Residents frustrated as second village road closes

Lee TrewhelaLocal Democracy Reporting Service
News imageTroon Residents' Action Group A gathering of people at the site of a mineshift collapse in Troon, Cornwall. They are protesting and calling on Cornwall Council to fill the hole. Metal fencing and a road closure sign are at the site. A silver Jaguar car is parked on the left-hand side.Troon Residents' Action Group
Organisers said about 150 people up to a protest at the site in Troon on Saturday

Residents of a Cornish village say they have "had enough" after a second road in the area has been closed due to a suspected mineshaft opening up.

Newton Road in Troon, near Camborne, has been closed since Tuesday between Newton Moor and Grenville Gardens after a hole appeared in the road and Cornwall Council put an initial six-month closure in place for investigations.

The closure follows a separate six-month closure after a mineshaft opened in nearby Pendarves Road in Beacon, which reopened two weeks ago.

A council spokesperson said the hole in Newton Road was likely linked to historic mining activity and it needed to "carry out further detailed investigations".

On Saturday, a protest by the Troon Residents' Action Group was held at the site of the mineshaft collapse.

Organisers said about 150 people turned up to voice their concerns and to call on the council to "fill that hole".

Rachel Goodman, of Troon Residents' Action Group, said the road needed to be repaired "as a matter of urgency", the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.

News imageCornwall Council Road closure signs, fences and cones in place on a road.Cornwall Council
Newton Road in Troon, near Camborne, has been closed since Tuesday

Goodman said: "The alternative route this time is a seven-mile diversion through Four Lanes and with the price of fuel and the cost-of-living squeeze, this is adding pressure on families who are stretched to breaking point.

"It is having an unacceptable effect on elderly residents, who need to attend doctors and hospital appointments and also for children attending schools in Camborne.

"The speed that emergency services vehicles can access the village is also being compromised."

The council spokesperson said: "We appreciate the road closure has and will cause inconvenience and frustration, however, safety is our priority."

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