Flooding disrupts travel with more alerts issued

BBC A red sign reads road ahead closed on a country, flooded roadBBC
A number of flood warnings are in place across the north-west of England

A number of flood alerts are in place across the north-west of England after heavy rain led to road closures and widespread travel disruption.

Seven red alerts were previously issued in Lancashire and Cheshire following torrential downpours across the region overnight but these have now been downgraded to an amber warning by the Environment Agency.

Flood alerts are also in place along the River Bollin, near Knutsford and Macclesfield, as well as the River Gowy near Frodsham.

The Met Office has an amber weather warning in place across the region ahead of the arrival of Storm Darragh on Saturday.

Along with flooding, National Rail have announced a problem with a system used by train drivers and signallers and several services are facing delays as a result.

Northern said there were cancellations and delays following flooding and the signalling issues on services between Manchester, Bolton and Wigan as well as Preston to Barrow and Leeds to Manchester and Chester and Warrington.

Customers are being urged to check before they travel and a number of ticket restrictions have been lifted during the disruption.

Meanwhile, Lancashire Police warned drivers to only travel if necessary after roads were closed in Blackburn, Darwen, Rossendale and Burnley.

Burst pipes

On Merseyside, roads have been closed following torrential downpours, including Queens Drive, in Liverpool, due to flooding from Dovedale Road to North Mossley Hill Road.

The road is prone to flooding and a couple died in their car on Queens Drive last year after becoming submerged in flood water.

Elaine and Philip Marco died after getting stuck inside the vehicle on 26 August 2023.

Merseyrail said due to heavy rain and flooding the railway between Hooton and Capenhurst on the Chester line was disrupted.

Footage has also been shared on X of flood water streaming through part of Everton's new stadium at Bramley Moore Dock.

An Everton FC spokesman said the drainage system at the new stadium was still under construction and would be completed in the coming weeks.

Allow Twitter content?

This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read  and  before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

Lancashire County Council said two schools in Pendle had been forced to close due to burst water pipes.

Pendle View Primary School and St John Fisher and Colne's Thomas More Roman Catholic High School are closed due to no water facilities.

The authority said United Utilities was currently in the area carrying out repairs.

Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas to [email protected]

Related internet links