Motorway safety review urged after fatal crashes

Google Vehicles near Junction 9 of the M65 near Burnley  in Lancashire. Google
There were two fatal crashes on the M65 in 2024

An urgent safety review of the M65 - including considering whether to reinstate roadside lighting - has been demanded by councillors following a series of serious incidents during the last 12 months.

Mick Strickland, who also works for Lancashire Fire & Rescue Service (LFRS) and has attended road accident scenes, joined his Liberal Democrat colleague Brian Newman in calling for a review at a full meeting of Pendle Council.

They said there had been a "spate" of major incidents on the Lancashire motorway in 2024 and that two people had died.

Strickland said lighting and flooding had been contributing factors in all of the incidents he had attended with LFRS on the M65.

LDRS handout Full Pendle Council meeting inside the chamber at Nelson town hall.LDRS handout
Councillors from all sides backed Brian Newman and Mick Strickland's calls for an urgent safety review of the M65

Their demands came after similar motions put forward by councillors in Burnley and Hyndburn.

The Pendle councillors said National Highways was considering removing all remaining lighting on the M65.

They also pointed out that flooding was of significant concern on the motorway, particularly on the section through Pendle, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.

National Highways has been asked to comment.

In a vote, councillors from all sides backed Strickland and Newman's call for Pendle Council to write to National Highways, Lancashire County Council, the Secretary of State for Transport and local MPs.

Their motion called for:

  • An urgent review of the general safety of the M65, "given the frequency of accidents"
  • Safety improvement assessments including, but not limited to, lighting
  • Opposition to any plan that would remove any remaining M65 lighting
  • Funding for a feasibility study and investment to bring back lighting to sections of the M65 where it has been removed
  • Lancashire County Council to take effective action to mitigate the risk to road-users from flooding

Newman said: "The M65 conjures an image of disaster for people who use it. We have flooding. No lights. It ends abruptly at Colne.

"The road is not fit for purpose."

Strickland, meanwhile, said an urgent review was needed "before we have more fatalities on the M65".

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