The Bulletin Breakdown | DIY Pothole Repairs, New E-Bike Rules & Road Expansion Costs
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This week’s episode explores three stories focused on maintenance, regulation, and the long-term cost of infrastructure decisions:
🛠️ A Community Approach to Pothole RepairsA volunteer road maintenance program in Devon, England is attracting attention for its low-cost approach to fixing small infrastructure issues before they become major problems. Residents are trained and equipped to perform tasks like pothole patching, drainage clearing, and sign maintenance. Could a similar model help Ontario municipalities stretch limited maintenance budgets further?
🚲 Ontario Prepares New E-Bike RulesThe province is proposing a new classification system for e-bikes as municipalities face growing concerns around safety, enforcement, and battery fires. The changes could introduce new rules for heavier, faster e-bike models, including insurance and licensing requirements. As e-bike use continues to grow rapidly, municipalities are being pushed to adapt infrastructure and regulations at the same pace.
🛣️ Repair Roads or Expand Them?A new U.S. report suggests governments often prioritize highway expansion over repairing existing infrastructure — even when the math says repair makes more financial sense. Researchers argue that widening roads creates long-term maintenance burdens without solving congestion, while deferred maintenance continues to pile up. The findings raise important questions about how infrastructure dollars should really be spent.