New Jersey officials
kick off
National Work Zone Awareness
Week
(Trenton) - Commissioner
James Simpson kicked off New Jersey
Department of Transportation’s
participation in National Work Zone
Awareness Week today, urging motorists
to contribute to a safe highway construction
season by taking it slow through work
zones.
“We can all help drive down
the number of accidents and injuries
to motorists and construction workers
by paying extra attention to the bright
orange signs which alert us of upcoming
work zones, and by traveling through
construction areas in a slow and safe
manner,” Simpson said.
Similar messages are being delivered
by transportation officials nationwide
as the highway construction season
shifts into high gear with the coming
of warmer weather. With as many as
200 highway and bridge projects under
way at any given time in New Jersey,
motorists travel through work zones
quite often.
“Every work zone, from relatively
simple ones to those that involve
lane shifts or merging traffic, offer
an opportunity for drivers to help
keep the zone safe,” said NJDOT
Deputy Commissioner Joseph Mrozek,
who this morning announced Work Zone
Awareness Week with New Jersey Motor
Vehicles Commission Chief Administrator
Raymond Martinez at an active work
zone along Route 1 in North Brunswick.
“We educate and test new drivers
on the importance of recognizing work
zone signs and responding appropriately,
but work zone safety is everyone’s
responsibility, from the teenager
with a learner’s permit to those
with decades of experience behind
the wheel,” Martinez said. “Don’t
allow yourself to be distracted while
approaching or traveling through a
work zone.”
In coordination with the New Jersey
Turnpike Authority, the South Jersey
Transportation Authority and the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey,
NJDOT is displaying a special safety
message on Variable Message Signs
reading, “Safer Driving, Safer
Work Zones, For Everyone.”
NJDOT is working with the New Jersey
Institute of Technology and Rutgers
University on a study to identify
whether work-zone accidents tend to
occur prior to the zone, within it
or as vehicles emerge from the zone.
Study data will help drive strategies
and investment decisions to help reduce
work zone accidents and injuries.
“All motorists should pay close
attention to both the location of
road workers, whose jobs often put
them extremely close to traffic, and
the movement of vehicles around these
zones,” Highway Traffic Safety
Acting Director Gary Poedubicky said. “Being
aware of workers, traffic control
devices and construction equipment
when traveling in areas where projects
are ongoing is not only a smart driving
behavior, but one that can also save
lives.”
In 2009, 667 motorists and construction
workers were killed and 40,000 injured
nationwide as a result of motor vehicle
accidents in work zones.
Real time travel and construction
information is available online
at
www.511nj.org.
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