Nicholas Boys Smith is the founder and chairman of Create Streets. Street Scar is published by Create Streets and you can sign a petition here to support it .
We’ve all seen street scars: the freshly laid paving, setts or Yorkstones; lovingly placed on a slow street or besides a freshly repaired parade of shops. Within months, weeks or days, a slice or a square of them are pulled up thoughtlessly, cracked, smashed and discarded replaced by a scar of tarmac which lingers for months or years or forever and which seems to laugh at any neighbourhood’s desire to live in a place with self-worth.
“I am from nowhere”, they say, “I serve the needs of a nameless, placeless corporation. I don’t care about your neighbourhood. Your local aspirations are petty.”
The key reason street scars happen is statutory failure. Section 70(4) of the New Roads and Street Works Act 1991 only requires utility firms (who have the right to dig up the road) to replace ‘like-for-like’ within six months. And it only gives councils the right to fine them £2,500 if they don’t. This is clearly monstrously insufficient for the size of the firms involved. Nor is it working, as any street inspection will tell you.
Guidance also gives far too much wriggle room for shoddy and uncaring work. The Specification for the Reinstatement of Openings in Highways says that the permanent reinstatement of the street should be ‘as considered appropriate for the circumstances in the opinion of the undertaker.’ The utilities firms are being allowed to mark their own homework with predictable results.
A culture has therefore evolved of utility firms not caring. Most use processes unbothered by the quality of their work or its harm to the streetscape. Their brand is rarely associated with the damage done, so ‘cheap as chips’ work is best. Frequently, it should be perfectly possible to relay stones but they just don’t bother. In Cleveland Street in West London, Yorkstones were broken and ‘fixed up’ with concrete at least two years ago.
The result is a degradation of our public realm. It is careless and needlessly impoverishing of our neighbourhoods. Some problems are hard to resolve. The good news is that street scars can be cured. Create Streets’ recent report, Street Scar, shows how. It set out six practical details.
Two steps are for national government – and I would warmly commend them as popular manifesto commitments. We should amend the New Roads and Street Works Act 1991 so that utility firms with the rights to dig up the road (unironically known as ‘statutory undertakers’ in the cheery officialise) should have at most three months, or less, before they must have made a permanent ‘like-for-like’ reinstatement, ideally less. Fines should be increased from the paltry and ineffective current £2,500 maximum. One option would be an index-linked £5,000 per month (or more) for the first three months and £10,000 per month (or more) thereafter. After three months, the council could do the work themselves imposing costs and an additional fine on the utilities firm. Another option would be to increase the maximum fine for failure to either £20,000 or to no upper limit. Enough to make the utility firms sort out their processes and manage them efficiently and with care for people’s neighbourhoods.
Councils have surrendered sovereignty over their streets. This is how to regain it.
Other actions don’t require legislation. Might we extend the Considerate Constructors scheme to street repairs and include very prompt like for like replacement? Or how about councils banding together to draft best practice council street design codes on appropriate street materials for different places. There is good guidance available publicly, for example from the London Borough of Southwark and Surrey County Council (which Create Streets helped draft).
Might this all be a distraction from more important matters? Emphatically not.
People really care about how their local high streets and town centres look. Their physical degradation upsets them. A 2021 poll revealed that physical decline of streets and buildings was both a major detractor from ‘local pride’ and that people cared about this. Social media is not Britain (thank heavens) but it is striking that when Create Streets has posted about this we have been deluged with support and encouragement from right and left. Civic pride and high streets matter.
This is also a way to improve Britain without needing to raise taxes. The cost of any fines would fall upon utilities firms. If they managed their work flow better then they should be able to minimise the additional costs.
Finally, this is a way to ‘level up’ Britain as many poorer councils are least able to enforce the law. Councils in high land value areas such as London receive large Section 106 payments from development. These proposals would create self-funding mechanisms for councils in less prosperous neighbourhoods to do likewise.
The 1991 legislation leaves councils powerless. Utility firms have six months to repair their damage and face risibly small fines for non-compliance. The process is failing and our neighbourhoods and high streets are the victims. We should fix this. And we can.
If anyone is looking for popular ideas for national or local manifestos, take this!
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Author: Nicholas Boys Smith
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