More than £400,000 of taxpayer cash is set to be pumped into the long-awaited Blyth Relief Road after the cost of the scheme jumped by almost £3 million in less than a year.
Northumberland County Council approved the draft business case for the project in July last year, with the project forecast to cost a total of £43.9 million. The council is set to meet 15%, or just under £6.6 million, of that bill.
However, since then the cost of the scheme has increased to £46.8 million due to "inflationary pressures", meaning the council's contribution must increase to maintain the required 15% contribution. At Tuesday's meeting of the council's cabinet, members agreed to provide an additional £431,214, bringing the total contribution from the council to more than £7 million.
Read more: Tragedy as pedestrian dies after collision with car on the A1 in Northumberland
Speaking at the meeting, Kitty Brewster's Conservative councillor, Wojciech Ploszaj outlined the scheme's importance to the town.
Coun Ploszaj said: "This is very very important for Blyth. It has been on the agenda for about 30 years. We finally will deliver it by 2026.
"We are asking to allocate an additional £400,000 for inflationary pressures. I hope you will approve this, as a resident of Blyth and a councillor for Blyth also."
Council leader Glen Sanderson added: "It is a really important project, this. It's good to see we're not taking our foot off the pedal for this and we're keeping the work going.
"I hope this is a clear signal of the intent of this administration to make sure that we do provide a relief road for Blyth - something that has been talked about, but nothing has actually happened."
A report presented to members said the project still demonstrated "high value for money" but warned that the project had "slipped" by two to three months. Despite this, opportunities were "being explored to recover this time" with a view to opening the road by February 2026.
The cabinet unanimously approved the additional funding.
Read next:
- Barclays to shut three North East branches as bank announces another 15 closures this year - including two in Northumberland
- The devoted Northumberland midwife changing lives while working in mobile clinic in earthquake-ravaged Turkey
- Northumberland County Council facing £4 million 'funding gap' for Northumberland Line as bridge construction costs triple
- Why Paul Gascoigne won't be in ITV's Hunt for Raoul Moat as footballer 'cut' from drama
- Loungers to open first North East bar and restaurant in Northumberland market town