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This Week at NCDOT: Work Zone Safety and Port of Wilmington Cranes

Raleigh - The following are highlights from this week at the N.C. Department of Transportation. The stories below are also featured in NCDOT Now, the department’s weekly newscast.

Work Zone Safety

As the weather warms up and more people hit the roads, there’s a greater chance you’ll drive through a work zone. The safety of you and our crews is the top priority here at the department, so let’s make sure everyone makes it home tonight.

Last year, there were more than 7,200 crashes and 38 deaths in work zones across North Carolina. Distracted driving and speeding were the primary causes of the crashes.

To help save lives, Gov. Roy Cooper has declared April as Work Zone Safety Awareness Month, and April 9-13 as Work Zone Safety Awareness Week.

“Every year we have people working on a road who never come home because they’ve been hit in a work zone or injured in some way by inattentive motorists or, in most cases, speeding,” said Mark Ezzell, Governor’s Highway Safety Program Director. “We want to make sure that does not happen in North Carolina this year.”

Motorists are asked to “Drive Smart. Do Your Part.” when driving in a work zone by following these tips to stay safe:

  • Don’t tailgate the car in front of you;
  • Pay close attention to signs and work zone flaggers;
  • Obey the posted speed limits in and around a work zone; and
  • Do not change lanes.

For more tips, visit the work zone safety website.

Port of Wilmington Cranes

Last week, residents along the Cape Fear River in Wilmington were able to watch as two massive neo-Panamax cranes made their way to the Port of Wilmington.

The new and larger cranes, weighing more than 1,500 tons each, will allow the port to service bigger cargo ships, which benefits all of North Carolina’s economy as more container ships can be quickly processed.

Seventeen boats from federal, state and local agencies helped safely guide the ship, which began its journey from Asia in January, up the river to the port.

The cranes, towering above at 120 and 150 feet, are part of a $200 million investment in the port’s infrastructure, port customers and the state’s economy.

Learn more about Wilmington’s growing port system at ncports.com.

***NCDOT***

8/22/2018 1:26 PM