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Brexit: Preventing another Operation Stack & Operation Brock

On the 23rd June 2016, 51.9% of the people of the United Kingdom voted in favour of leaving the EU. Now with Brexit just one hundred and eight days away, the Prime Minister Theresa May is in a bit of a pickle to put it mildly.

Meanwhile, many agencies have been getting on quietly in the background to prevent a mess in the event we get a no Brexit deal; which remains a possibility. As this wonderful Australian makes clear prior preparation prevents piss poor performance.

The people responsible for ensuring we do not get any piss poor performance and another Operation Stack; which paralysed Kent last time around and brought the county to a standstill, is the Kent Resilence Forum

The have 108 days to accomplish this and are working with limited information and limited money, as Cllr Paul Carter Leader of KCC has called for a further £20 million to prevent another Operation Stack in the event of a no deal Brexit.

The Kent Resilience Forum, KCC Highways and partners have devised a dedicated ‘Freight Traffic Management Plan’, which contains various mitigations to maintain freight fluidity in the event of a no-deal Brexit. This has been made possible due to the joint learning across all partners who dealt with the 2015 Operation Stack event and utilises the ‘Operational Fennel’ multi-agency group, consisting of Highways England, Kent Police, KCC Highways and other key stakeholders, set-up as a result. Work remains ongoing to finalise this operational plan. These plans will be completed by the end of December and a walk-through test will be carried out in January 2019. And the map looks like this.

To summarise the map or the Brexit Freight Traffic Management Plan or Operation Brock as it will be known, will be broken down into five phases, as outlined in the diagram and table below.

During routine operations all freight for Eurotunnel and Port of Dover uses M20 and A20. Should the situation at either Port of Dover and Eurotunnel change and their buffer zones become full, Operational Fennel proposes:

Kent is dependent on, and awaiting details of, the Government’s ‘National Freight Plan’ (Brock Stage 5) – including plans for priority passenger freight, and the ‘National Ports Strategy’. The Kent Resilence Forum is continuing to encourage Government to develop measures to hold traffic outside of Kent. Arrangements for holding freight outside of the county, or at source, when Kent no longer has capacity is another crucial element of the plans.

Now not everything is in the hands of the Kent Resilence Forum and its members. It is now necessary for  the Government to take specific decisions. These include:

KCC also requires Government to provide further information and advice on:

As we understand there will be a trial of Operation Brock in early to mid January with up to a maximum of 200 lorries involved, according to sources from the Road Haulage Association. Letters have been sent out to a number of firms requesting their involvement.

There is still away to go to prevent another Operation Stack which might paralyse Kent. If this does happen then the lack of prior preparation will no doubt be down to the piss poor performance of our Prime Minister and NOT Kent Resilence Forum.

The Shepwayvox Team Journalism for the people NOT the Powerful

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