Holidaymakers and freight drivers are dealing with frustration on the Port of Dover, with queues taking hours to clear.
Checks by French border guards are taking as much as 90 minutes to course of automotive passengers, and round two hours for these in lorries, the Kent port has introduced.
In a message to ready passengers, the port stated: “Today is already proving a popular travel day at Dover, and the port is busy processing strong volumes of tourist traffic.
“Teams from the port, Police aux Frontieres and our ferry operators are working to get you thru as swiftly as doable.”
Earlier within the 12 months at Easter, some passengers on coaches had been left ready as much as 10 hours to be processed as they waited to board ferries.
Delays on the port have partly been blamed on Brexit, and the French border officers having to hold out further checks and stamp UK passports earlier than they will board the ferries.
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The Dover Traffic Assessment Project (TAP) – a short lived scheme put in place at busy instances to stop the city from turning into backed-up with site visitors – has been activated for the day.
The scheme requires HGV drivers to stay within the left hand lane of the street resulting in the port, that means native site visitors can circulate by means of the opposite lane.
DFDS, a serious ferry operator between Dover and Calais, stated passengers who miss their ferry because of the delays might be booked on to the following accessible journey.
Source: information.sky.com”