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Going out of UK! Brace for long queues at airports and ports

Airline passengers were warned on Saturday to expect long waits at British airports over the Easter holiday period due to a chronic shortage of check-in staff and security personnel.

“We do think that there will be queues at peak times over the Easter period,” Karen Dee, chief executive of the Airport Operators Association, told the BBC.

She said the industry needed to recruit “tens of thousands” of staff as it scales-up after Britain’s COVID-19 restrictions on travel were removed.

FILE PHOTO: People queue to enter terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport in London, Britain. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

London’s Heathrow airport alone needed another 12,000 staff, she said.

“We’ve started this process some time a go, but actually with those scale of numbers, particularly in a tight labour market, it is going to take us some time unfortunately,” she added.

Lorries and motorists are also facing long delays to board ferries at the Port of Dover.

Holiday motorists heading to France from Britain were on Saturday facing long delays due to a shortage of ferries at the Port of Dover, while airport travellers have also been warned to expect queues.

Many schools in Britain broke up for the two-week Easter holiday on Friday, putting more pressure on limited ferry capacity at the port, just when Britons have been freed of COVID-19 restrictions and are travelling abroad in greater numbers.

FILE PHOTO: Vehicles disembark from a cross-channel ferry in the Port of Dover. REUTERS/Toby Melville

Cross-channel ferry capacity between Dover and the French port of Calais has been disrupted after P&O Ferries services were suspended following its sacking of 800 workers last month. The company is yet to be given clearance to resume sailings using cheaper agency staff.

Poor weather overnight has made the situation worse.

“We are aware of queues at Dover, and the Kent Resilience Forum and local partners are working to minimise any disruption by deploying temporary traffic management measures,” the Department for Transport said in a statement.

“This has been caused by a number of factors, including severe weather in the Channel.” (Reuters)

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