Christmas travel measures to help passengers plan their journey and travel safely
Government outlines measures for safe Christmas journeys between 23
and 27 December. Transport Secretary announces 778 of miles of
roadworks cleared. Rail upgrades postponed enabling extra services
with over 95% of the rail network unaffected by engineering works.
Longer trains and extra services added alongside waiving of admin
fees to change advance rail tickets Passengers urged to plan
carefully, book ahead and...Request free
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The Government has today (Thursday 3 December) outlined a series of measures focused on minimising disruption and helping people travel safely over the Christmas period, while urging passengers to plan their journeys carefully, consider quieter routes and where possible book ahead. Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has announced a comprehensive plan for the Christmas travel window between 23 and 27 December, including lifting hundreds of miles of roadworks, enhancing rail services, postponing and accelerating rail engineering works and cutting ticket charges to help travellers with their journeys. The Government is also working closely with transport operators to establish priority areas for testing of workers, to maintain and maximise services. As roads and rail have typically been quieter over the course of the pandemic, journeys during the Christmas period could be longer and busier than usual. The measures to be outlined today are targeted at supporting passenger and staff safety, reducing disruption wherever possible, and helping people travel with confidence. Travellers are also reminded to closely follow guidance, including wearing face coverings, maintaining social distancing and washing their hands frequently.
The Government is also working with the Devolved Administrations on our plans to ensure we take an aligned approach as far as possible. Measures outlined today include: Rail
Road
The Government appointed Sir Peter Hendy – Chairman of Network Rail – to act as a Christmas travel tsar on Friday. Providing rigorous scrutiny of the plans of all rail, road, coach, maritime and aviation operators, he will ensure a collective focus across the transport industry on minimising disruption and supporting passengers.
Travellers are being urged to closely consider the timings of any journey and consider quieter routes. On rail and coach services, passengers should book in advance. Long-distance rail operators, including LNER and Avanti West Coast, already require passengers to have a ticket booked with a seat reservation, enabling social distancing. For operators where passengers can still turn up and go, passengers are urged to book ahead, follow the guidance on social distancing closely, avoid the busiest times and consider using alternative forms of transport for shorter journeys. Whatever the journey, people are asked to plan carefully, book ahead where possible, and be prepared for journeys to take longer than normal. Notes to editors
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Road
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