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Winter plan for Caithness confirmed – council approves priorities for treating county's roads


By David G Scott

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At the Caithness Committee meeting yesterday (Monday, August 22) members approved a winter maintenance plan for the area which includes priority road lists and maps showing the priority gritting routes.

Across Caithness there are 135km of primary routes, 222km of secondary routes and 49km of other routes and these will be treated using 10 front-line gritters. Four footpath tractors will also be available.

Gritter operating in Wick. Picture: DGS
Gritter operating in Wick. Picture: DGS

Primary routes are treated first, followed by secondary routes and crews will only move on to treat other roads when the primary and secondary routes are all completed.

As last year, the gritting services on a Saturday and Sunday will be equalised and both primary and secondary routes, as well as difficult other routes will be treated routinely from 6am onwards over weekends as well as weekdays when conditions dictate.

A duty officer rota will be in place to ensure that there is always a suitably qualified and experienced member of staff available 24-hours a day, 7-days a week, to take decisions on the deployment of appropriate resources to deal with the prevailing weather conditions.

The average annual usage of salt for the Caithness area is around 6,000 tonnes and the council is well prepared with sufficient salt in all its depots.

Each year local areas put in place their own Winter Maintenance Plan to cover the operational details in order to deliver a service locally within existing budget and resources

Councillor Struan Mackie, vice chair of the area committee, said: “We are lucky in Caithness to have a hard working and dedicated team of local staff who go out in the worst of wintry conditions to provide the best service they can.

“Winter service treatments consist of morning routes, evening precautionary treatment routes and, during extreme conditions, continuous or all-day treatments so crews are kept very busy.

“The plan of routes and priorities we have agreed will be closely monitored over the winter months to make sure we can respond to extreme conditions and use all available resources to the best effect.”

He added: “As in previous years we are keen to encourage communities to 'self-help' as much as possible and to be aware of people within their local community who may need assistance from neighbours in clearing snow and ice or possibly shopping or accessing health and social services during extreme weather conditions.”

Community self-help is also being encouraged under the councils Winter Resilience scheme whereby communities can submit an application via their community council to carry out footway gritting operations within an agreed area. The council will provide the community with salt/grit, bins, scrapers and reflective waistcoats. This does not replace the service provided by the council, but allows the community to provide an enhanced level of service.

The leaflets and policy information are provided on the Winter Road Maintenance pages on the council’s website at: www.highland.gov.uk/gritting

The council publishes Winter Services leaflets for each operational area providing the public with information on snow clearing and gritting of council roads along with maps showing the priority attributed to individual roads.


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