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£400k damages for family of triathlete killed in pothole crash

Kate Vanloo was thrown into path of a car when she hit defect council had failed to have repaired

The  family of a triathlete who was killed when she was thrown into the path of a car after hitting a pothole have been awarded damages of almost £400,000.

Kate Vanloo, aged 52 and from Napton, Warwickshire, was fatally injured in the collision involving a Toyota Yaris car as she retuned home from a training ride with Rugby Triathlon Club in January 2016.

The Mail on Sunday reports that a High Court judge has now authorised that damages totalling £388,000 be awarded to her three sons – two of them aged under 18, hence the need for court approval – following a settlement agreed with Warwickshire County Council.

A coroner’s inquest in September 2017 heard that the four-inch deep pothole that she hit was concealed by a puddle that extended across the width of the road and that due to oncoming traffic, Ms Vanloo had been unable to avoid riding through it.

The pothole, however, but had been identified by contractors Balfour Beatty in 2015 as a category 2 defect that needed mending, meaning it should have been repaired within 28 days.

But it was three months before the council, the responsible highways authority, gave the go-ahead for the repair, following a backlog earlier in the year of defects needing remedying.

A worker from sub-contractors CR MacDonald who went to fix it in November 2015 could not find the pothole at the location given and instead carried out repairs to another defect three miles away, amending the paperwork accordingly, but neither the council nor Balfour Beatty were notified of that.

Subsequently, the council insisted it had “significantly improved” its process for identifying and making good road defects, and that the system now gives priority to those that are close to the 28-day limit.

> Worker repaired pothole three miles away instead of one that then caused triathlete’s death

Earlier this year, Cycling UK launched the inaugural Pothole Watch Week, and highlighted that pothole claims from cyclists cost local authorities 25 times more than those from motorists, because they were more likely to result in death or serious injury.

> Cycling UK launches Pothole Watch week

The charity’s CEO, Paul Tuohy, said: “Cyclists are running the gauntlet when riding on British roads following a decade of underinvestment leading to the poor state they’re currently in.

“Potholes aren’t just an expensive nuisance, they are ruining lives.

“The government is going to spend £25 billion on maintaining and building new motorways, while effectively each year it finds some loose change for the problem of potholes on local roads,” he continued.

“Cycling UK wants government to adopt a ‘fix it first’ policy. Let’s repair the local roads first – the ones we all use in our cars and on our bikes everyday – before building new motorways.”

He also urged road users to report defects requiring attention through Cycling UK’s Fix That Hole app and website, which automatically notifies local authorities of issues needing attention.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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8 comments

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bivvy | 4 years ago
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Councils are nuts. There are many potholes around Warrington and the council blames austerity. Yet they recently spent a fortune on a new designer architect car park, when the old one they knocked down had nothing wrong with it. 

I actually witnessed a lady hit a pothole in Warrington that had been like that a year. She fell off and injured her shoulder. Another rider in the group swerved and nearly was hit by a car going in the opposite direction. Never found out what happened to her but she looked in a lot of pain.  

Councils lack common sense and like to make excuses. They like to spend on fancy things and forget the basics! 

 

 

 

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cycle.london replied to bivvy | 4 years ago
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bivvy wrote:

Councils are nuts. There are many potholes around Warrington and the council blames austerity. Yet they recently spent a fortune on a new designer architect car park, when the old one they knocked down had nothing wrong with it.

Same with Eltham, near where I live.  They don't have the money to get more people out and fine car drivers who park on the mandatory cycle lanes going through the town, but they have money to piss away on one of these at each end of the High Street...

https://www.itv.com/news/london/2017-07-27/love-it-or-hate-it-hollywood-...

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LastBoyScout | 4 years ago
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Have given up nagging Reading council to mend some broken road surface on a roundabout on the A4. First reported 4 years ago, still deemed not bad enough to repair and being monitored.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 4 years ago
1 like

the whole aspect of downgrading the how long a given repair needs to be done is dangerous in itself. There is clear breaches of the grading and what constitutes a serious danger to the public on the highway. it's yet another slap in the face for people on bikes wanting to simply get from A-B safely when those responscible will not make good the needed repairs in good time despite the obvious level of danger to vulnerable road users.

28 days was in itself disgraceful period of time when we see how the outcoe of waiting even that long is like playing russian roulette with other people's lives.

The money is still not all that big a sum when you consider the loss, it can only provide some financial support for the family.

Was there no-one hauled over the coals for the repeated multiple fuck ups that ended in someone being killed.

Yet another wasted life, I can't imagine what the family have gone through yet again hearing all the mistakes and how trivially neglectful various organisations have been.

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Xena replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 4 years ago
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BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

 

The money is still not all that big a sum when you consider the loss, it can only provide some financial support for the family.

its ironic now they are going to have pay a huge amount of money in a tragic circumstance . A pittance of that money would have made sure no life would have been lost . 

Trouble is that a big picture is looked at , similar to Walmart . Walmart have failed to pay employees, they have had to pay out millions of dollars in comp but in the overall big picture it’s a drop in the ocean and it actually works for the profit wise . 

So you have all these councils all over the country doing the same thing  not fixing pot holes etc etc saving millions millions of pounds , so just paying out a few hundred thousand in the odd place is worth the risk .    Money talks simple as that. 

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Xena | 4 years ago
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This has everything to do with councils being underfunded . A pot hole is not going to be the highest of priority’s. What  a tragedy . Shame on this government - elites /  that keeps squeezing the money out of all the vital resources that are needed .  Things are not going to get better . No government has done any good for anyone  except create real wealth for the oligarchs . There’s always money for war .

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Master Bean | 4 years ago
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Title reads filled not killed. Kind of awkward.

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RoubaixCube replied to Master Bean | 4 years ago
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Master Bean wrote:

Title reads filled not killed. Kind of awkward.

 

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