Potholes and local road maintenance funding
This briefing brings together various sources of local pothole and road maintenance funding. It can be used to find local funding allocation datasets.

Traffic Regulation Orders are used to create parking spaces, vehicle restrictions and temporary road closures. This paper describes how they can be introduced.
Traffic Regulation Orders (TROs) (568 KB , PDF)
Local highway authorities can place temporary, experimental or permanent restrictions on traffic within their areas by way of a Traffic Regulation Order (TRO). Some of the most popular uses for TROs are restricting the movements of HGVs in residential areas, implementing parking restrictions and restricting traffic for the purposes of parades, street parties and other events. More recently, TROs have been used to create low-traffic neighbourhoods to restrict the flow of traffic in residential areas.
The making of TROs can be lengthy and costly, and there have been calls for reform of the advertising requirements to bring down the cost. The Transport Committee looked at this issue as part of their 2019 inquiry into pavement parking and made recommendations to government.
In 2022, the Department for Transport (DfT) published a consultation which included proposals to change the publishing requirements for TROs. This included:
The Government published the first part of their response to the consultation in January 2024, setting out that they planned to proceed with the proposed amendments to the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 as soon as Parliamentary time was available. No amendments were made, and the Government has not published the second part of their consultation response, prior to the dissolution of Parliament for the 2024 General Election.
In 2020, the DfT published a consultation on ‘Managing pavement parking’. One of the options was improving the TRO process. Again, no Government response to the consultation was published prior to the dissolution of Parliament for the 2024 General Election.
Traffic Regulation Orders (TROs) (568 KB , PDF)
This briefing brings together various sources of local pothole and road maintenance funding. It can be used to find local funding allocation datasets.
This briefing paper explains the policies of successive governments towards the designing of vehicle excise duty (VED). It gives information as to the exemptions and how the Government enforces its collection. It also describes the most recent changes to VED
The Planning and Infrastructure Bill 2024-2025 had its First Reading in the House of Commons on 11 March 2025. Second Reading is scheduled for 24 March 2025. The Bill, and its Explanatory Notes, can be found on the Parliamentary website.