

'If you're not able to travel, you can use your ticket either the day before or up to and including August 2, otherwise you will be able to change your ticket or claim a refund. 'While we will do all that we can to minimise disruption, if you are going to travel on the routes affected, please plan ahead and check the latest travel advice. West Midlands Trains: Will not operate other than a special shuttle between Birmingham New Street and Birmingham International Southeastern: There will be no Southeastern services running on the rail network, so passengers should avoid travelling by train on this day

London Northwestern: While not involved in the Aslef dispute, there will be no services tomorrow London North Eastern Railway: The timetable will be extremely limited, we recommend you only travel if absolutely necessary Hull Trains: Only one service will run from Hull to and from London King's Cross Heathrow Express: While not involved in the Aslef dispute, there will be no service tomorrow Great Western Railway: Most parts of the network will have no train service, so customers should avoid travelling on GWR as the few routes that are running will have a severely reduced service Most routes will have no service at all and the few routes that are operating will have a severely reduced service Greater Anglia: Avoid travelling with Greater Anglia. The Rail Delivery Group issued this guide on the levels of service to be expected on train operators tomorrow:Īrriva Rail London: No London Overground services expected Traffic was also building on several sections of the M25 around London - and major disruption was seen on the M55/M6 junction and surrounding roads north of Preston following a lorry fire and the closure of the M6 earlier on. Slow-moving traffic was reported on the M4/M5 interchange near Bristol, M3 near Winchester and A303. It said roads heading towards the Eurotunnel terminal at Folkestone and Port of Dover had minimal delays by this afternoon, but the switchover for holiday lets was showing with disruption on routes towards southern England.
#TRAFFIC TO WORK DRIVERS#
Drivers will face the worst delays between 11am and 3pm today and tomorrow. The AA warned of gridlock on major roads as the strikes force more people into vehicles on the second busiest weekend of the summer getaway. The LNER timetable will be extremely limited, with one train every two hours between London and York one train every two hours between York and Edinburgh and one train in each direction between London and Leeds all day.Įlsewhere, West Midlands Trains will not operate other than a special shuttle between Birmingham New Street and Birmingham International - while on Hull Trains, only one service will run from Hull to and from London all day. Only 10 per cent of Greater Anglia services will run - including just one Stansted Express per hour - while most of the Great Western Railway network will be shut, and the few routes running will have a severely reduced service. No Southeastern or London Overground trains will run - the latter being due to the Arriva walkout - while there will also be no service on London Northwestern or Heathrow Express, even though neither are involved in the dispute. The strike is by drivers for Arriva Rail London, Greater Anglia, Great Western, Hull Trains, LNER, Southeastern and West Midlands Trains - during the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham and as the English Football League starts. Rail services will be severely disrupted tomorrow and into Sunday morning due to the latest outbreak of industrial unrest – with members of the drivers' union Aslef at seven train operators walking out for 24 hours over pay. Britons were today braced for a weekend of travel misery as the summer travel hell facing holidaymakers deepened amid another major rail strike tomorrow and an 'amber' traffic warning issued by the AA.
