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GONE TO POT

Our road is so full of pot holes I have to take pain killers after I’ve driven to my front door

‘Pothole Crescent’ the name given to Glebe Crescent at Witham in Essex where residents have had to put up with the appalling road surface for nearly five years...PICTURE BY JOHN McLELLAN - 3.6.23

FURIOUS residents have dubbed their street ­Pothole Crescent because it is cratered with holes.

Locals claim nothing has been done to fill them in for five years.

Glebe Crescent in Witham, Essex, has been named 'Pothole Crescent' by locals
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Glebe Crescent in Witham, Essex, has been named 'Pothole Crescent' by localsCredit: John McLellan
Electrician Terry Collier said the council just shows up once a year to mark the holes and then goes away again
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Electrician Terry Collier said the council just shows up once a year to mark the holes and then goes away againCredit: John McLellan
Some of the cavities are a foot across and 4ins deep
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Some of the cavities are a foot across and 4ins deepCredit: John McLellan

Pictures show the extent of the damage in Glebe Crescent in Witham, Essex.

Some of the cavities are a foot across and 4ins deep.

Electrician Terry Collier, 59, said: “The council come once a year, measure the holes, mark them up for repair and go away again. It’s a joke.

“We pay our council tax but nothing gets done.”

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Keith Williams, 70, said: “I try not to cross the road as I’m scared I’ll trip over a pothole or my dog, Suzy, will get stuck.”

Betty Sheehan, 82, suffers from rheumatoid arthritis and has to be driven by her son to avoid the potholes.

She said: “I have to take pain killers whenever I get out in the car, because bumping up and down over the potholes is agonising due to my condition.

“It’s disgusting to see the state of it and it’s been like this for at least four years.”

Nicola Moore, 44, said: “When we had construction work done the ­contractor struggled to reach us because of the potholes.”

Town mayor Susan Ager added: “The roads of Witham are full of dangerous potholes.”

A spokesperson for Essex Highways said: ““We look after 5,000 miles of roads, one of the largest road networks in the country, with a mix of urban and rural roads, which each bring their own challenges.

“Due to the pressure on our limited resources, we prioritise our work and fix the higher-risk issues first. Unfortunately, we cannot undertake all works at once.

“This means we do the repairs that require immediate attention because of safety issues first, and then move to more minor repairs.  Not all defects that have been reported and inspected require immediate repair.”

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