Judge Montgomery said witnesses had described Alam speeding up prior to the crossing "plainly irritated by slow moving traffic ahead" of him.
Unite leader Sharon Graham said it was "outrageous that valued workers are being punished" because of changes in the international chemicals market."The potential loss of so many well paid jobs in the area will be devastating, not just to our members and their families, but to the local economy as well," she said.
The union's regional officer, Richard Jackson, called on Dow "to reconsider its decision and work with us, government and other stakeholders to find an alternative solution to this closure."A council is facing a bill of almost £170,000 after losing an appeal over a warehouse plan on the edge of a town, it has emerged.West Northamptonshire Council's planning committee
in September for a DHL site on the edge of Towcester.The firm appealed and a planning inspector
in April after a public inquiry.
The council said the bills would be covered by its annual legal budget.But she hopes to stay alive until her children, both in their early 20s, leave home.
Jeannie is one of about 1,000 people who can’t access a treatment that could extend their lives because it has not been approved for funding on the NHS in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.The drug, called Enhertu, can give patients with a specific type of incurable breast cancer an extra six months to live on average.
The health assessment body, NICE, is the only organisation around the world so far to say no to the drug for this condition. It says that it is too expensive for the NHS to fund.The decision applies in England - but Wales and Northern Ireland will follow this guidance too.