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andyking | 12 years ago

I don't know if I'm making a big mistake here, but isn't local council tax used to maintain the roads?

So if I was going to go down the path of "I pay my road tax, therefore I have more rights on the road than you," I could just as easily say "you're not from around here, get off MY roads!" Which would just be silly.

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harrytuttle|12 years ago

That is correct.

You can actually sometimes tell when you drive out of a London borough with good maintenance (Richmond) into one that is crap (Hounslow for example) without even looking at the signs...

toble|12 years ago

It's similar for Scotland's rural routes. Some councils don't have the funding to maintaining their roads properly, so they focus on the important roads. It can be quite jarring crossing from one area to another.

justincormack|12 years ago

Roads are split I think in terms of this with larger roads centrally managed, And I think paid for.

andyjohnson0|12 years ago

In England and Wales the Highways Agency manage and maintain what they term the "strate­gic road net­work" - basically the motorways and main A roads (map [1]) - and this is funded by central government. Other roads are the responsibility of local government. I don't know how it works in Scotland.

[1] http://www.highways.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Highwa...

JackpotDen|12 years ago

the problem is the idea that one is special for some reason, and one is entitled to more of something because of that reason.