THE state of roads in England is much worse than in Wales, a council leader and keen cyclist has claimed. 

Anthony Hunt, the Labour leader of Torfaen County Borough Council, said he has found while out on his bike that highways in Wales are better maintained than those across the border. 

He said: “As a cyclist, on narrow high tyres that shake you about if you hit a pothole, I find if you go over the border into England the state of roads, including classified roads, deteriorates considerably.” 

However the councillor, who represents Panteg, acknowledged residents in his own local authority area may not agree that the condition of roads across the borough are improving. 

He citied figures in a highways report that showed the percentage of principal A roads in an “overall poor condition” had dropped from 2.48 per cent in 2018 to 1.7 per cent in 2022, and over the same period the percentage for B roads in a poor condition fell from 4.77 per cent to 2.4 per cent, and C roads from 4.4 per cent to 3.2 per cent. 

“I suspect many members of the public will scoff at that a little bit, but that may be based on their experiences outside their own homes which are on unclassified roads,” Cllr Hunt said. 

“It’s inevitable, I guess, that if we prioritise the highest speed and highest volume roads, for both safety and other things, that it’s the backroads, the residential roads that are unclassified, that will no doubt suffer but if you tried to flip it the other way round you’d have more accidents caused by potholes and things.” 

He said the challenge for the council and its “finite resources” is how it maintains residential roads, and footpaths, while also keeping the main roads in good condition and in communicating that it must spend money “where safety dictates”. 

Council officer Rachel Jowitt said the authority is “pretty comparable” to others in Wales on road conditions but added: “We don’t have the data with England to do those comparisons it is only be what we may see as cyclists or as a driver.” 

Torfaen’s cabinet had been discussing the authority’s Highways Asset Management Plan, known as the HAMP, which is used to guide where it should spend on projects from repairing potholes to major road resurfacing and which also helps the council identify safety risks. 

The HAMP has been in use since 2019 and runs until 2025 and was discussed by the cabinet as part of a mid-term review.