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Okpebholo’s road maintenance ‘Rapid Response’

By John Mayaki When governments speak of infrastructure renewal, the conversation often gravitates toward grand construction projects such as new highways, bridges and dualised roads that capture public attention. Yet,

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The Nation
March 18, 2026·7 min read

By John Mayaki

When governments speak of infrastructure renewal, the conversation often gravitates toward grand construction projects such as new highways, bridges and dualised roads that capture public attention. Yet, in many states, the real battle lies elsewhere in the everyday fight against potholes, drainage failures and the gradual decay of existing roads. These problems, though less glamorous than ribbon-cutting ceremonies, are the true test of governance.

It is in this context that Governor Monday Okpebholo’s activation of enhanced rapid response measures for road maintenance across Edo State deserves attention. With the purchase of equipment and machinery for the state’s Road Maintenance Agency, the administration is signalling a shift from reactive governance to a more organised maintenance culture. If properly implemented, this initiative could significantly strengthen the state’s readiness for integrated emergency road maintenance.

Road infrastructure deteriorates not only because it ages but also because it is neglected. Across Nigeria, a familiar cycle plays out: roads are constructed with fanfare, but little thought is given to systematic maintenance until they deteriorate badly enough to require expensive rehabilitation. The cost of such neglect is enormous economically, socially and politically.

The establishment and strengthening of Road Maintenance Agency suggests an attempt to break that cycle. With the right tools and operational mandate, the agency is expected to ensure uninterrupted field operations by workers who will maintain roads, fill potholes and address broken-down infrastructure before such defects escalate into major structural failures.

At its core, the agency is designed to respond quickly to various forms of road defects. This intervention, as understood, will range from full rehabilitation to sectional rehabilitation, routine maintenance and palliative work. Such a layered approach is important. Not all road failures require total reconstruction. Many require swift, targeted repairs that can prolong the lifespan of the infrastructure and save government resources.

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For too long, road maintenance in many jurisdictions has been episodic rather than systematic. Crews appear only when deterioration becomes too severe to ignore. By that time, the cost of repair has multiplied. A rapid response system, however, works differently. It is built on the principle of early detection and early intervention such as identifying problems while they are still manageable.

If the new agency functions as intended, it will consolidate an all-year-round approach to road maintenance and rehabilitation. The use of a wide range of maintenance materials, including asphalt premix, interlocking paving stones, cold mix asphalt, boulders, crushed stones and lean concrete, will give field teams flexibility to respond to varying conditions and types of defects.

These materials are not merely technical details; they represent a practical response to the realities of road maintenance in a tropical environment. Weather conditions, particularly rainfall, often complicate repair work. In many cases, repair efforts stall once the rainy season begins, leaving defective sections of road to worsen until the dry months return.

However, modern maintenance techniques increasingly allow work to continue even under less-than-ideal weather conditions. Cold mix asphalt, for instance, can be deployed in wet conditions, while other materials provide temporary stabilisation until permanent repairs can be undertaken. With proper planning and technical expertise, road maintenance need not grind to a halt simply because the rains arrive.

Okpebholo has already assured steady funding for the agency and has taken the critical step of procuring the necessary equipment. That decision is crucial. Maintenance agencies often fail not because the concept is flawed but because they lack the tools to carry out their mandate. Graders, rollers, asphalt mixers and other essential machinery are the backbone of any serious road maintenance operation.

With equipment in place and funding guaranteed, expectations are understandably high. The hope is that the agency will utilise the dry days of 2026 to rapidly address the majority of road defects across the state. The dry season offers the best conditions for extensive repair works, and it should be maximised.

Yet, the agency must also plan for continuity during the wet season. Road maintenance cannot be seasonal if the objective is to keep infrastructure consistently serviceable. Monitoring weather patterns, deploying appropriate techniques and ensuring that emergency repairs can still take place during rains will be essential components of an effective maintenance strategy.

Another area where the agency can make a meaningful impact is in the maintenance of inner roads. While state governments often focus on major arterial roads, the smaller roads within communities are equally vital to economic and social life. These roads connect neighbourhoods, facilitate access to markets, schools and healthcare facilities, and determine the daily quality of life for residents.

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In most cases, local governments have primary responsibility for these inner roads. However, collaboration between the Rapid Response Agency and local government authorities could significantly improve outcomes. Such coordination would ensure that maintenance efforts reach beyond major highways and extend into the communities where road failures often go unattended for long periods.

The favourable dry weather experienced so far this year presents an opportunity that should not be wasted. The agency would do well to deploy its teams aggressively, treating defective road sections both day and night where necessary. Rapid response should mean exactly that; speed, efficiency and visible results.

But government action alone will not be enough to sustain the gains of this initiative. Citizens also have a responsibility to protect the infrastructure that serves them. One of the most persistent causes of road deterioration in many communities is the blockage of drainage systems. When drains are filled with refuse, water has nowhere to go. The resulting flooding weakens road foundations and accelerates damage.

Residents must therefore desist from the habit of dumping waste in drains. What may appear to be a convenient method of disposal often leads to consequences that affect entire communities.

Beyond waste disposal, there are other forms of road abuse that citizens must avoid. Indiscriminate cutting of roads to lay cables or pipes without proper restoration damages road surfaces and weakens structural integrity. Burning items on roads, spilling petrochemical products and dumping refuse along drainage channels all contribute to premature road failure.

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Public infrastructure thrives when communities develop a sense of ownership. Roads are not merely government property; they are shared assets that support economic activity, mobility and public safety. Protecting them should be seen as a collective responsibility.

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Still, policies and equipment alone do not guarantee success. Implementation remains the ultimate test. The governor has set the compass and provided the tools. The Road Maintenance Agency must now follow through with action. The people will judge the initiative not by its announcement but by the visible condition of the roads they use every day.

Citizens, for their part, owe the governor appreciation for taking steps to address the long-standing problem of road maintenance. But appreciation must be matched with vigilance and cooperation. Ultimately, the success of the Road Maintenance Agency will depend on its ability to deliver immediate, measurable improvements. The expectation is clear: swift repairs, consistent maintenance and roads that remain serviceable year-round.

The governor has initiated the process. The agency must now justify the confidence placed in it by translating policy into performance. In the end, results, not stories or excuses, will determine whether this bold step becomes a lasting solution to Edo State’s road maintenance challenges.

•Mayaki writes from Benin City, Edo State.

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