North and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent

Summary

The North and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent (NMWTRA; Welsh: Asiant Cefnffyrdd Gogledd a Chanolbarth Cymru) is one of the two trunk road agents in Wales. It is responsible for managing trunk roads in North and Mid Wales on behalf of the Welsh Government. A merger of two trunk road agencies, established separately on 1 April 2006, the North Wales Trunk Road Agency and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agency, the two bodies were merged and renamed to its current name on 1 April 2012. The agent manages trunk roads in eight principal areas of the north and mid regions of Wales: the respective principal councils of Anglesey, Ceredigion, Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Gwynedd (lead authority), Powys, and Wrexham. The remainder of Wales is managed by the South Wales Trunk Road Agent.

North and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent
Native name
Asiant Cefnffyrdd Gogledd a Chanolbarth Cymru (Welsh)
Company typeWelsh Government agency
IndustryTrunk road agent (Highway authority)
PredecessorsNorth Wales Trunk Road Agency
Mid Wales Trunk Road Agency
Founded1 April 2012 (2012-04-01)
HeadquartersLlys Britannia
Parc Menai
Bangor
Areas served
Key people
David Cooil (Head of Service)
OwnerWelsh Government
Websitetraffic.wales/north-and-mid-wales-trunk-road-agent-nmwtra
Map of the trunk road agent's coverage.

History edit

Prior to the North Wales Trunk Road Agency and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agency being established, motorways and trunk roads in Wales were managed by the Ministry of Transport, later being taken on by the Welsh Office. The National Assembly for Wales took responsibility for devolved powers on 1 July 1999,[1] as part of this process, transport was transferred from the Parliament of the United Kingdom to the National Assembly for Wales and with it responsibility for the trunk road network, including motorways.[2] Responsibility for the management of highways in Wales is split between the Welsh Government and local highway agencies. The Welsh Government is responsible for trunk roads and motorways, whilst the 22 local authorities are responsible for all other highways.

In 2001 the Welsh Government reviewed the way in which trunk roads and motorways were being managed,[3] and by September 2004,[3] they had decided to reduce the number of trunk road agencies from eight down to three.[3] The three new agencies including the South Wales Trunk Road Agency (SWTRA), North Wales Trunk Road Agency (NWTRA) and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agency (MWTRA).[3] Both the North Wales Trunk Road Agency and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agency was established on 1 April 2006, and by 1 April 2012 the two bodies merged and were renamed to become the North and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent. The North and Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent is responsible for the trunk roads in 8 Local Authorities, on behalf of Isle of Anglesey County Council, Ceredigion County Council, Conwy County Borough Council, Denbighshire County Council, Flintshire County Council, Gwynedd Council, Powys County Council, and Wrexham County Borough Council. Gwynedd Council acts as the Lead Authority for NMWTRA is managed through the Trunk Road Management Unit (TRMU) who manage and maintains the trunk road network on behalf of the Welsh Government.[4]

As of April 2015, out of a total of 34,495 kilometres (21,434 mi) of roads in Wales, 1,576 kilometres (979 mi) are trunk roads.[5] Of the 1,576 km of trunk roads in Wales, the NMWTRA manages 1,100 kilometres (680 mi) of which 175 kilometres (109 mi) is dual carriageway.[6]

Roads managed edit

Road number Route within NMWTRA
A5 Bangor - Chirk
A40 Abergavenny - Llandovery
A44 Llangurig - Aberystwyth
A55 Holyhead - Chester
A458 Shropshire Boundary - Mallwyd
A470 Merthyr Tydfil - Llandudno Junction
A479 Nantyffin - Llyswen
A483 Chester - Sugar Loaf
A487 Dinas (Ceredigion) - Bangor
A489 Newtown - Machynlleth
A494 Dolgellau - Queensferry

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Devolved Parliaments and Assemblies". Parliament of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
  2. ^ "Governance of Wales: Who is responsible for what?". National Assembly for Wales. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d "Background to Formation of the Agency". South Wales Trunk Road Agent. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Who we are". North & Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
  5. ^ "Road lengths and conditions in Wales during 2014–15, Table 2 – Road Length by Class and local Authority 2015(a) – Page 4" (PDF). Welsh Government. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  6. ^ "What we do". North & Mid Wales Trunk Road Agent. Retrieved 27 February 2018.

External links edit

  • Official website