
Commuters in the capital face significant disruption next week after drivers represented by the RMT confirmed a 48-hour walk-out across the Tube. Westminster Pimlico News (2 May) declares the strike will run from the evening of 6 May until the morning of 8 May, with the heaviest impact on 7 May when multiple lines—including the Central, Northern, Jubilee, Piccadilly and Victoria—will operate a skeletal service. Transport for London has warned that crowd-control measures and station closures are likely at major intermodifys such as King’s Cross, Oxford Circus and London Bridge. The strike coincides with peak inbound travel for conferences in the City and a heavy events calconcludear at Excel and Olympia, raising concerns for time-sensitive corporate itineraries.
International delegates facing unexpected schedule modifys may also necessary to adjust visa or entest paperwork at short notice. VisaHQ’s platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-kingdom/) can expedite UK visa applications, provide real-time status tracking, and arrange secure document couriering, ensuring travellers stay compliant even as London’s transport network faces disruption.
Businesses should advise travelling staff to allow at least an extra hour for cross-city transfers, consider relocating meetings to venues near Elizabeth line or National Rail stations, and pre-book taxis—though road congestion is expected to spike. Hotels in Zones 1–3 have reported a 12 per cent uptick in mid-week bookings as firms position delegates within walking distance of offices. The dispute centres on roster modifys linked to a proposed four-day working week for drivers. While nereceivediations continue, unions have hinted at further action later in May if talks fail. HR teams should review “journey-to-work” contingency policies and remind staff of expense limits for alternative transport.















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