Five-year plan to manage local roads network approved
Our plan to manage the local roads network amid rising demands from population growth and new developments was approved by Cabinet at their May meeting.
The Road Asset Management Plan (RAMP) sets out a five-year strategy for maintaining or improving the roads network as efficiently as possible within the constraints of a limited budget.
The plan acknowledged that the projected population increase in East Lothian of 12.4% between 2022 and 2032 will require new roads, junctions, footways, cycle routes, drainage, and other associated infrastructure. This will place greater pressure on the existing road network and expand our responsibilities for inspections, maintenance, resurfacing, and winter service.
We are currently responsible for a road network which includes 1,147km of carriageway, 674km of footways, 18,741 street lighting columns, 101 traffic signals and 294 electric vehicle chargers, as well as bridges, drainage gullies and bus shelters. This has risen steeply in recent years with, for instance, the length of carriageway under council adoption climbing by 14 per cent from 931km to 1073km between 2013 and 2023.
The RAMP seeks to promote good practice and achieve the best value for money in an ongoing climate of reduced budgets and increasing costs.
Under the plan, the condition of road assets would be regularly assessed in comparison with similar assets across East Lothian to ensure they are safe and functional. Along with recording defects and feedback from road users and local communities, the resulting data will be used to prioritise a programme of works to ensure that the limited funding available is targeted where the need is greatest.
We have always had a maintenance plan which followed best practice, and this was formalised after the development of the Local Transport Strategy in 2018. Cabinet voted to approve the updated RAMP to cover the period 2026-2031.
While the report to Cabinet noted a halving of carriageway faults reported by the public from 4917 in 2024 to 2247 last year, the RAMP also reinforces the need for additional investment and sufficient preventative maintenance in response to recent severe winters and more frequent harsh weather conditions.