A6 upgrade: Public inquiry calls over road scheme 'fiasco'
- Published
There have been calls for a public inquiry into ongoing delays into the completion of a new dual carriageway between Londonderry and Dungiven.
The 15-mile stretch is part of the A6 upgrade linking Derry and Belfast.
Stormont's Department for Infrastructure (DfI) said key aspects of the project have yet to be completed.
However, DUP East Londonderry MP Gregory Campbell said the project had now become "a fiasco".
Work on the road started in 2018, with an estimated cost of £220m, and had been due to be completed earlier this year.
DfI said while the road upgrade is "well advanced" essential aspects, including safety barriers and lighting, have yet to be completed.
It said at present it is not possible to "provide an exact opening date" for the road.
The department has also now confirmed the scheme's budget will exceed the original estimated cost.
It included cost details in a Freedom of Information (FOI) request response to BBC Radio Foyle's Mark Patterson Show.
DfI said the "actual cost is under continual review and the final cost will not be known until the project has been completed".
It added: "Any funding requirements will be factored into future budget settlement".
Speaking earlier to BBC Radio Foyle, Mr Campbell said the A6 should be "a tremendous asset".
"But it is an embarrassment to the department now. This fiasco has gone on for far too long," he said.
The DUP MP said a public inquiry is needed to establish "how it has come to this".
He said it is needed to establish the nature and cost to the public of the scheme's "inordinate delay".
Foyle SDLP MLA Mark Durkan said an inquiry would "demonstrate the shortcomings and what they (DfI) can learn and not repeat".
He said it has become increasingly challenging to get updates on the road scheme from DfI.
"Over the past six to eight months it has become much, much more difficult to get information from the department as to what is happening and when we can expect to see completion of this much needed and long overdue project," he said.
The A6 story so far
The Department for Infrastructure began work on the A6 road scheme in 2018.
Work was completed on the nine-mile (14.7km) dual carriageway between Toomebridge, County Antrim, and Castledawson, County Derry, last year.
The first phase of the carriageway, between the M22 motorway at Randalstown and Toomebridge, opened in 2019.
The dual carriageway is part of a larger scheme to improve the route between Derry and Belfast, with work continuing on a major new road between Derry and Dungiven.
Starting at the village of Drumahoe, the 15-mile section of dual carriageway includes a bypass around Dungiven.
In September the department said supply-chain issues and global-market volatility were causing the delays.
It said at that time it was "working closely with the contractor" to agree a completion date.
The continued delays are causing frustration for commuters and affected businesses.
At present there are a number of diversions and speed restrictions in place to accommodate the ongoing work.
'Lorries on back roads'
Brian Cassidy owns a cycle shop in the County Londonderry village of Claudy.
"People are stopping with us, asking how to get to Derry, Belfast, Claudy," he told BBC Radio Foyle.
"They are turning off not knowing where they are going. We have had lorries stuck up the road, 40ft lorries on back roads that are not designed for them, purely down to signage."
In a statement the DfI said the "work items yet to be completed" include "the provision of safety barrier, road marking, signage and street lighting".
The department added: "A Road Safety Audit must then be completed before the road can be fully opened.
"The outcome of the audit process may recommend some safety-related amendments and therefore it is not possible to provide an exact opening date at this time."
It said it "is currently envisaged that the road will open in the coming months".
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