Cambridgeshire County Council has issued its strongest criticism to date over the long-running disruption at the Kings Dyke crossing, Whittlesey, after confirming a new delay to the embankment remediation works that have kept the Ralph Butcher Causeway under traffic restrictions for well over a year.
In a hard-edged update published today (Thursday) the council revealed that Jones Bros—the contractor responsible for the repair programme—has fallen behind schedule due to extended soil-nailing works and a late start to the crucial sprayed-concrete phase.
The authority did not hide its frustration, describing the development as “not acceptable” and indicating that additional pressure is now being applied to the firm and its subcontractors to accelerate progress.
The setback marks the latest twist in what has become one of the most controversial infrastructure sagas in Fenland, with local residents and businesses increasingly voicing anger over months of congestion, unclear timelines and escalating technical challenges.
‘Not acceptable’: Council loses patience
In its new statement, the council confirmed Jones Bros had informed officials earlier this week that the current construction programme had been delayed yet again. The root cause, according to the contractor, was the longer-than-expected duration of the soil-nailing phase—where metal tendons are drilled deep into the embankment to stabilise it—and a delayed start for the application of the first layer of sprayed concrete.
While remediation work has been underway since July 2025, the embankment has remained in a fragile condition. Movement, cracking and settlement first triggered an emergency lane closure in July 2024, with additional fractures identified in May this year, forcing traffic to be funnelled into a single lane under signal control.

The council said it was “clearly disappointed” by the latest slippage and emphasised it was working to “ensure this work is done as quickly as possible” while maintaining safety. It gave no new overall completion date for the full reinstatement of the two-way carriageway, though Jones Bros now expects sprayed-concrete works—the critical final stage before reopening—to finish “before the end of January 2026.”
Concrete phase finally approaches
Despite the delay, the council says reinforcement installation is now progressing along the sharply angled, 70-degree embankment face. The first application of sprayed concrete is scheduled to begin on Monday, 24 November. Temporary hoarding will be erected along the top of the embankment to shield the sole open traffic lane from any overspray.
Once the sprayed concrete is fully applied in two layers, the structure should finally reach the stability required to lift the lane closure and restore two-way traffic—though the road will later require a further settlement period and full resurfacing. That final resurfacing stage, first indicated in early project timelines, has not yet been given a revised date following the latest delays.
A winter of risk and frustration
Council officials acknowledged the timing of the works is far from ideal. With winter approaching and the Fenland road network already vulnerable to flood-related closures, the authority is preparing for potential knock-on congestion should further roads become impassable.
However, they stressed that resilience measures have improved since last year, notably through completed works on the B1040 Dog-in-a-Doublet bridge. If winter flooding forces traffic diversions, the council says additional inspections, maintained drainage standards and coordination with streetworks teams will be intensified to minimise disruption.
But for Whittlesey residents, the assurances come after more than 16 months of intermittent closures, emergency repairs and escalating traffic problems. The town has endured a series of overlapping road issues since 2024, including failures at Benwick Road, subsidence at East Delph and multiple flood-related shutdowns across the wider network.
A timeline littered with setbacks
The Ralph Butcher Causeway’s troubles were first acknowledged publicly in July 2024, when cracking in the carriageway prompted the initial lane closure. Further fractures discovered by Jones Bros in May 2025 triggered an escalation in monitoring and design work.
A long sequence of council updates records a pattern of incremental progress overshadowed by recurring difficulties:
- July–September 2025: Early installation of soil nails with two rigs operating simultaneously, steadily increasing from 43 nails in late July to more than 500 by late September.
- October 2025: Drainage installation and steel reinforcement begin, with soil nails surpassing 630. The council projected sprayed-concrete works to follow soon after.
- 5 November 2025: Soil-nailing on the main embankment is completed, and the contractor anticipates starting the first sprayed-concrete layer within two weeks.
- 20 November 2025: Jones Bros confirms the sprayed-concrete phase has been delayed—pushing key milestone dates into early 2026.
Throughout these months, the council consistently assured residents that the work would be delivered under the existing lane closure, avoiding a full road shutdown. While technically accurate, the length of the lane closure—now stretching into its 17th month—has created chronic congestion, particularly during peak commute hours.
Accountability questions and contractor scrutiny
One of the most striking aspects of the council’s messaging this year has been its repeated insistence that the costs of the remediation programme will be “fully met” by Jones Bros. The authority has also made it clear it has not yet taken ownership of the Kings Dyke bridge, pending satisfactory resolution of the embankment issues.

This stance reflects ongoing concerns over construction integrity on the broader Kings Dyke scheme, a flagship project designed to eliminate the notorious level crossing that previously caused long-standing delays.
The refusal to assume ownership suggests the council is preparing to hold the contractor squarely accountable for design or engineering shortcomings, though no findings have yet been publicly released regarding the root cause of the embankment movement.
Public anger grows as delays continue
Local frustration has intensified sharply over the last 12 months. Residents have repeatedly questioned why the westbound lane could not be reopened sooner, calls the council has rejected on safety grounds, citing ongoing “intrusive testing,” subsurface instability and the risk to both drivers and workers.
Businesses in Whittlesey, dependent on reliable access to Peterborough and surrounding employment centres, report significant operational disruption. Some commuters have complained of unpredictable journey times and lack of clear long-term deadlines.
The council has tried to counter this by improving communication, expanding digital signage and providing daily traffic information. But with the project now running months behind its previous projections, trust is wearing thin.
Where the project goes from here
The next decisive step will come in late November when the sprayed-concrete works begin—assuming no further delays emerge. Only once the full reinforcement and concrete facing are complete can engineers confirm whether the embankment’s movement has been contained sufficiently to restore normal traffic flows.
Even then, a final resurfacing phase will be required following a settlement period, meaning the full resolution of the Kings Dyke issues may not arrive until spring or summer 2026.
For a project originally intended to ease congestion and improve reliability, the Kings Dyke crossing has instead become a symbol of extended disruption—and the council’s latest update makes clear that frustrations are likely to continue into the new year.