Cones Hotline

Cones on the A45 in Coventry

The Cones Hotline was a telephone hotline introduced by the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom John Major in June 1992 to allow members of the public to enquire about roadworks on the country's roads and report areas where traffic cones had been deployed on a road for no apparent reason. The telephone number for the hotline (originally 0345 504030, later 08457 504030) was usually displayed on signs after sections of roadworks.

The hotline was widely seen as being a waste of government resources, costing several thousand pounds per year to run. In September 1995, having fielded a total of fewer than twenty thousand calls, it was announced that the hotline would be gradually wound down.[1]

The hotline continued after this date, with a broader remit, and renamed as the 'Highways Agency Information Line' or HAIL. The Highways Agency was another of Major's innovations, having been formed not long before, in 1994. The hotline was one of the first to move to the new local-rate 0845 numbers in 1996.

The service did inspire the term cone syndrome, to describe a piece of legislation made by a government that seems to serve no real purpose.

It was mentioned in the television series Grumpy Old Men by Rick Wakeman, who said that nobody really knew what it was for:

"I've spotted some cones."
"How many?"
"About four and a half million on the M6, doing absolutely nothing."
"Thank you for telling us."

References

  1. Christian Wolmar (19 September 1995). "Cones Hotline put into cold storage". The Independent.

External links

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