Gritting, speeding and parking worries at school on new housing estate
Pressure is mounting on Norfolk County Council to make the streets around White House Farm Primary School in Sprowston safer, and to accelerate a process which would give County Hall more power over the roads.
The school in Mallard Way, for children aged four to 11, opened in 2019, with many of the pupils living in the hundreds of homes built on the White House Farm estate.
White House Farm Primary School(Image: Labour Party)
But nearby roads, including Atlantic Avenue - the main spine road for the estate - are unadopted. This means they are private, rather than maintained by County Hall.
Campaigners say that is making it harder to tackle reckless and unsafe parking on the estate, including near the school. There are also concerns that roads will not be gritted this........
© Norwich Evening News
