Drivers accused of failing to take notice of weather warnings
Many people spent hours stuck on the M62 in severe weather on Thursday night and Friday morning.
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Your support makes all the difference.Too many drivers ignored warnings to avoid non-essential journeys, National Highways suggested as many people spent hours stuck on the M62 in severe weather.
The Government-owned company responsible for Englandās motorways and major A roads insisted it āthrew everythingā at keeping traffic moving but struggled due to the volume of traffic and drivers ignoring lane closures.
Asked if too many drivers ignored the weather warnings, National Highways operational control director Andrew Page-Dove told the PA news agency: āI think the volume of the traffic speaks for itself, particularly this morning. The M62 was queued back to Manchester.
āPersonally, I probably wouldnāt have set out on a journey knowing that those conditions were there.
āWere all those journeys essential? I donāt know.
āI donāt think (the warning) was necessarily as well heeded as we would have liked it to have been.ā
He went on: āAs soon as you get vehicles that lose traction, then that just blocks the road and makes it impossible for our traffic officers, emergency services or indeed our snowploughs to get through.
āWe threw everything at it that we had and Iām absolutely confident that we did everything we needed to do in terms of treatments, in terms of ploughing.
āItās just the volume of traffic.
āThe question for me really is what more can we do to get drivers to really consider whether or not their journey is necessary.ā
National Highways attempted to keep M62 traffic moving by using just two lanes.
But Mr Page-Dove said some drivers ignored lane closed signs, leading to them becoming stuck.
This āexacerbatedā the situation, he added.
National Highways is warning that a āsevere frostā is expected overnight while snowfall from the north Midlands northwards is forecast to cause disruption.
It stated: āThere is further snow forecast to affect the cross-Pennine routes: M62, A66 and A69.
āWe have issued an alert and would urge drivers to avoid these routes, especially larger HGVs.ā
RAC breakdown spokesman Rod Dennis told PA: āA substantial amount of snow falling in a very short space of time can quickly lead to problems even if a road has been treated, and it looks like thatās what happened on the M62 overnight.
āThe situation was made worse by drivers overtaking slower moving traffic only to find themselves stuck in a lane of fresh snow.ā
He added: āThings are thankfully now improving but the scenes of stranded drivers is the perfect reminder of why itās so important to carry a warm blanket, a winter coat, extra layers, food and drink and a power bank and phone-charging cable.ā
Derbyshire Constabulary urged drivers not to travel in the Peak District on Friday morning āunless absolutely necessaryā as most roads in the High Peak and Derbyshire Dales areas were āimpassableā.
The force said it was working with mountain rescue teams to respond to reports of stranded vehicles.