More than 240 flood warnings STILL in place as Britain braces for Big Freeze and police blast ‘stupid’ drivers for moving ‘road closed’ signs and driving into floods

More than 240 flood warnings STILL in place as Britain braces for Big Freeze and police blast ‘stupid’ drivers for moving ‘road closed’ signs and driving into floods

Police have blasted idiot drivers after they moved road signs and drove on into floods – saying their actions are the ‘height of stupidity’.  

Almost 250 flood warnings remain in place across England and Wales as conditions continue to cause travel chaos across the country.

Severe flooding has led to hundreds of people being evacuated, cows drowning, rail lines being blocked and roads turning to rivers amid torrential rain. 

But while the Met Office predicts the wet weather has passed, water levels remain high and temperatures as low as minus 6C are predicted for the next few days with the UK Health Security Agency issuing a yellow cold weather alert.

Continuous rain for 41 days has racked misery across the UK as the wake of Storm Henk ravaged towns and villages. 

Leicestershire Police slammed the motorists after CCTV captured them stopping their cars, getting out, moving the signs out of the way and driving on.

A police spokesman said ‘This is the height of stupidity – these signs are put there for a purpose.

Roads still flooded in Essex today with abandoned cars taken over by the floodwater

An abandoned black BMW sitting in floodwater has been given a parking ticket after road was closed due to flooding in Cookham, Berkshire

A man paddles his small boat through the floodwaters in front of a house in Maisemore, Gloucestershire

Flooding around the town of St Ives in Cambridgeshire on Saturday morning after the River Great Ouse burst its banks

Dog walkers take to Irvine Beach as temperatures dropped to minus 4 on sea front

Temperatures as low as minus 6C are predicted for the next few days with the UK Health Security Agency issuing a yellow cold weather alert

The Environment Agency issued hundreds of flood warnings (in red)

‘They warn drivers the road ahead is flooded and may be impassable and dangerous.’

It came after the force had already begged locals to ‘act responsibly’ after dozens of vehicles had to be rescued from the waters by the fire service.

The Environment Agency had 244 flood warnings, where flooding is expected, in place across England on Saturday – down from more than 300 on Friday morning.

Natural Resources Wales has warnings in place on the River Wye at Monmouth and the River Ritec at Tenby.

There were a further 262 flood alerts, where flooding is possible, in place across England and nine in Wales.

Data from the Environment Agency showed almost every river in England has reached exceptionally high levels with some reaching record levels.

Heavy rain in Cambridgeshire meant rail replacement buses, in use due to flooding on the line, were unable to reach St Neots and Huntingdon railway stations for a spell overnight.

The company said Network Rail was working to repair damage caused by a landslip near Arlesey in Bedfordshire on Thursday, along with planned engineering works. They estimate affected lines will reopen by the start of Monday with a bus replacement service in place until then.

A 4x4 is left beached at the side of a road in the middle of the floodwater in Essex

The parking charge notice had been fixed to the black BMW, which was sitting in the dense floodwater

The whole road around the posh estate had been submerged by the murky water in Cookham, Berkshire

A column 11 of abandoned vehicles lay submerged on The A443 road near the small hamlet of Lindridge close to Tenbury Wells in Worcestershire

Fields and roads are flooded after the River Trent burst its banks with a major incident declared in Nottinghamshire

Flood waters from the River Ouse surround properties in Barcombe Mills, East Sussex

Great Western Railway said it had suffered ‘significant disruption’ to its services after flooding near Chipping Sodbury and the line between Swindon and Bristol Parkway is expected to remain closed through the weekend.

The line between Theale and Taunton is likely to remain closed on Saturday with services continuing on alternative routes.

South Western Railway, which saw much of its network affected on Friday including a landslip in Crewkerne, Somerset, said there was a ‘good service’ on Saturday.

Roads have been closed in and around Gloucester due to flooding and Gloucestershire police said a taxi driver had been reported for traffic offences on Friday night when he needed rescuing after becoming stuck when he attempted to drive through floodwater.

The Environment Agency said the River Severn was expected to have reached its peak at Gloucester Docks, and further upstream in Worcester, on Friday evening.

A slip road onto the A419 near Cirencester was closed on Saturday morning due to flooding, according to National Highways.

In Sheffield, firefighters were called to rescue a man who fell into the swollen River Don.

The Environment Agency said ‘significant river flooding impacts’ were expected on Saturday across parts of the Midlands on the River Trent and in Gloucester.

The River Great Ouse in Bedford town centre has burst its banks following heavy rainfall

Residents in a market town being rescued from major flooding after the waters rose to their doorsteps in Marlborough, Wiltshire

An overflowing river swells across a road after heavy rain in Cambridgeshire

Flooding in Marlborough, Wiltshire, where murky waters have swamped an entire road

It said areas of the South West on the River Avon would also be affected, adding that impacts are likely across much of England over the next five days because the ground is ‘completely saturated’.

Caroline Douglass, the agency’s flood director, said the Trent has been at ‘some of the highest levels we’ve seen in 24 years’. Nottinghamshire County Council declared a major incident on Thursday due to the rising levels.

The Met Office predicted Saturday would bring a dry day to most areas with some sunny spells, although with a few showers along the coast and feeling cold with frost and fog patches overnight.

It said temperatures will drop to minus 4C in parts of rural south-west England on Saturday night and minus 6C in rural areas along the Welsh border in Shropshire and north Herefordshire on Sunday night.

Sunday is forecast to remain largely dry, except for the occasional shower in southeast England early in the day, with the cold weather continuing for much of the next week.

The UKHSA has issued a yellow cold weather alert for the vulnerable and elderly from 9am on Saturday until noon on January 12 with temperatures likely to be a few degrees below average across much of the UK, especially overnight, with ice an issue on wet ground.

Met Office chief forecaster Jason Kelly said: ‘As the prevailing weather conditions will be characterised by high pressure, a good deal of settled weather is likely.

‘Clearer skies and a marked reduction in precipitation are expected, although any showers that do occur are likely to be wintry in nature.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak insisted people should be ‘reassured’ by the response to flooding, but Labour accused the Government of being ‘asleep at the wheel’ over flood warnings with leader Sir Keir Starmer vowing to make flood defences ‘fit for purpose’, writing on social media that ‘people’s lives shouldn’t be upended by extreme rain’.

Liberal Democrat spokeswoman for housing and communities Helen Morgan called on Mr Sunak to visit affected areas, saying: ‘The Prime Minister should see for himself the devastation caused by these floods.’

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Iwan Stone

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