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Ohio Drivers Are Staying Home, And Helping Road Construction Crews

A screengrab of an ODOT camera shows light traffic on I-75 on a Friday afternoon.
Courtesy of
/
ODOT
A screengrab of an ODOT camera shows light traffic on I-75 on a Friday afternoon.

There have been questions about whether construction work is essential under Ohio's stay-at-home order. ODOT spokesman Matt Bruning says road construction and repair is absolutely essential.

"We keep those roadways open and we keep them in as good repair as we can. Obviously, going out patching potholes, repairing lights, repairing guardrails."

Ohioans are pretty obviously heeding the governor's orders to stay home. Bruning says traffic levels dropped by nearly half the first week of the stay-at-home order. Bruning says that's helped the road work.

"There's a lot of work that traditionally we only allow our crews to do overnight because when they impact traffic, the impacts are less. Because the traffic volumes have been down so dramatically we have changed some of the rules, relaxed some of those restrictions and allowed some of that traditionally overnight work to happen during the day."

Bruning says closing lanes in the daytime and at night could mean some projects get finished ahead of schedule. "It allows us to do more work, and probably be a little safer during daytime. We're more visible obviously in the daytime. It's been a benefit to everybody involved."

Statistics from the Ohio Department of Transportation show a decrease in traffic numbers, compared to a year ago.
Credit Provided / ODOT
/
ODOT
Statistics from the Ohio Department of Transportation show a decrease in traffic numbers, compared to a year ago.

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Rinehart has been a radio reporter since 1994 with positions in markets like Omaha and Lincoln, Nebraska; Sioux City, Iowa; Dayton, Ohio: and most recently as senior correspondent and anchor for Cincinnati’s WLW-AM.