Complete the news report about a protest against a new road. Put in the correct form of the verbs. Sometimes you need will or would.
Yesterday protesters managed to hold up work on the Oldbury bypass. Protest leader Alison Compton
defended the action by members of the Green World group. 'If we don't protest, soon
(►) there'll be (there / be) no countryside left,' she told reporters. The bypass is now well behind schedule,
and if the protesters had not held up the work so often, (1)………………………. (it / open) two months
ago. 'If these fields (2)……………………….... (disappear), we'll never see them again,' said Ms Compton.
'Why can't we use public transport? If more people (3)……………………… (travel) on buses and trains,
we wouldn't need new roads. If the motor car had never existed, the world (4)………………………(be) a
more pleasant place today.'
But many people in Oldbury want their new bypass. 'If (5)………………………. (they / not build) it soon,
the traffic jams in the town will get worse,' said Asif Mohammed, whose house is beside the busy A34. 'We
just can't leave things as they are. If things remained the same, people's health
(6)……………………….. (suffer) even more from all the pollution here. It's terrible. If we don't get the
traffic out of the town, (7)………………………. (I / go) mad. If (8)………………………. (I / know)
earlier how bad this problem would get, (9)………………………. (I / move) out years ago. But now it has
become impossible to sell this house because of the traffic. The government waited too long.
If (10)……………………….. (they / do) something sooner, there would be less traffic today'
And the protest is making the new road even more expensive. 'If this goes on,
(11) …………………….. ... (there / not / be) enough money left to finish the road,' says the Transport
Minister.