No end in sight to big freeze
Friday, December 3 , 2010
Forecasters warned there is no end in sight for icy conditions as the
death toll rose and transport networks struggled to cope with the
freezing weather.
Two pensioners died after falling in their gardens in sub-zero
temperatures while a motorist who stopped to help a stranded driver died
after he was struck by another vehicle.
As a working week beset by major disruption comes to an end,
commuters face continuing chaos on the trains and drivers were warned of
the danger of black ice on roads.
Transport Secretary Philip Hammond summoned Government chiefs for an
hour-long emergency weather meeting today to "stocktake" and discuss
preparations for the weekend, a Downing Street spokeswoman said.
Though the worst of the snow has fallen, temperatures remain low and
rain is set to make Britain's frozen roads and pavements even more
dangerous.
"The problem is the ground temperature is lower than the air
temperature so makes thawing difficult," said Aisling Creevey, a
forecaster with Meteogroup, the Press Association's weather division.
"It's going to be really cold into the next 10 days." There might be
a slight reprieve tomorrow for the south of England with a rise in
temperatures to about 5C expected.
But that will not be enough to melt the ice which is expected to be
worsened by rain - predicted for tonight and tomorrow morning - freezing
on top.
Any thaw will "be a very slow process", said Miss Creevey.
"It's a big, icy mess - I would be really advising caution, it is
going to take time to thaw out." The warning came as details emerged of
the first casualties.
Police said they feared 80-year-old Lillian Jenkinson had frozen to
death after collapsing in her back garden in Workington, Cumbria.
Her body was found at 10.40am yesterday, the day after an elderly man
was found dead in his garden in Kirby Stephen, also in Cumbria.
The deaths prompted charities to urge residents to check on elderly
neighbours.
Meanwhile North Yorkshire Police said a 57-year-old man, who has not
been named, was standing behind his Land Rover Defender when he was
struck by a Land Rover Freelander.
He had stopped to help recover a Vauxhall Corsa from a ditch at
Bellerby Bank, between Richmond and Leyburn, on the edge of the
Yorkshire Dales, when the accident happened at 7pm yesterday.
Downing Street today declined to offer a guarantee that the country
would not run out of salt and grit but said the nation was "in a much
better position than we were last year".
The spokeswoman added there were "no major concerns" over supplies of
food, petrol, diesel or gas.
Gas supplies were higher than last winter and so far there have been
"no supply issues related to the cold weather", she said.
Despite Downing Street's assurances, the Retail Motor Industry
Independent Petrol Retailers' Association said some forecourts were out
of fuel and others could soon run out diesel or even petrol.
Politicians are keen to avoid a repeat of last year's panic over road
salt supplies when emergency deliveries were made to councils up and
down the country.
The Independent
|