To continue reading this article, subscribe to the Stray Ferret for as little as £1 a week
Already a subscriber? Log in here.
22
Apr
North Yorkshire Council's bid for £965,000 of government money to upgrade traffic lights has been rejected.
Sixty-seven local authorities successfully applied to the Department for Transport’s traffic signal obsolescence grant. North Yorkshire was one of 23 whose bids were rejected.
It means the council will receive the minimum £117,151 awarded to all local authorities, but has missed out on a slice of the extra £20 million available to successful bidders.
Several local authorities received more than £500,000. The highest award, for £2.5 million, was to Tees Valley Combined Authority.
The traffic signal obsolescence grant is targeted at upgrading obsolete traffic signal systems to improve reliability.
It was announced as part of the government’s Plan for drivers in October 2023.
The Stray Ferret asked the council what feedback it received on its application and how many signals will be upgraded with the funding.
A spokesperson said it was “yet to receive feedback”, adding:
Further details are available in this council report.
0