2 2025/26 Transport and Infrastructure Capital Programme PDF 336 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Executive Member for Environment and Sustainability considered a
report regarding the 2025/26 Transport and Infrastructure Capital Programme.
The purpose of the report was to gain approval to allocate funding to
develop and deliver transport and infrastructure improvements contained within
the report.
Middlesbrough Council received City Region Sustainable Transport
Settlement (CRSTS) funding from the Department for Transport, via Tees Valley
Combined Authority, to undertake maintenance and improvement works on the
Council’s transport network.
The current Council approved CRSTS allocation for 2025/26 was £1.065m,
specified against Incentive Funding (new works) and £2.339m for Highways
Maintenance. In addition, the Council
had been allocated a one-off grant totalling £0.750m from the Department of
Transport towards re-surfacing works as part of the Government’s December
Spending Review. Appendix 2 detailed the
planned works totalling £4.154m.
It was proposed that the Council approved the expenditure of the CRSTS
allocation for 2025/26, as outlined in Appendix 2. This would provide the Council time to
identify the most prudent method of delivering a longer-term programme;
ensuring that best value for money was achieved.
The projects within the proposed programme had been identified from the
Council’s ‘Future Year scheme’ list.
This was a compiled table of all known requirements and suggestions
received, which were matrix ranked for their suitability against a set
criterion, forming a priority basis.
However, this was also conditional upon external funding criteria,
eligible uses, statutory obligations, and other implications.
The maintenance schemes were based on asset condition rating systems,
and allocation of resources work to address a ‘worst first’ was used. This was rationalised based on public safety
and asset longevity priorities (such as ensuring that structures were
safe). This ensured that the Council was
sequentially addressing the areas of the network in most need of resolving.
The Council also received specific allocations through competitive
grant programmes and awards that were to deliver prescribed pieces of work,
depending upon national / regional criteria.
Any awards for such projects by-passed the matrix scoring criteria
(although this may have been used to identify the most suitable candidates) and
could be awarded / was accessible throughout the financial year. The proposals within the report included all
known awarded allocations at time of approval but could be subject to
change. If required, approvals would be
sought through the formal decision-making process.
A map of the scheme locations was shown at Appendix 1; the full funding
allocations used to identify the projects / programmes were shown at Appendix
2.
OPTIONS
Re-assessing the
project proposals – this was not recommended, as they had been
identified using a robust scoring matrix and the prescribed funding criteria,
to ensure best allocation of resources.
Any changes would deviate from this process and add delays to the
delivery programme.
Do nothing. This was not recommended as it would not allow the Council to allocate funding and make the necessary arrangements in advance of receipt of the allocations. The delivery of infrastructure improvements required prudent planning and co-ordination, so approvals in a timely manner were pivotal ... view the full minutes text for item 2