This Easter weekend Britain
is facing gridlock as engineering works on the
railways and the Bank Holiday getaway coincide.
As
many as 16 million motorists are set to take to the roads over Easter,
with four million traveling on Good Friday and 4.5 million on Easter
Sunday.
'The
first spring bank holiday of the year traditionally heralds the start
of busier weekends on the nation's roads,' said RAC head of external
affairs Pete Williams.
He
went on: 'This Easter is set to be a hectic one with 16 million of us
getting behind the wheel for an Easter break, but at least we will
benefit from the longer days and lighter evenings to complete our
journeys.'
The Highways Agency is also maintaining 55 sets of roadworks over the Bank
Holiday weekend meaning Parts of the M1, M3, M4
and M6 likely to be hit by lane closures or speed restrictions. ( they
are lifting 62 roadworks temporarily to ease the congestion).
The
increase in the number of people planning to travel by car is thought
to have been in part triggered by a significant shutdown of the rail
network including the West Coast main line, First Great
Western and Greater Anglia - forcing passengers to make diversions on
slower trains or spend hours on the dreaded replacement coaches.
Network Rail said engineering works were planned over the Easter holidays because passenger numbers fell by 20 per cent.
In a move
that has been described by an expert as 'adding insult to injury',
Virgin Trains and London Midland have cancelled advanced cheap fares
forcing passengers to purchase more expensive off-peak tickets.
Both
Virgin and London Midland say they cannot offer advance fares as the
tickets would not be valid with other operators and replacement
services.
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