Transport for London asks the public to avoid travelling tomorrow, as the Red heat alert is extended by another 24 hours
The Met Office has recorded a temperature of 36.4C at Yeovilton in Somerset, making today the hottest June day on record – beating the record 36.1C which had been set yesterday, June 24.

Mercury rising: the June temperature record has been broken on two successive days this week
Those, of course, are the temperatures “in the shade”, measured according to strict Met Office rules. The temperature in the sun, with heat reflected off hard surfaces, can often be several degrees higher.
Emergency services and London’s transport system are feeling the heat, with record call-outs, while double the number of schools have closed or sent pupils home early – more than 2,000 – than had been the case yesterday.
In Croydon, the temperature has reached 32C, with the forecast for it being hotter still tomorrow (Friday, June 26).
The Met Office has extended its Red heat warning by 24 hours, through to tomorrow evening. Continue reading


Croydon College School of Art’s end-of-year exhibition opens today, “celebrating the creativity, innovation and achievements” of more than 150 students across a diverse range of disciplines.

CROYDON IN CRISIS: The omnishambles council is looking for its third chief exec in the space of nine months, with the challenge for the borough’s failed Mayor of finding anyone willing to work with him. By STEVEN DOWNES
CROYDON IN CRISIS: Figures from the council show that it has issued refunds to fewer than 1-in-10 of the motorists who were fined for driving through Low Traffic Neighbourhoods which the High Court ruled as ‘unlawful’.
Schools in Croydon and Sutton are among nearly 1,000 across England and Wales which have decided to close today and tomorrow, or adjust their hours to cope with the Red heat warning that has been issued by the Met Office.





Four fire engines and around 25 firefighters attended a fire on Brigstock Road, Thornton Heath, in the early hours of Wednesday morning.




CROYDON CHRONICLES: For much of the Victorian era, Croydon was a trading centre for Surrey farmers trading one of the products on which the nation’s economy had depended for centuries. But by 1876, all that was about to change. DAVID MORGAN explains


Andy Burnham won the Makerfield by-election this week. Here, ANDREW FISHER outlines what the result could mean for Britain, and for Croydon and its politicians