Mike Watts, 62, built his own road which
bypassed a key local road in Kelston, Bath, which was closed for
maintenance
He borrowed an adjoining field from a farmer
friend and, at a cost of £150,000 to himself and his wife Wendy, 52, made the
bypass
Mike
needs 1,000 cars a day at £2 per car, per journey for 150 days to break
even
Every minute or so a car rumbles past, churning up dust and small stones. Drivers and passengers wave and shout thank-yous through their open windows.
Every minute or so a car rumbles past, churning up dust and small stones. Drivers and passengers wave and shout thank-yous through their open windows.
‘It’s a pleasure,’ Mike yells back,
beaming from ear to ear. ‘Enjoy the view!’
They do indeed. But even they aren’t as
happy as Mike, who’s had quite a week.
For, suddenly, he’s become a national
hero. People have called for him to be knighted and (though I suspect this
might be slightly tongue in cheek) honoured with a statue on the green in his
home village of Kelston, near Bath.
And all because, when faced with the
indefinite closure of a key local road while it is mended, forcing him to take
a 14-mile diversion to work as a council repair team sorts it out at the speed
of a glacier, Mike took matters into his own hands.
His solution was not a civilised
‘reopen our road, please’ campaign or angry letters to the Bath Chronicle
newspaper, pointing out that nothing had been done since early February when a
crack appeared in the A431 and the road was closed.
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