Railway workers bring food to stranded lorry drivers

Southeastern and Network Rail staff load food deliveries onto a train at London Charing Cross station.

With an estimated 6,000 lorry drivers stuck trying to leave the UK due border restrictions, of which roughly 2,000 are waiting on the motorways approaching Dover, Southeastern and Network Rail worked late into the night on Christmas Eve to get food to them.

Southeastern workers took the initiative when they recognised that rail station shops would have excess food stock due to the introduction of Tier Four. Working with Network Rail, they collected food donations from London station outlets including Leon, Boots, Pret A Manger, Starbucks and M&S.

Staff filled crates with donated food and put them onto trains from London St Pancras, Charing Cross and London Bridge stations.

The food was donated by a number of station retailers.

Seven trains with crates of food left over a 48-hour period, with Southeastern staff working until late into Christmas Eve to fill more crates with much-needed supplies.

David Statham, Southeastern.

The crates were picked up at Ashford International railway station in Kent, which the Salvation Army distributed to stranded lorry drivers.

Macknade Kent Foodhall, based in the Kent town of Faversham, also donated parcels of food to the enterprise.

David Statham, managing director of Southeastern Railway, said: “We saw that lorry drivers in Kent were in a difficult place and we wanted to play our part in helping other transport professionals.

“I’m proud of how quickly our colleagues have reacted to this situation and are helping people in difficult circumstances.”

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