Easter travel disruption likely on rail and roads
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-32172510 Version 0 of 1. People travelling by rail over Easter should "think twice", Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin has said. He told the Evening Standard large-scale rail engineering work may make journeys more difficult. Several major rail routes are affected, particularly the London to Scotland West Coast main line, parts of Kent and lines running through Reading. The RAC said four million motorists were expected to travel on Good Friday and some 4.5 million on Easter Sunday. Arriva Trains said passengers in Wales travelling to London would face delays due to engineering works. "There will be alternatives and we've lifted almost all motorway roadworks to help," Mr McLoughlin said. More than 550 miles of roadworks have been put on hold over the weekend by Highways England, formerly the Highways Agency. For safety reasons the speed restrictions will remain in place but the roadworks, on England's motorways and major A roads, will not resume until Tuesday. Mr McLoughlin said "an army of 14,000 workers" would be working around the clock over the Easter weekend to upgrade train lines. "But if you are travelling between Friday and Monday night please check your journey first, it may be that you'll think twice about how you travel. "I'm sorry if it is more difficult - but my promise is that the work is essential and when it's done the benefits will be worthwhile." One passenger travelling on the sleeper train from Inverness to London Euston told the BBC that the delays were worse than expected. She said that passengers had been expecting a 90-minute delay after receiving a warning email a few weeks ago. However, after being diverted down the East Coast line, passengers faced a "long wait at Wembley", she said, where engineering works were taking place. Planned works Network Rail has promised to try to prevent a repeat of the rail chaos which occurred at Christmas. An overrunning engineering project shut the line between Reading and London Paddington at the end of last year. Julian Burnell, from Network Rail, said work on the Reading station redevelopment, in its last major stage, was a "very big project, dealing with one of the biggest bottlenecks anywhere in the country". He added: "I can't say there's absolutely no danger [of an overrun at Easter], but we have done everything in our power to get it finished in good time. There are hundreds of buses waiting if that happens." Work on the railways this Easter includes: As a result of the work being undertaken, Virgin is "strongly recommending" that passengers do not travel between Good Friday and Easter Monday. Speaking of the work being carried out at Watford, Network Rail route managing director Martin Frobisher said: "There is never a good time to carry out this type of work but we have liaised closely with the train operators to plan for it to take place at a quieter time on the railway." According to traffic information company Trafficmaster, the top five busiest stretches of road over Easter are likely to be: Breakdown company Green Flag said 54,000 call-outs were expected over the weekend, with one puncture every minute. It said the M4 was likely to be one of the worst-congested roads. The coach company National Express said it planned to provide 33,000 extra seats to cope with the extra demand from passengers. According to the travel group Abta, 1.8 million Britons are heading abroad over the weekend, with Spain and Florida among the top destinations. Heathrow Airport said it was expecting a record-breaking Easter weekend with more than 800,000 passengers passing through. The airport, which expects a 40% rise in the number of families travelling with small children, has called in 150 extra staff members. Gatwick Airport will see some 480,000 passengers between Good Friday and Easter Monday - an increase of about 11% on Easter last year. |