Getting around and getting online

Connectivity is key to a place like Wiltshire. Our market towns and villages, and our outlying farms and cottages, depend on decent transport and decent broadband. 

I probably get more correspondence about potholes than any other subject. Driving around Wiltshire, especially when there is water on the roads, is a high-risk venture for tires. The Government has recognised the problem, which is nationwide, by committing an additional £8.3 billion to fixing potholes. In total the taxpayer is spending £27 million a year on road maintenance in Wiltshire. 

I always take constituents' complaints about specific road issues straight to the council, and I will continue to fight for faster and more permanent fixes to the craters that pockmark our roads.

I'm pleased that rural travel in Wiltshire is improving. I lobbied Government for a grant to invest in an innovative new bus system, which I'm glad to say we won - so there is now a 'demand-responsive' bus service, called Wiltshire Connect, in the Vale of Pewsey and Marlborough area. Rather than large, and largely empty, buses trundling up and down the same routes every day, Wiltshire Connect responds to the need for travel by picking a route each day that suits the passengers - like a taxi. You can find out more and book your trip [here]. I will continue to campaign for better public transport across the county.

Broadband coverage has increased markedly since I was elected in 2019, with 94% of homes in the constituency now having superfast broadband availability (capable of receiving download speeds of at least 30 Mbps). But we still have too many areas where the internet is slow or non-existent, either because broadband is still routed through old copper wires or because there's no mobile signal - or both. I will continue to push for a faster roll-out of the gigabit programme, and to raise particular cold spots with BT Broadband.

 

News

Newsletter - 3 July, 2023

Last week John Glen, MP for Salisbury, and I spent a day at the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) at Porton Down. Dstl sits on a vast campus comprising hundreds of buildings, some dating back to World War I and the first experiments with gas for the battlefield.

Newsletter - 12 March, 2023

They won’t be photos I use on campaign literature next time round, but Matt Hancock and I stood in a muddy field in November 2019 pointing to where the new Devizes Urgent Care Centre would - if we were elected on 12 December - in due course arise. We were elected, and at last it has arisen.

All Things Roads - Thursday 23rd February, 6.30pm

On Thursday, there will be a public meeting, in Marlborough, to discuss "All Things Roads". Please come to discuss any issues you may have directly with Marlborough Town Council, Wiltshire Council, the PCC and myself. 

An Update on the M4 to Dorset Coast Connectivity Study

I met last week with the Minister of Transport and representatives of the Highways Agency to hear more about how the M4 to Dorset Coast connectivity study is progressing. It is ongoing, but their recommendations should be made in around 7 weeks time.