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RAC issues summer holiday travel chaos warning as pain looms for air, rail and ferry passengers

RAC issues summer holiday travel chaos warning as pain looms for air, rail and ferry passengers


Travel chaos is brewing on multiple for families seeking summer getaways this week as the majority of schools in England and Wales break up for summer.

Drivers are being warned over severe road congestion, with the RAC forecasting that nearly 13 million people embarking on day trips or holidays by care between Friday and Monday will cause “bumper-to-bumper traffic”.

Those travelling instead by rail, sea or air could also face disruption, with bosses at the Port of Dover warning holidaymakers to expect two-and-a-half hour delays this weekend.

Waiting times have greatly improved at the ferry port since some coach passengers were subjected to 18-hour delays at Easter, thanks in part to enhanced post-Brexit passport checks by French border officials – with a new processing booth expected to be completed before Friday.

Nevertheless, the port’s chief executive Doug Bannister warned that processing times could stretch up to two-and-a-half hours during the peak hours of 6am to 1pm during the first couple of Saturdays and Sundays of the summer holidays, “due to the extreme popularity of these days”.

Those travelling from London Gatwick airport have also been warned of “severe delays, disruption and cancellations” as nearly 1,000 members of Unite – comprising check in, baggage handling and aircraft dispatch staff working for ASC, Menzies Aviation, GGS and DHL Services Ltd – walk out over the next two weekends.

A Gatwick spokesperson said although the airport did not employ the staff directly, it would work with the ground handles to ensure “as many flights as possible operate as scheduled”.

Industrial action is also set to hit those travelling by rail, with huge strikes by the RMT union on Thursday, Saturday and the following weekend set to cause thousands of cancellations.

Going places? Warning notice to passengers about industrial action at the UK’s busiest railway station, London Waterloo

(Simon Calder)

This is likely to be compounded by an Aslef train drivers’ overtime ban, which began on Monday and will last until Saturday. This “action short of strike” will be repeated again from six days starting from 31 July, the union announced on Monday.

Friday, the day most schools begin their summer break, is set to be the worst day for drivers as holidaymakers compete for road space with commuters, the RAC said.

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