Pothole damage sees business increase for garage
- Published
A company that specialises in fixing cars damaged by potholes said business had never been better.
Ace Finish, in Godmanchester, Huntingdon, said it had seen cars with cracked wheels quadruple over the last three years.
Alan Piggott, who owns the company, has described the condition of roads across Cambridgeshire as "truly shocking".
Cambridgeshire County Council said: "We are investing an extra £43m over this year and next year into our highways, including delivering improvements which both repair and prevent potholes."
Mr Piggott, 46, founded Ace Finish 12 years ago.
He said: "We started out as a bodyshop, but saw there was a need for alloy wheel refurbishment. So we dabbled a bit at first, but now it's completely taken over the business."
He added that was all because of potholes. "Potholes means cracked wheels. Replacement tyres. That's our bread and butter now.
"In the last three years, we've seen the volume of cracks in wheels - which in itself is an MOT failure - quadruple."
"In 2022, we had 730 customers with buckled wheels. That number went up to 1,090 in 2023. But this year we've already done 1,250 buckled wheel jobs. And we still have over three months of the year left," Mr Piggot said.
Mr Piggott said that although this presented good business, there should not be a reliance on firms like his.
"The state of our roads right now is truly shocking. The damage we are seeing on our customers' cars, on a daily basis, is next level."
Cambridgeshire County Council, who have responsibility for the county's roads, provided statistics from 2019-23. These showed that during this period the average number of potholes fixed annually was 57,325. Last year 66,583 potholes were fixed.
The number of claims against the council for damage caused by potholes more than tripled last year, with the figure rising from 600 in 2022 to 2,023 in 2023.
In a statement, Cambridgeshire County Council said: "It is important that each claim we receive is assessed on their own merits, as we’re dealing with taxpayers’ money.
"As a general rule, the council is liable for compensation when we have failed to meet specific duties as set out in the Highways Act around maintaining the public highway.
"We know how important our roads are which is why we identify defects and repair them as quickly as we can. We’re investing an extra £43m over this year and next year into our highways, this includes delivering improvements which both repair and prevent potholes."
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