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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Lewis Smith

Neath Port Talbot to spend millions on roads and new fleet of vehicles

Neath Port Talbot Council has approved plans for a £3.3 million programme to repair and maintain footpaths, roads, and bridges across the borough this month, at a Regeneration and Streetcare Services meeting on March 3.

The project which is within the council’s Highways and Engineering Programme for the 2023/24 financial year will now include maintenance and repair works at a wide range of locations in the area over the next twelve months.

Read More: Special advisory boards to be set up for two major developments in Neath Port Talbot

These will include funding of over £1.1 million for road surfacing in Neath Port Talbot, along with an additional sum of over 300,000 for preventative treatments and maintenance on roads.

Other spends will see footway resurfacing worth around £167,000, bridge strengthening worth around £300,000, and minor works to traffic signs, barriers, and regulation orders worth £425,000. Funding will come from a number of sources such as the council’s Highways and Engineering Capital Allocation, as well as planned maintenance revenue funding.

Some of the money will also come from the £4.25 million worth of funding approved last year by the council’s coalition to "clean up and green up" Neath Port Talbot’s towns and valleys.

In the same meeting it was also proposed that a new fleet of heavy vehicles and plant could be purchased over the next three years, as part of the council's Vehicle and Heavy Plant Fleet Procurement Programme.

The meeting saw members discuss the potential purchase of about 20 new vehicles such as waste and recycling carriers as well as plant equipment, all of which would potentially be hybrid or zero emission. Council bosses in attendance heard how vehicles and plant listed in the report were reaching the end of their economic life, with replacements having a beneficial effect on both the environment and the productivity of the council.

Members of the scrutiny committee in attendance asked for a further report to be discussed in the next six months, looking at the potential costs of the vehicles and the level of EV charging infrastructure required. You can read more of our stories from Neath Port Talbot here or subscribe to our newsletter here.

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