Mayor Claire Ward secures landmark £121m road maintenance funding for the East Midlands

Mayor of the East Midlands, Claire Ward is backing the Government's new homelessness strategy.

Millions of pounds is to be invested in improving the region’s roads thanks to the Mayor of the East Midlands. 

Members of the East Midlands Combined County Authority’s Transport Committee have approved a £121 million investment in road maintenance and repairs across the region for the next three years, supporting the four highway authorities across the East Midlands of Derby City, Derbyshire County, Nottingham City and Nottinghamshire County.

The decision, which still has to go to EMCCA Board for final approval, was agreed at EMCCA’s Transport Committee, confirming the largest single year of investment in road maintenance the region has seen in years. The approved funding will make roads safer, reduce congestion, and address long-standing wear and tear caused by historic underinvestment.  

Road maintenance plans

The £121m package was approved over an alternative lower-funding option and will be used for a range of measures. Work includes repairing worn road surfaces and potholes, improving footways and cycleways, upgrading street lighting, protecting key structures, and increasing proactive maintenance to prevent future damage. In many locations, repairs will be combined with drainage upgrades and public realm improvements to deliver better outcomes for local communities. 

In addition, more than £13.5has been agreed for local neighbourhood transport projects. These smaller-scale schemes will improve road safety, accessibility, and local travel, directly benefiting people’s daily journeys in towns and villages across Derby, Derbyshire, Nottingham and Nottinghamshire through measures such as traffic calming and better signage.  

Mayor of the East Midlands, Claire Ward said: “This year, 2026, is the year of delivery for the East Midlands. With this £121m investment now approved, we are ready to roll up our sleeves and make roads safer, journeys smoother, and communities stronger. This isn’t just planning, it’s action, and residents will start seeing the benefits this year.” 

Millions of pounds is to be spent on road maintenance across the East Midlands.
Millions of pounds is to be spent on road maintenance across the East Midlands.

Investment programme

The Transport Committee also reviewed progress on the existing £184m transport investment programme, which is already delivering safer roads, better bus services, new cycle routes, and improved travel connections across the region. 

Mayor Claire said:This investment is a significant step forward for our region. By focusing on road maintenance, safer streets, and better transport connections, we are delivering real benefits now while laying strong foundations for long-term improvements over the next seven years.” 

 EMCCA successes so far include: 

  • Bus and active travel upgrades in Derby: Refurbishment of Victorian railings alongside improved bus priority and active travel routes; 
  • Digital bus totems: Real-time travel information installed in Derby city centre and Sutton-in-Ashfield in Nottinghamshire;
  • Cycle and pedestrian improvements in Nottingham: New routes and links delivered ahead of schedule;
  • Road maintenance in Nottinghamshire: 140 schemes completed to improve safety and journey quality. 

Key projects under way include: 

The programme remains on track to spend £151m this year, a significant increase on 2024/25, demonstrating EMCCA’s growing capacity to deliver major transport projects at scale. This year marks the first of a seven-year investment plan, providing long-term certainty to deliver larger, more lasting improvements across the East Midlands. 

Options for the remaining funding are to be brought before the Transport Committee in April for consideration.  

Mayor’s Big Transport Conversation

The funding decision comes as Mayor Claire Ward continues her Big Transport Conversation, inviting residents to shape a cleaner, safer, and better-connected transport system for the region. Buses remain a key focus, with plans to improve reliability, affordability, accessibility, and connections between communities, alongside action to reduce congestion, improve air quality, and support greener travel. 

The Big Transport Conversation runs until 8 February, giving people across the East Midlands the opportunity to help shape the transport network they want to see by 2040. 

 

Published on: 16 January 2026

Categories: News, Transport

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