "But as far as sorting the rest goes, they've had years to get this correct and haven't done so."

    In the article, the Scottish Sun notes defects at George Square, St Vincent Place and St Vincent Street were repaired, but shared photos of similar potholes on nearby John Street, Virginia Street, Rottenrow and Bothwell Street, as well as a collapsed
    manhole cover on West Campbell Street, none of which feature on the road race routes.

    Antony Kildare of the charity IAM RoadSmart said "Repairs should be done in a systemic and planned way. It needs to be prioritised and funded to support safer roads, and enable events like this to go ahead with less risk of injury."

    Meanwhile, as the UCI's social media account dedicated to the World Championships shared a video trailer for the event, saying "Glasgow is ready to show off the power of the bike" as well as its cultural offering, several replies asked about the state of
    the city's roads, another suggesting it was also ready to show off the "world-class cycling infrastructure" seen below.

    Potholes have been a hot topic in the build up to the UCI's premier event visiting Scottish soil. Back in February we reported that a local cyclist had raised the alarm over "dangerous" potholes on the road race routes.
    2023 World Championships Glasgow road race potholes (Liam McReanan)

    Then, in June, a "crude" last-minute "patch-up" of potholes was criticised, a representative from Tadej Pogačar's Slovenian team reportedly saying the Scottish roads are the "worst they'd ever seen".

    https://road.cc/content/news/world-championships-pothole-repairs-spark-anger-302897

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  • From Spike@21:1/5 to swldx...@gmail.com on Mon Jul 31 15:07:51 2023
    This article brings forward the thought that the sooner Scotland gets its independence, the better. Providing the English don’t have to carry on
    paying for it, of course. Just give England a vote on it.


    swldx...@gmail.com <swldxer1958@gmail.com> wrote:
    πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

    As the days left ticker drops below three days to go until the UCI
    Cycling World Championships begins in Scotland, the state of Glasgow
    roads has again been thrust into the spotlight. This time as politicians, pothole campaigners, a taxi federation chairman, as well as numerous
    locals, have hit out at the council fixing defects on roads used by the
    event as others nearby remain "appalling" and "dangerous".

    In a piece published this weekend by the Scottish Sun (link is external),
    it was reported how council contractors had been spotted undergoing last-minute repairs to roads on the route, near to where the finish line
    of the road race events in Glasgow will be found. Nearby, but not on the route, the newspaper snapped photos of pothole-hit roads and "craters"
    that had not been fixed.

    Commenting on the situation, Conservative MSP Graham Simpson, called the Scottish National Party-controlled council's repairs "a kick in the teeth
    for motorists" and said it was "appalling" that potholes on the route
    were seemingly being prioritised.

    In response to the story, Glasgow City Council insisted that "no specific funding had been set aside for road repairs ahead of the event" and
    explained how the UCI "requires routes to be in an appropriate condition
    to hold the races, which we continue to do as part of our usual roads maintenance programme."

    However, MSP and former shadow transport secretary Simpson hit out at the "dangerous conditions" locals see every day and called the state of
    Glasgow's roads "abysmal", comments backed up by pothole activist Mr
    Pothole, real name Mark Morrell.

    "Glasgow is the pothole capital of the UK," he said. "Now you've got the local council desperately trying to patch up the roads when clearly
    they've known about it long enough. It's appalling. Does it mean we need
    to have a big cycling event for them to fix our roads? It seems like a
    bid to prevent bad publicity.

    "But residents and visitors are suffering damage to their vehicles due to roads not being maintained to a satisfactory standard."

    Scottish Taxi Federation chairman John Kyle added: "Roads all over
    Glasgow and the outskirts are in such a bad condition. This is just a temporary fix. I'd like to see the workforce focusing on not just filling
    in potholes but sorting them properly."

    "I'm happy they are fixing roads for the cyclists," a Glasgow nightclub
    boss also told the newspaper. "But as far as sorting the rest goes,
    they've had years to get this correct and haven't done so."

    In the article, the Scottish Sun notes defects at George Square, St
    Vincent Place and St Vincent Street were repaired, but shared photos of similar potholes on nearby John Street, Virginia Street, Rottenrow and Bothwell Street, as well as a collapsed manhole cover on West Campbell Street, none of which feature on the road race routes.

    Antony Kildare of the charity IAM RoadSmart said "Repairs should be done
    in a systemic and planned way. It needs to be prioritised and funded to support safer roads, and enable events like this to go ahead with less risk of injury."

    Meanwhile, as the UCI's social media account dedicated to the World Championships shared a video trailer for the event, saying "Glasgow is
    ready to show off the power of the bike" as well as its cultural
    offering, several replies asked about the state of the city's roads,
    another suggesting it was also ready to show off the "world-class cycling infrastructure" seen below.

    Potholes have been a hot topic in the build up to the UCI's premier event visiting Scottish soil. Back in February we reported that a local cyclist
    had raised the alarm over "dangerous" potholes on the road race routes.
    2023 World Championships Glasgow road race potholes (Liam McReanan)

    Then, in June, a "crude" last-minute "patch-up" of potholes was
    criticised, a representative from Tadej Pogačar's Slovenian team
    reportedly saying the Scottish roads are the "worst they'd ever seen".

    https://road.cc/content/news/world-championships-pothole-repairs-spark-anger-302897




    --
    Spike

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  • From swldxer1958@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jul 31 08:21:14 2023
    Someone needs to explain to Mr Simpson that what usually happens is that potholes do not get repaired until they are at a size where they'll impact upon motor traffic (or until a vulnerable road user is actually injured). The potholes being repaired are
    not, I'd wager, at such a level. If the Championships weren't happening, these roads wouldn't be repaired at all.

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