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Cornwall Highway Adoption Policy: Criteria, Implications, and Proposals

Explore Cornwall's adoption policy for highways serving more than 5 dwellings, outlining criteria for adoption consideration, implications, and proposed guidelines. Learn about the challenges faced in obtaining bonds, financial constraints, and the council's approach to maintaining infrastructure. Discover the significance of APC notices and the distinction between public and private highway responsibilities.

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Cornwall Highway Adoption Policy: Criteria, Implications, and Proposals

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  1. Highway AdoptionsBonds and APC’s • Andy Stevenson – Infrastructure Asset Manager • Transport, Waste and Environment Service

  2. Adoption Policy – Current Situation • Cornwall Design Guide 2001 • Adoption considered on all estate roads which serve more that 5 dwellings. • APC’s served on all “streets” which serve more than 5 dwellings

  3. Adoption Policy – Current Issues • MfS – Manual for Streets • Promotes layouts which are not able to be considered for adoption. Makes the application of existing policy impossible. • Use of parking courts and other shared areas changes the mix of what may be considered a private/public area. • Financial Climate • Bonds difficult or impossible to obtain • Working Capital constrained • NRSWA definition of Street • This definition includes all areas of highway, road, lane, footway, alley, passage, square, court and any land laid out as a way whether it is for the time being formed as a way or not.

  4. Adoption Policy – Proposals • Cornwall Council will adopt and maintain at the public expense all highway infrastructure which is deemed to offer sufficient benefit to the wider public by the provision of a through access and has been constructed to appropriate standards and in accordance with a previously approved layout and/or configuration. • Cornwall Council is unlikely to consider the adoption of highways which do not provide a through route for the general public. Criteria for consideration include, but are not limited to: • The proposed design and use of the highway • The type and number of properties served by the highway • The anticipated type and volume of traffic use for the highway • Any future potential for the highway to be used as a through route for the public to access any subsequent adjacent development and the suitability of the road design to serve that purpose. • Highways which do not meet these criteria will not be maintainable at public expense.

  5. Adoption Policy – Implications • Cornwall Council considers that the most appropriate use of the APC is to encourage the adoption of highways which meet the criteria for adoption set out in this policy. Therefore we will only serve APC notices on those highways which are considered suitable for adoption. • It follows that those highways on which APC notices are not served will not be considered for adoption and will remain private and the responsibility of the frontagers either as a collective or as part of a management company set up by the developer. • It is therefore incumbent on the developerto make purchasers/householders aware of their liabilities.

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