
An extra £20m boost will improve roads across the North East and Yorkshire – part of an additional £500m to tackle potholes nationwide.
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Cyclists in the North East and Yorkshire will get around safely and easily as the Government invests an extra £32m to tackle potholes and build new cycle lanes in the region. Today (Friday 6 June) the Minister for the Future of Roads will be in Saltburn-by-the-Sea, North Yorkshire, to speak to local schools, cycling clubs and female cycling champions during Stage 2 of the Lloyds Tour of Britain Women - the UK's biggest women's road cycling race. The Minister will show how the Government is taking action to resurface roads and emphasise the need to make them safer and more accessible for all road users, including female cyclists. Her visit follows the £15.6 billion boost announced earlier this week to empower local leaders to invest in local transport projects that will make a real difference across England’s city regions – including South Yorkshire, the North East, and Tees Valley. Pothole-ridden roads put off everyone from cycling, with this impact felt the most by women. According to research from Cycling UK, more than half of women (58%) said their cycle journeys were limited by safety concerns and a lack of suitable infrastructure, with 36% of women pointing to poor roads as a main factor. The Government is investing an extra £20m to resurface roads across the North East and Yorkshire so that cyclists and all road users can get around more safely, more easily and with confidence. On top of this uplift, local cyclists are also benefitting from an almost £13m boost to build new cycle lanes and pavements in the North East. Better roads and new cycle lanes will make it easier and safer for people to cycle. This will lead to 43,000 less sick days a year across the country and add £1.4bn to the UK economy, putting money in the pockets of hardworking families to help deliver the Government’s Plan for Change.
Across the country, the Government is investing a total of £1.6bn to resurface roads – enough to fill 7 million extra potholes – which includes an extra £500m boost to go above and beyond the Government’s manifesto commitment.
The £13m for new cycle lanes and pavements in the North East comes from a £291 million package to build new active travel infrastructure across the whole country and encourage more people to walk, wheel, scoot and cycle. The improvements will help people across the country make 30 million more journeys by bike or foot every year, including more than 20 million new walk-to-school journeys by children and their parents.
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