成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Be sure to smile, speed cameras approved for state work zones

Apr 6, 2023, 8:47 AM | Updated: 9:57 am

Speed cameras...

Be sure to smile if you鈥檙e speeding through a state highway construction zone. Speed enforcement cameras are on their way. (AP Photo/File)

(AP Photo/File)

Be sure to smile if you’re speeding through a state highway construction zone. Speed enforcement cameras are on their way.

Governor Inslee has signed that will allow the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) and Washington State Patrol (WSP) to put up automated speed enforcement cameras in work zones.

More Chokepoints: Remember WB I-90 construction backups? Guess what, they’re back

The bill received unanimous support in both the Senate and House of Representatives, with the need for these speed cameras becoming more apparent due to an uptick in traffic collisions on all roadways, including in work zones.

鈥淔olks working on our state highways deserve to do so with the peace of mind that they will end their shift by going home to their families and loved ones,鈥 Sen. Marko Liias鈥檚 (D-Everett) said. 鈥淭hese workers are acting every day to ensure our highways are safe for commuters, and we have a duty to keep them safe as well.鈥

They can only be put up on state highways, including freeways, and they will only be active when workers are present.

Lawmakers want to cut down on the types of accidents that nearly killed Adam Gonzalez, a WSDOT worker sitting in his attenuator truck protecting a work zone.

“The oncoming driver hit me going 70 miles an hour,” Gonzalez said at the bill signing. “Head, shoulder, and hip bashing the steering wheel. I suffered a concussion. I’m fortunate enough to be alive. If I hadn’t been there that night, my crew would most likely have been killed by that reckless driver.”

And it’s not the only time Gonzalez has been hit by a driver while in a work zone.

“I was glad it was me that got hit, not them standing on the road,” Gonzalez said. “I wish I could say this was it, but this is one of two or three crashes I’ve been in.”

In total, 60 WSDOT workers have been killed in work zones.

WSDOT data shows there were 283 minor injury crashes, 28 serious injury crashes and five fatal crashes in work zones in 2021 alone.

The state has a year to get this program up and running. The cameras are expected to be online in July 2024.

Pictures will only be taken of the car and license plate, and infractions will be sent to the registered owner. Signs must be posted informing drivers that they will be entering a work zone enforced with automated cameras. The state must also install “your speed is” signs prior to the work zone.

The money generated from the infractions will go to paying for the system. Anything over that will go to traffic safety education and funding DUI emphasis patrols.

MyNorthwest News

Gig Harbor Police Car...

Frank Lenzi

Driver crashes into four parked cars in Gig Harbor shopping center parking lot

A driver crashed into four empty cars in a Gig Harbor parking lot.

17 minutes ago

Lynnwood mail theft...

Jason Sloss, 成人X站 7 News

Lynnwood man using cameras to fight back against mail thieves

Mail theft is a growing crime around Puget Sound, and a Snohomish County man is doing what he can to fight back. 鈥淚 installed the cameras back in 2022 when mail theft got really bad around here,鈥 said Erik Watt, who installed cameras outside mailboxes on his street in Lynnwood.

3 hours ago

electricity demand...

MyNorthwest Staff

Electricity demand for WA, surrounding areas could double by 2046, experts say

The Pacific Northwest's demand for electricity could double over the next two decades, according to an energy forecast from regional experts.

3 hours ago

pierce county teenage son...

Frank Sumrall

Teenage son arrested after stabbing mother’s boyfriend to death in Pierce County

The Pierce County Sheriff's Office is investigating a homicide after a teenage son allegedly stabbed and killed his mother's boyfriend.

7 hours ago

wealth tax...

Frank Sumrall

Progressive group’s study debunks myth that ‘wealth tax’ drives rich residents out of WA

One progressive think tank is combating the belief that, if a wealth tax is established in budget plans aimed at closing a $16 billion shortfall, the wealthiest Washingtonians still wouldn't leave the state in droves in response.

7 hours ago

Cascade Valley Hospital lockdown...

成人X站 7 News Staff

Cascade Valley Hospital forced into lockdown three times in a week for 鈥榰nconfirmed threats鈥

Skagit Regional Health says they have enlisted the help of the FBI and local police after at least three different threats put Cascade Valley Hospital on lockdown over the last three days.

8 hours ago

Be sure to smile, speed cameras approved for state work zones