Caltrans updates on I-80 and Highway 50 ramp closures for commuters
(FOX40.COM) — Caltrans is alerting the community of an update on the ramp closures for the ongoing I-80 and Highway 50 Pavement Rehabilitation Project in Yolo County.
According to Caltrans, the Chiles Road on and off-ramps along westbound I-80 will be affected by the anticipated weather expected in the area. Since the materials related to this repaving project can not be placed in wet conditions, there have been some shifts that have been canceled.
Three fire stations dispatched to apartment fire in South Sacramento
The Chiles Road off-ramp closure will start on Friday at 9 p.m. and will last until April 14 at 5 a.m., stated Caltrans. The on-ramp to westbound I-80 closure has already started and will last until April 16.
Photo provided by Caltrans
Caltrans has suggested a detour through westbound I-80 and motorists can use Mace Boulevard as an alternative entrance and exit for I-80.
The work zone is from just west of the Yolo Causeway along I-80 and Highway 50 in West Sacramento, said Caltrans. The speed limit has been reduced to 55 mph for the safety of other motorists and workers.
Caltrans said, 'The extended lane closures will help to minimize the duration of the work and improve workers' safety.'
According to a statement from Caltrans, this is a $280 million project that includes $47 million from Senate Bill One which is the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017. The bill provides about $5 billion in transportation funding every year which is shared equally between state and local agencies.
'Caltrans District 3 is responsible for maintaining and operating 4,385 lane miles in 11 Sacramento Valley and Northern Sierra counties,' said officials. 'Caltrans reminds motorists to 'Be Work Zone Alert' and slow in construction zones for the safety of travelers and crews performing these improvements.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
What is a Waymo car?
( — Waymo vehicles have been in headlines over the last few days after anti-immigration enforcement protestors set some of them on fire in Los Angeles. But what are they? A Waymo car is a fully autonomous, self-driving vehicle operated by the company Waymo, a Google subsidiary. It operates on a rideshare service application called Waymo One, which offers on-demand, self-driving transportation in select cities, according to How does ICE know who to deport? Waymo began in 2009 in San Francisco as an experiment and went on in 2016 to become a fully-operational robotaxi service in some major cities. 'The Waymo Driver is the embodiment of fully autonomous technology that is always in control from pickup to destination,' the company said on its website. 'Passengers don't even need to know how to drive. They can sit in the back seat, relax, and enjoy the ride with the Waymo Driver getting them to their destination safely.' Waymo cars are currently available in Phoenix, AZ, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Austin, TX, according to its website. They are reportedly coming soon to Atlanta, GA, and Miami, FL. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Traffic collision blocks multiple lanes on southbound I-5 in North County
SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — Multiple lanes are blocked on southbound Interstate 5 in North County, just south of the Las Pulgas exit, due to a traffic collision, Caltrans confirmed. According to a Sig Alert from California Highway Patrol, the incident was first reported around 12:45 p.m. Based on information provided in the traffic alert, the collision reportedly involved a motorcycle and at least two other vehicles, though exact details have yet to be provided. Also noted by CHP officials, a Life Flight air transport was requested. At this time, it's unknown how many people, if any, were injured in the collision. At least three lanes remain closed due to the 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Hella construction on Sacramento's Hwy. 50 promises little long-term relief
The perpetual roadwork on Sacramento's highways is a never-ending story of surprise detours, dangerous lane splits, metal-smeared K-rails and tragic fatal accidents — all in the futile pursuit of a solution to relieve congestive traffic. A 'solution' that will be obsolete in less than a decade. Caltrans announced this week that the 'Fix50' project will go until at least 2026 and will cost $529 million — a year later than the original completion date of the summer of 2025 and nearly $50 million over the estimated budget of $483 million. For a mere 7-and-a-half miles of road, that's a cost of more than $70 million per mile. The project will add new carpool lanes in each direction from Watt Ave. in Rosemont to the intersection with I-5 downtown; replace crumbling pavement with reinforced concrete; add retaining walls and widen the highway between 39th and 65th street undercrossings; build new sound walls along the south side of the highway from Stockton Blvd. to 65th St.; upgrade and widen several on and off ramps; improve signs, drainage, guardrails and utilities; and widen 12 bridges overall — among numerous other, smaller improvements. But at what cost? We don't mean the more than half a billion dollar price tag — Californians are well-accustomed by now to that level of spending. The bigger issue is that the Fix50 project is notoriously dangerous for drivers, and statistically, will be out-of-date by 2035. So why are we investing more than half a billion dollars when Sacramento could be putting that money toward a project that improves mass transportation? Such forward thinking would not only alleviate traffic, it could save lives and assist Californians in our climate-neutral goals overall. Why do we insist on repairing and widening when we could be innovating? The construction on Hwy. 50 has already resulted in multiple fatalities, and is statistically likely to only cause more before its completion. According to data from the California Highway Patrol, the number of wrecks from March 2021 and December 2021 doubled from that same period in 2020 on westbound Highway 50. Ronald Fitzgerald, a local man, died on Hwy. 50 in 2021 after he crashed his motorcycle into a car stalled on the road's non-existent shoulder, leaving behind a loving wife and family — and all for what? This boondoggle project is funded through multiple sources in the state, with Caltrans subsidizing nearly $90 million of the construction costs under California's Senate Bill 1 — also known as the Road Repair and Accountability Act of 2017. Caltrans has also relied on $52.2 million from Sacramento's Measure A Transportation Sales Tax to support the project, and the State Highway Operation and Protection Program is funding an additional $387 million. But all of the extra money and construction delays are unlikely to relieve Sacramento's notorious congestion issues in the long run. It begs the question: What's the point? UC Davis Professor Susan Handy, who specializes in transportation, explained that adding lanes to a roadway only relieves traffic in the short term. The new lanes actually encourage more drivers to use the road which simply leads to more traffic. 'We don't adequately account for the pain that we all experience during construction,' Handy said about the Fix50 project in 2023. She cited the increase in crashes, deaths and severe congestion as the cost of that hubris: 'The analysis that Caltrans and others are doing overstates the benefit of widening the freeway. And data analysis is also understating the environmental impacts of widening the freeway.' In a state like California, where driving is as second-nature as breathing and many commute on the highway to work, construction projects like 'Fix50' do more harm than good. With thousands of federal workers returning to the office on July 1, piling more cars on the road, the situation will only worsen. Caltrans, hell-bent on highway construction, is a lost cause. It's going to take leadership by a governor and a legislature to start investing in transit that can attract commuters and truly reduce congestion.