Diversions left early morning motorists facing huge tailbacks and the gridlock is expected to continue tonight. |
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Constant roadworks lead to rush-hour gridlock on the highways linking the bustling resorts of Ayia Napa, Lemesos and Paphos. |
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Once the symbol and instrument of progress, now it drives us to gridlock and road rage. |
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It will cause misery for long-suffering drivers who faced gridlock when the main burst, forcing police to shut the flooded road for hours. |
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The protesting workers used tanks, armoured cars, and missile launchers to seal the entrance, creating a gridlock along a nearby highway. |
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The highway fails in that too many roads feed into it causing gridlock at peak times. |
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One open-air concert starring Robbie Williams attracted 370,000 people and caused gridlock for miles. |
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There was gridlock on some roads when 200,000 people converged on RAF Fairford for last summer's two-day event. |
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That's where all these highway interchanges and overpasses are planned to bring the traffic even quicker than the present gridlock. |
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Little did I know, as I struggled onto a hugely packed tube, that the city was in total gridlock. |
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York's traffic was plunged into rush-hour gridlock again as half-term holidaymakers joined commuters on the congested roads. |
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How else can we deal with the looming threat of climate change and gridlock on the roads? |
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A lorry shed a cargo of paper across the Bristol Road on Saturday morning causing four hours of traffic gridlock in Chippenham. |
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The best way to ease gridlock is to voluntarily switch to other forms of travel, where possible. |
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And that flood of goods is threatening to create gridlock on the roads and rails of Southern California. |
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If we want to keep motorists sane and avoid total the gridlock of Saturday last, now is the time to start planning. |
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The President's face remained composed, masking the turmoil and terror raging within as his cerebrum went into gridlock. |
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But Fontaine was also slowed by the gridlock created by internal Liberal Party machinations. |
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Nobody will thank the planners if they face daily gridlock getting to and from their homes. |
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The move to inject liquidity started in Asia as the Bank of Japan reacted early to head off fears of a global gridlock. |
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But he is up to his neck in it right now, and potentially faces years of policy gridlock in city hall. |
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Less than four years into the life of the parliament we seem to be facing the prospect of legislative gridlock. |
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And still the returns prophesied continued political gridlock in an evenly divided nation. |
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Wall Street likes legislative gridlock because politicians cannot apply their financial ideas. |
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Proponents say a parliamentary system would end the gridlock between the executive and legislature that dogs Philippine politics. |
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A number of ideas are being looked at by Colchester Council to bring an end to rush-hour gridlock. |
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The aim is to rid the town of heavy through traffic which is creating gridlock. |
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This issue is simply too important to give in to gridlock and to accept inaction. |
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Higher density means fewer long commutes, which helps gridlock problems and is good for the environment. |
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Traffic will take to minor narrower roads causing even worse congestion and gridlock. |
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The near-term outlook for enactment of new copyright legislation is unclear, and the best guess is that gridlock will prevail. |
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People feared the development would cause traffic gridlock and claimed noisy fans would make their lives a misery. |
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This would be especially good considering the almost daily South Granville Street traffic bottlenecks and gridlock. |
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As well as trying taxpayers' patience, the worsening gridlock is costing big money. |
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In Edinburgh, six-mile tailbacks of commuter traffic brought gridlock to much of the city for more than three hours. |
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Road users and residents say they are fed up with the constant gridlock and traffic mayhem. |
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Senior city councillors have approved a traffic master plan aimed at saving York from future gridlock. |
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His fear, which we share, is that principles will be interpreted inflexibly, without regard to the nuances of cases, generating a gridlock of conflicting principled stands. |
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A meeting was convened to discuss possible ways to prevent total gridlock. |
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Traffic lights lost power, causing gridlock all across the city. |
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A virtual gridlock exists around this area between 4.30 pm and 6.30 pm. |
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That could lead to months of gridlock and policy drift, say some analysts. |
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Months of political gridlock have taken the shine off of Chen's victory. |
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The closures have meant gridlock in places, but pre-planned highways contingencies have been put into operation and diversionary routes publicised where possible. |
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Many transport commentators are relying on national road pricing to deliver us from gridlock. |
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Unfortunately, after an impressive show of bipartisanship in the wake of September 11th, Congress is regressing into acrimony and gridlock. |
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That leaves us facing political gridlock between the sensible but cowardly party and the greedy, sociopathic party. |
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One way to remove health reform gridlock is to open up important discussions to citizen participation. |
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On the other hand, Canberrans speak fondly of how easy it is to get around – unlike the gridlock of Sydney and Melbourne. |
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If the necessary steps are not taken immediately, Europe's airspace will soon be in gridlock. |
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Preparing liquidity reserves affects costs as much as the delayed settlement due to gridlock. |
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Can you help the driver break out of the gridlock before the ice cream melts? |
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Meanwhile, the cash flaxseed market is in a state of gridlock with no clear indication of when the issue in Europe will be resolved. |
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This has already created a kind of competitive gridlock where many trades and occupations have plenty of work in their home province. |
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Networks multiply the channels through which information and exchange flow, and are, therefore, much less subject to blockage and gridlock. |
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In the next two years, the Republicans and Democrats will often be at loggerheads, mired in the gridlock of divided government. |
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It may cause a traffic jam or a tailback to the point of gridlock. |
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Emotional disengagement is often a later stage of continued gridlock. |
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Now cities are largely on their own, as austerity and gridlock grip Washington. |
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Such admiration for the American system sounds strange in this era of gridlock and bickering. |
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Most of all, Orman reflects a bubbling Main Street frustration with hyper-partisan gridlock. |
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But after two years of budgetary gridlock in Washington, people are sick of hearing about it. |
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With that audience in mind, I hope to hear how the President will bypass Washington gridlock and get some things done. |
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Traffic gridlock is commonplace, air pollution levels are soaring and, most alarmingly, the thirst for water means the mighty Colorado River is increasingly running dry. |
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So today, gridlock in Washington simply mirrors who we are and where America is. |
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If the GOP controls both the House and the Senate, the gridlock to come will make recent times look like a minor traffic jam. |
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Before Bridgegate, the governor explained the best part of being boss was driving to New York with no gridlock. |
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If they stood against the Tea Party, they could break some of the gridlock in Congress. |
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It's the end of the working day, but a heavy snowstorm has brought chaos to public transport and gridlock to the roads, thus trapping everyone in the smoking room after hours. |
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A committee of 20 acting as an executive is simply a formula gridlock. |
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The gridlock has become a significant impediment to the economy as well. |
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Now, the caped commuting crusader is asking those who travel through Downtown to prevent gridlock and avoid costly fines. |
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Even on the most generous reading, his proposals offer immense opportunities for a Westminster version of the gridlock that has brought the US system of federal government almost to its knees. |
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But the gridlock is most damaging to Republicans who, four months after electoral gains that gave them control over both chambers of the legislature, have allowed bitter internal divisions to impede effective government. |
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If it exactly the same, and electoral legitimacy is equal by elected senators or consultatively elected senators, however Bill C-43 puts it, then we will risk gridlock and that we must avoid. |
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More pessimistically, one might hold that there will always be people who act irrationally some of the time, and that in the context of an overloaded road system, episodes of gridlock will be inevitable. |
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Continued gridlock is likely, knee-jerk jingoism the popular default. |
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Let's wheel clamp them into gridlock in the battle for hearts and minds. |
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Indeed, the ability of banks to slow outgoing flows has often been acknowledged as creating gridlock in payment systems and, hence, systemic risk. |
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And even if you're unlikely to get stuck in a traffic jam thanks to the intelligent TMC package, the media package in the NAVIGON 8410 makes even gridlock into a pleasant experience. |
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The shock will soon congeal into fear-fueled groupthink and gridlock. |
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The East Side avenues seize up in teeth-grinding gridlock. |
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We all know how important public transit is when we talk about the smog, quality of life, and the traffic gridlock that is happening in our major cities. |
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The original MATA plan, minus the one-way streets, was used as a basis for the current effort to help ease the city's traffic gridlock. |
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Beginning the process could provide a model for how government gridlock might be broken and the demands of the electorate met. |
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Mineta is one of the few people in a position to avoid the aviation gridlock that we are facing in the near future. |
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While adversarial approaches are appropriate to enforce laws, the result in jurisdictions with a predisposition to litigation is often gridlock rather than progress. |
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Delegates are kept back by political gridlock. |
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Welcome to green gridlock, the traffic jam to save the planet. |
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Andersson's people shamble about their daily rounds in a city that's perpetually overcast, chimneys belching effluent on the horizon, traffic in permanent gridlock. |
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Treacherous roads created gridlock from Hamilton to Ottawa, but couldn't stop a massive outdoor wedding ceremony in Niagara Falls when 200 couples renewed their vows for the new millennium. |
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One diplomat believes that Bosnia's gridlock has got so bad, and the political atmosphere so poisonous, that for the first time since 1995 the unthinkable of renewed fighting is thinkable once again. |
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Congestion, pollution, gridlock, global warming, floods, freak weather. |
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Yes, gridlock frustration and national debt nausea are understandable. |
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Although the Conference on Disarmament broke the gridlock on its programme of work for the first time in 12 years, it failed to advance because of procedural disagreement. |
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A temporary gridlock is triggered in the system when no bank has sufficient liquidity available to start settling the first payment in their wait queue. |
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Slide the blocking cars out of the way to escape the gridlock. |
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These upgrades will reduce gridlock and make the road safer while contributing to economic growth and fostering the development of tourism in the region. |
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One of these must be modal shift from private car travel to more sustainable transport modes, including de facto public transport, if urban areas are to avoid being strangled by gridlock. |
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This is urgently required, firstly in order to counteract the threat of gridlock on Europe's trunk roads, and secondly to prove that politicians are giving the rail sector a genuine chance. |
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Longtime residents are frustrated by the increasing gridlock. |
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Even under normal circumstances, the mix of carts, wagons, and pedestrians in the undersized alleys was subject to frequent traffic jams and gridlock. |
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Conversely, flexibility in the timing of parliamentary elections can avoid periods of legislative gridlock that can occur in a fixed period presidential system. |
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The motorway has an average daily traffic flow of 144,000 vehicles in West Yorkshire, and has several areas prone to gridlock, in particular, between Leeds and Huddersfield. |
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Because of legislative gridlock in 2009, former Congressman Rick Lazio, a prospective candidate for governor, has proposed that New York adopt unicameralism. |
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Massage therapists say massage prevents gridlock in your lymph vessels. |
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It would be premature to say bipartisanship is back and that the current Republican-controlled Congress has broken the gridlock that has gripped it in recent sessions. |
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Of course interest-group members are members of society as a whole, too, and lose more from the gridlock than they gain from their specific group protection. |
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Disagreements about funding have caused legislative gridlock in Congress. |
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