Work Zones in High Gear
The stimulus money began flowing to road reconstruction projects to March. More money brings more work zones, more (temporary) congestion, and more risk.
- By Jerry Laws, Marc Barrera
- May 01, 2009
The 10th annual National Work Zone Awareness
week was held April 6-10, 2009, with
"Drive to Survive—Our Future is Riding On
It!" serving as the week's theme. The national
kickoff took place April 7 on the George Washington
Parkway near a bridge replacement project between
Washington, D.C. and Virginia, a fitting location given
the federal government's stimulus of infrastructure
projects this year. More money brings more work
zones, more (temporary) congestion, and more risk.
A Facts & Statistics page from the Federal Highway
Administration's Work Zone Mobility and Safety
Program explains why FHWA is involved in the national
campaign: Work zone activity is increasing,
construction work typically occurs on busy existing
roads, and a high number of fatalities and injuries occur
in the zones. The latest data available are for 2007,
when 835 deaths were recorded in highway construction
zones nationwide and 40,224 highway fatalities
occurred outside the zones. Texas ranked highest that
year with 124 work zone fatalities, followed by Florida
(92), California (80), Georgia (65), and Alabama and
North Carolina (35 each).
These data come from the National Work Zone
Safety Information Clearinghouse, which is owned
by the American Road & Transportation Builders Association
Transportation Development Foundation
(ARTBA-TDF). The clearinghouse's Web site, which is managed by the Texas
Transportation Institute, is a leading resource for
roadway construction zone safety information; the
clearinghouse received a 2008 Global Road Achievement
Award from the International Road Federation
in the advocacy category earlier this year.
Each year in April, National Work Zone Awareness
Week (NWZAW) is held to bring national attention
to motorist and worker safety and mobility issues
in work zones. Beginning in late 1999, FHWA has
worked with the American Association of State Highway
and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and the
American Traffic Safety Services Association (ATSSA)
to coordinate and sponsor the event. Since then other
transportation partners have joined the effort to support
NWZAW. In addition to a national event conducted
each year, many states host their own events.
The 2008 kickoff event took place in Sacramento, Calif.,
but moved back to the Washington, D.C., area to
commemorate the event's 10th anniversary.
President Obama spoke at DOT's headquarters on
March 3 as he announced $28 billion was being released
from the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act to states and local transportation authorities to repair
and build highways, roads, and bridges. "Of the
3.5 million jobs that will be created and saved over the
next two years as a result of this recovery plan, 400,000
will be jobs rebuilding our crumbling roads, bridges,
and schools, repairing our faulty levees and dams,
connecting nearly every American to broadband, and
upgrading the buses and trains that commuters take
every day," Obama said. "Many of these projects will
be coordinated by Secretary LaHood and all of you
at the Department of Transportation. And I want you
to know that the American public is grateful to public
servants like you—men and women whose work
isn't always recognized, but whose jobs are critical to
our nation's safety, security, and prosperity. You have
never been more important than you are right now,
and for that we are all grateful.
"Altogether, this investment in highways will
create or save 150,000 jobs by the end of next year,
most of them in the private sector," he said. "The
jobs that we're creating are good jobs that pay
more than average; jobs grinding asphalt and paving
roads, filling potholes, making street signs, repairing
stop lights, replacing guard rails. But what
makes this investment so important is not simply
that we will jumpstart job creation, or reduce the
congestion that costs us nearly $80 billion a year,
or rebuild the aging roads that cost drivers billions
more a year in upkeep. What makes it so important
is that by investing in roads that have earned a grade
of D- by America's leading civil engineers—roads
that should have been rebuilt long ago—we can save
some 14,000 men and women who lose their lives
each year due to bad roads and driving conditions.
Like a broken levee or a bridge with a shaky foundation,
poor roads are a public hazard—and we have a
responsibility to fix them."
This article originally appeared in the May 2009 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.