Construction Season Begins,
Caution Needed Behind the Wheel
Work Zone Safety Week reminder to pay
special attention when seeing orange
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[April 05, 2017]
SPRINGFIELD
– The Illinois Department of Transportation, Illinois State Police
and the Illinois Tollway were joined by industry partners and
frontline construction workers today to remind the public that
construction season has arrived and extra caution will be required
in work zones. In support of the effort, Gov. Bruce Rauner has
proclaimed April 3-7 as “Work Zone Safety Week” in Illinois.
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“If you are driving in Illinois this year, you will be driving in
our work zones. We are striving to make this construction season the
safest one ever and drive traffic fatalities in Illinois to zero,”
said Illinois Transportation Secretary Randy Blankenhorn. “Please,
if you are traveling through a work zone, slow down, avoid
distractions in your vehicle and pay special attention to your
surroundings. One life lost is one too many.”
The theme for this year’s National Work Zone Awareness Week is “Work
Zone Safety is in Your Hands,” reinforcing the message that driving
habits impact the well-being of other motorists, cyclists, workers,
and pedestrians. When you choose to put aside distractions, you gain
the ability to save a life, perhaps yours.
“The ISP is committed to the safety of construction workers and
motorists on Illinois roadways,” said state police Director Leo P.
Schmitz. ‘While traveling through construction zones, we want to
remind drivers to obey work zone speed limits, pay attention to the
road and put the cell phones away. We will be present in work zones
throughout the construction season enforcing distracted driving
laws. Motorists need to focus on the construction zone and that
alone.”
 To better alert drivers when they are about to enter a work zone,
IDOT this year is deploying portable rumble strips in select spots
throughout the state. The department is also expanding the use of
speed indicator boards and Smart Work Zones, which rely on sensors
to relay traffic flow conditions via digital message boards in
advance of work zones.
A renewed focus by IDOT, the Illinois Tollway and the state police
will be on specialized “wolf pack” patrols to enforce the rules of
the road around work zones. Troopers also will be stepping up the
use of photo enforcement vans to ticket drivers who are not obeying
work zone speed limits.
More than 4,800 motor vehicle crashes on average occur in Illinois
work zones every year. Provisional data shows that 44 people were
killed in Illinois work zone crashes in 2016, including one worker.
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To promote safety in the field, IDOT is working with its industry partners to
host “tailgate talks” at project locations throughout the week. The discussions
with workers are refreshers on work zone protocol to encourage safety throughout
the construction season. In addition, a media campaign will last through the
fall featuring the Seymour Signs character encouraging drivers to “See orange.
Slow down. Save lives.”
This Friday, Laborers will continue their tradition of staffing rest areas
across the state and distributing materials that stress the importance of safe
driving through work zones.
“We’re reminding drivers to slow down and take extra precautions when they
travel through work zones to protect construction workers, emergency responders,
other motorists and themselves,” said Illinois Tollway Executive Director Greg
Bedalov. “Even if no workers are present, drivers are required to follow posted
speed limits in construction zones and to be alert for changing road and traffic
conditions. To be safe, drivers need to pay attention to the road, not their
cellphones, so we’re reminding our customers that using a hand-held cellphone
while driving is not just dangerous, it’s illegal.”
In recent years, Illinois has strengthened laws to increase safety in work
zones. Fines for speeding in work zones are $375 for first-time offenders and
$1,000 for a second offense. The penalty for hitting a worker is a fine of up to
$10,000 and 14 years in prison.
To learn more work zone rules and driving tips, an online quiz is available at
idot.illinois.gov.
[Illinois Department of
Transportation]
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