
Parkway East construction causing headaches and backups, how long will it last?
The mess on the Parkway East over the last couple of days has prompted the question: How long will this last?
That question has many answers, but let's just deal with the here and now.
Tuesday morning when PennDOT's contract first put the lane restriction into the Squirrel Hill Tunnel into place, it created a monster backup.
"That is a very highly-traveled corridor," said John Myler, PennDOT's Senior Assistant Construction Engineer. "Traffic volumes are 100,000 vehicles per day, so I think that's to be expected."
Myler said by contract, the contractor could do this for up to 35 days, but that doesn't mean a month-plus straight of single-lane restrictions through the outbound tunnel.
"What we're definitely saying right now is for the remainder of this week and next week, we will have this in place," Myler said.
To improve the flow at the merge point outside of the tunnel and stop the weaving, Myler explained they're going to look to close the Squirrel Hill ramp to the outbound, eastbound Parkway.
Further out on the Parkway, the steel is in place for the outbound bridge over Old William Penn Highway.
"By late July, we should be opening that structure up, switching traffic over onto it, and then continuing the second half of the bridge for the remainder of the year," he said.
They're also going to be shifting around the lanes out there next week, but that's nothing more than a subtle change.
Also, if you're coming to Pittsburgh or you're in Pittsburgh and worried about getting to the U.S. Open later this summer, worry not, they're putting all projects on hold that week.
However, remember, this is only the beginning. The new bridge comes next summer, and that project won't conclude until summer 2027.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Medscape
34 minutes ago
- Medscape
ED Work Environment Discord Affects Patient Outcomes
In a recent study, emergency nurses and physicians in approximately half of the study hospitals disagreed on the quality of the work environment. An environment rated "unfavorable" by both groups was significantly associated with worse clinician and patient outcomes. METHODOLOGY: A cross-sectional analysis included emergency department (ED) clinicians (1190 nurses and 414 physicians) from 47 Magnet hospitals who completed the 2021 US Clinician Wellbeing Study. Researchers classified hospitals into profiles according to the level of agreement between nurses and physicians regarding the hospital work environment. Researchers assessed clinician job outcomes (burnout, job dissatisfaction, and intent to leave), patient safety, and quality-of-care metrics. TAKEAWAY: Hospital profiles revealed three distinct patterns: "Agree, Unfavorable Environment" (10 hospitals); "Agree, Favorable Environment" (15 hospitals); and "Disagree, Less Favorable Environment Among Nurses" (22 hospitals). Compared with hospitals where clinicians agreed on a favorable environment, hospitals where clinicians agreed on an unfavorable environment had significantly higher rates of burnout (β, 25.8), job dissatisfaction (β, 32.5), intent to leave (β, 31.7), and unfavorable patient safety grades (β, 29.1), after adjustment for hospital characteristics ( P < .001 for all). < .001 for all). Hospitals where nurses rated the environment less favorably than physicians demonstrated increased burnout (β, 15.4; P < .001) and poorer patient safety grades (β, 11.9; P < .01), after adjustment for hospital characteristics. < .001) and poorer patient safety grades (β, 11.9; < .01), after adjustment for hospital characteristics. Compared with physicians in hospitals with an "Agree, Favorable" profile, those in hospitals rated as having an "Unfavorable" work environment showed significantly higher rates for all outcomes except burnout and patient-care quality. Similarly, nurses in hospitals with a "Disagree, Less Favorable Among Nurses" profile experienced higher rates across all job-related and patient-care outcomes. IN PRACTICE: "This cross-sectional study found that ED nurses and physicians in close to half of study hospitals disagreed on the quality of their work environment. Clinician job and patient outcomes were worse when both clinicians rated their work environment unfavorably and when nurses only reported their work environments as unfavorable," the authors wrote. "The implication of these findings is that, if two essential partners in emergency care within the same institution do not agree on the deficiencies in ED work environments, significant interdisciplinary research is needed to bridge these gaps and disparate experiences," they added. SOURCE: The study was led by Jane Muir, Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. It was published online on May 16, 2025, in BMC Health Services Research . LIMITATIONS: The study included only Magnet hospitals, which are known for favorable work environments and good physician-nurse collaboration, suggesting the findings may have underestimated the variation in clinician work environment agreement across all hospitals. The cross-sectional design prevented causal inference, and the sample had more nurses than physicians. DISCLOSURES: The research was funded by the Clinician Well-being Study Consortium and the National Institutes of Health. Additionally, it was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the National Institute of Nursing Research, the National Clinician Scholars Program, and the Emergency Medicine Foundation/Emergency Nurses Association Foundation. The authors reported having no relevant conflicts of interest.


Associated Press
44 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Fever take on the Mystics on 3-game slide
Washington Mystics (3-4, 3-1 Eastern Conference) at Indiana Fever (2-4, 2-4 Eastern Conference) Indianapolis; Tuesday, 7 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: Indiana Fever looks to break its three-game losing streak when the Fever take on Washington Mystics. Indiana went 11-9 in Eastern Conference action and 12-8 at home during the 2024-25 season. The Fever averaged 85.0 points per game while allowing opponents to score 87.7 last season. Washington went 14-26 overall and 7-13 in Eastern Conference play during the 2024-25 season. The Mystics averaged 79.3 points per game last season, 11.5 on free throws and 29.1 from beyond the arc. INJURIES: Fever: Caitlin Clark: out (quadriceps). Mystics: Georgia Amoore: out for season (acl). ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.


Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
Seattle faces Dallas, looks to break 3-game skid
Dallas Wings (1-6, 0-3 Western Conference) at Seattle Storm (3-4, 3-3 Western Conference) Seattle; Tuesday, 9:30 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: Seattle Storm looks to break its three-game losing streak when the Storm play Dallas Wings. Seattle went 14-6 at home and 13-7 in Western Conference play during the 2024-25 season. The Storm averaged 17.6 points off of turnovers, 11.0 second-chance points and 14.7 bench points last season. Dallas went 9-31 overall and 6-14 in Western Conference play during the 2024-25 season. The Wings averaged 84.2 points per game while allowing opponents to score 92.1 last season. INJURIES: Storm: Katie Lou Samuelson: out for season (knee). Wings: Paige Bueckers: out (concussion protocol). ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.