This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/7878143.stm
The article has changed 14 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 6 | Version 7 |
---|---|
UK set for more winter disruption | UK set for more winter disruption |
(30 minutes later) | |
Further disruption is expected across the UK later with the arrival of a winter storm bringing rain and snow. | Further disruption is expected across the UK later with the arrival of a winter storm bringing rain and snow. |
Heavy rain is falling over southern and south-western England, while more snow is due to arrive in Wales and the Midlands, creating blizzard conditions. | Heavy rain is falling over southern and south-western England, while more snow is due to arrive in Wales and the Midlands, creating blizzard conditions. |
It follows a week which saw the heaviest snowfall in the UK for 18 years, closing schools and crippling transport networks. | It follows a week which saw the heaviest snowfall in the UK for 18 years, closing schools and crippling transport networks. |
Some councils have begun to run out of supplies of salt for gritting. | Some councils have begun to run out of supplies of salt for gritting. |
Overnight, some snow fell in Northern Ireland, southern and central Scotland, and parts of the Midlands and the north west of England. | Overnight, some snow fell in Northern Ireland, southern and central Scotland, and parts of the Midlands and the north west of England. |
In Aviemore, Inverness-shire, the temperature dropped to -18C (-0.4F) overnight, which the Met Office said was the lowest temperature since January 2003. | |
The storm will spread from southern England and Wales to the Midlands and continue overnight into Tuesday, the BBC Weather Centre said. There will be heavy-lying snow by tomorrow morning Matt TaylorBBC weather forecaster class="" href="/1/hi/uk/7865477.stm">Map: UK snowfall | |
It could bring up to six inches of snow (15cm) in some areas, and up to an inch-and-a-half of rain in others. | It could bring up to six inches of snow (15cm) in some areas, and up to an inch-and-a-half of rain in others. |
Gale force winds will cause drifting where snow is falling and exacerbate already freezing temperatures. | Gale force winds will cause drifting where snow is falling and exacerbate already freezing temperatures. |
Rain falling on areas that have already seen snow will add to the potential for flooding. | Rain falling on areas that have already seen snow will add to the potential for flooding. |
BBC forecaster Matt Taylor said heaviest rain was falling over England's southern counties. | |
He said snow was likely to begin falling over eastern Wales and the west and southern Midlands on Monday evening, spreading north as far as Nottinghamshire overnight. | He said snow was likely to begin falling over eastern Wales and the west and southern Midlands on Monday evening, spreading north as far as Nottinghamshire overnight. |
"There will be heavy-lying snow by tomorrow morning - up to 5cm (2in) of snow generally but we could see 10cm in some places and 15cm on higher ground," he said. | "There will be heavy-lying snow by tomorrow morning - up to 5cm (2in) of snow generally but we could see 10cm in some places and 15cm on higher ground," he said. |
Container ship | |
Localised sleet and light snow in the north of England should have less of an impact, while Northern Ireland and Scotland should escape further significant snowfall. | Localised sleet and light snow in the north of England should have less of an impact, while Northern Ireland and Scotland should escape further significant snowfall. |
However, it will be another freezing night in the Highlands, Mr Taylor added. | However, it will be another freezing night in the Highlands, Mr Taylor added. |
Some councils in England have already been running out of road salt, with the Highways Agency saying supplies were "very limited". | Some councils in England have already been running out of road salt, with the Highways Agency saying supplies were "very limited". |
There was some relief in Scotland as a ship unloaded 6,000 tonnes of salt from Tarragona in Spain at Aberdeen harbour. The city's council said it was a scheduled delivery. class="lp" href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/talking_point/default.stm">HAVE YOUR SAYWe had a further two inches of snow overnight, on top of the four inches of ice that has been accumulating since last MondayBrendan, East Yorkshire class="" href="http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?forumID=6023">Send us your comments | |
Another container ship is travelling from Spain, laden with a further 40,000 tonnes of salt, and a third is also heading to the UK with salt from Germany. Both are expected to dock on Wednesday. | Another container ship is travelling from Spain, laden with a further 40,000 tonnes of salt, and a third is also heading to the UK with salt from Germany. Both are expected to dock on Wednesday. |
Monday saw far fewer schools closed across Britain, although 55 were shut in Aberdeenshire. There were 13 closed across Wales and eight in Bedfordshire, with just a handful shut in other local authority areas across southern England. | Monday saw far fewer schools closed across Britain, although 55 were shut in Aberdeenshire. There were 13 closed across Wales and eight in Bedfordshire, with just a handful shut in other local authority areas across southern England. |
Meanwhile, the debate continues over whether last week's snow caused Britain to grind to a halt too easily. | Meanwhile, the debate continues over whether last week's snow caused Britain to grind to a halt too easily. |
The leader of Devon and Cornwall Business Council Tim Jones said too many schools and businesses "panicked", costing the region's economy £40m. | The leader of Devon and Cornwall Business Council Tim Jones said too many schools and businesses "panicked", costing the region's economy £40m. |
In London, Tube workers are angry at being told they will not be paid if they failed to turn up for work during last week's heavy snow. | In London, Tube workers are angry at being told they will not be paid if they failed to turn up for work during last week's heavy snow. |
They have accused Mayor Boris Johnson and Transport for London of hypocrisy, given that all bus services in the capital and much of the Tube network were withdrawn last Monday. | They have accused Mayor Boris Johnson and Transport for London of hypocrisy, given that all bus services in the capital and much of the Tube network were withdrawn last Monday. |
Have you been affected by the snowfall? Send your comments and pictures to the BBC using the form below: | Have you been affected by the snowfall? Send your comments and pictures to the BBC using the form below: |
At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. | At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. |
Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk, text them to 61124 or you have a large file you can upload here. | Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk, text them to 61124 or you have a large file you can upload here. |
Read the terms and conditions | Read the terms and conditions |