Skip to main content

Telford Council opts for Yotta Mayrise Street Works software

Following its recent implementation of Yotta’s visualised asset management software Horizons, Telford and Wrekin Council has also invested in the company’s Mayrise Street Works software. The hosted software will be used to monitor the street works register, coordinate works on the highway and issue fixed penalty notices.
May 2, 2014 Read time: 1 min
Following its recent implementation of 7606 Yotta’s visualised asset management software Horizons, Telford and Wrekin Council has also invested in the company’s Mayrise Street Works software. The hosted software will be used to monitor the street works register, coordinate works on the highway and issue fixed penalty notices.

Mayrise Street Works software is a complete solution for managing street work notices for both street and highways authorities and statutory undertakers. Handling the Street Works Register, National Street Gazetteer, inspections management and defect reporting, the system eliminates paperwork, ensures best practice and provides up to date information on the status of all works. Mayrise Street Works also offers full compliance with the revised EToN 6 specification.

“Mayrise Street Works will give visibility of all works taking place on the highway to all members of the Network Management team and enable them to issue fixed penalty notices as individuals,” commented Lee Barnard, Network Management interim group manager at Telford and Wrekin Council. “The Mayrise software will also complement the authority’s new coring regime.”

Related Content

  • April 29, 2019
    Cost benefit: just $25 boosts pedestrian safety in Florida
    A relatively straightforward change to the way that pedestrians cross the street in a Florida city has made a significant safety improvement. And what’s more, it was cheap, finds David Crawford Installing a lead pedestrian interval (LPI) system at 25 central business district signalised intersections in the Florida city of Lakeland has cut numbers of incidents involving pedestrians by some 60% - at a cost of US$25 for 30 minutes' work, according to traffic operations manager Angelo Rao.
  • August 7, 2019
    Videalert: Bath experience highlights joined-up thinking
    Councils can achieve greater value with multi-purpose traffic enforcement and management platforms, says Tim Daniels of Videalert. But UK authorities could also help deliver solutions by committing to ‘joined up thinking’... Joined-up thinking’ used to be a commonly related governmental phrase and implied a commitment to looking at elements of a problem to deliver a holistic solution. However, the way that successive governments have addressed major issues has demonstrated their inability to achieve join
  • August 6, 2013
    Amsterdam Group turn ITS theory into practice
    ASECAP’s Marko Jandrisits discusses the Amsterdam Group’s efforts to bring a sense of order to cooperative ITS deployments. When an issue arises which is deemed to require a technological solution governments and public-sector agencies around the world all too often tread the same sorry path. A decision is made to research and develop said technology to the production-ready stage, the work is done and the technology realised but then the money for deployment runs out and the technology is left on the shelf
  • May 3, 2022
    TRL drives National Highways update
    England's roads agency to replace 20-year-old asset managment software