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Extra night sailings to try and clear Port of Dover traffic backlog

The port declared a critical incident amid high volumes of coach traffic heading to France for the Easter holidays.

Catherine Wylie
Saturday 01 April 2023 21:17 BST
Lorries queueing on the A20 to get to the Port of Dover in Kent as the Easter getaway begins. The Port of Dover declared a critical incident as high levels of traffic caused coach passengers to experience lengthy delays. It comes as operators P&O Ferries and DFDS Seaways also reported delays to ferry and coach services, citing bad weather and hold-ups at French border controls as partly responsible for waits and queues. Picture date: Saturday April 1, 2023.
Lorries queueing on the A20 to get to the Port of Dover in Kent as the Easter getaway begins. The Port of Dover declared a critical incident as high levels of traffic caused coach passengers to experience lengthy delays. It comes as operators P&O Ferries and DFDS Seaways also reported delays to ferry and coach services, citing bad weather and hold-ups at French border controls as partly responsible for waits and queues. Picture date: Saturday April 1, 2023. (PA Wire)

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Extra sailingsĀ are to run overnight at the Port of Dover to try and clear the backlog which has left passengers stuck in Easter traffic for hours.

A spokesman for the port, which hasĀ declared a critical incident, said it was hoping to clear the backlog by lunchtime on Sunday as some travellers said they had been held up for 14 hours.

The port has said the delays were ā€œdue to lengthy French border processes and sheer volumeā€.

P&O Ferries updated passengers on the delays on Saturday evening in a tweet stating: ā€œWe apologise for the wait times for coaches this weekend.

ā€œWe have put on additional sailings overnight to help clear the backlog of traffic. Once coaches reach our check in desks they will be on the next crossing to Calais.ā€

The firm had also stated that coaches at the Cruise terminal were stillĀ facing a wait time of up to 3.5 hours before they can proceed to the Port of Dover.

It added: ā€œOnce they are in the buffer zone at the entrance to the port the wait is approximately another 3-4 hours. We apologise for delays.ā€

The port spokesman said: ā€œThere is still the on-going situation at the Port but both DFDS and P&O are adding additional departures overnight. Vessels usually have a longer layover at night but they will be running back and forth to clear as much as they can.

ā€œAt present, we anticipate the backlog around lunchtime tomorrow but the extra sailings could well reduce that time.ā€

It came after a day in which a port spokesman said heĀ wasĀ ā€œdeeply frustratedā€Ā on Saturday as coach traffic faced ā€œsignificant delaysā€.

Additional coach bookings taken by ferry operators for Easter had impacted upon operations, a statement on the portā€™s website said on Saturday morning.

Just before 9am, a spokesman for the port said: ā€œCoach waiting time is still several hours, but tourist cars are getting through OK.ā€

P&O Ferries also apologised for the wait times for coaches sailing from Dover, while DFDSĀ advised passengers to allow extra time to complete border and check-in controls.

The port said food and drink had been provided to coach passengers in the queues.

Traveller Rosie Pearson said it was ā€œcarnageā€ in Dover as she was stuck for 16 hours with her husband and two teenagers.

Ms Pearson, 50, is an environmental campaigner from Essex and was travelling to Val dā€™Isere in the French Alps on an overnight bus.

It was due to arrive at 2.15pm on Saturday, but they expected they would probably not make it until 6am on Sunday due to delays in Dover.

ā€œThe whole thing was a shamblesā€¦ Not a single bit of communication,ā€ Ms Pearson told the PA news agency.

ā€œIt was carnage. The worst thing was that no-one told us anything for the whole 16 hours, literally nothing.

ā€œ(We are) very tired but people are resigned now and relieved to be en route. Shocking that something this chaotic can happen. My childrenā€™s school has a ski trip this week (they are not on it, with us instead) and their bus was turned away last night ā€“ they had to sleep at a service station and come back this morning.ā€

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer urged the Government to ā€œget a gripā€ of the situation at Dover.

ā€œI really feel for people trying to get through Dover. There will have been families who have booked holidays and now they are frustrated yet again and I think the nature of the frustration will be ā€˜not againā€™,ā€ he said.

ā€œThis is not the first time there have been problems at Dover. The Government needs to get a grip of this.

ā€œYou canā€™t have every summer holiday, every Easter holiday, the same old problem. And so the Government needs to get a grip on this and actually help people out, who are just trying to get away for a few daysā€™ holiday.ā€

A Government spokesman said: ā€œThe UK Government remains in close contact with ferry operators, the French authorities, and the Kent Resilience Forum, regarding delays at the Port of Dover.

ā€œThe port has advised that it remains busy, but the situation has improved significantly since yesterday, with coaches being processed at a much quicker rate.

ā€œWe recommend passengers check the latest advice from their operators before travelling.ā€

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