Latest news with #HOVlanes


CBS News
16 hours ago
- Automotive
- CBS News
Parkway North HOV lanes remain closed due to repairs, impacting around 30,000 drivers daily
Around 30,000 drivers a day are being impacted due to the Parkway North's HOV lanes ongoing closure due to repairs in Pittsburgh. PennDOT found five bridge piers considered "high priority" with problems. 18 other piers will also be repaired during the traffic restrictions. PennDOT emphasized that the open lanes are safe. If there was any doubt, they would be shut down. The closed HOV lanes will put more stress on the I-279 main lines in both the morning and afternoon. As the repair work began with a single cracked pier, it has now extended to quite a few more, the most critical of which is holding up the I-579 main line on the north end of the Veterans Bridge. "We've got to utilize the HOV to maintain mainline, 279, traffic while we perform the repairs," said Jason Zang, PennDOT District 11 executive. "The repairs require us to jack the beams off of the substructure, off of the piers and we can't do that with the traffic on them." While crews continue the aforementioned work to make the repairs, all southbound destined mainline I-579 traffic will be diverted onto the HOV Lane just south of McKnight Road. "Traffic wants to go to the Veterans Bridge, and I-579 will have to cross into the HOV lanes there, and then it will cross back out on the main span of the Veterans Bridge over the Allegheny River," said Zang. This will result in a complete reversal of the pattern drivers have been taking since the Parkway North opened in 1989. Traffic to the Veterans Bridge will now have to get over to the left to get into the cross under the Swindel Street Bridge. It's going to take crews until July 11 to get everything configured and the switch made before they can even start the repairs on the southbound side. Zang said it will take two months to do all that work and then switch it over to a northbound crossover. The HOV lane is closed until further notice and when that northbound crossover happens, the ramp from southbound Route 28 to the Veterans Bridge, which carries 11,000 vehicles a day, will also close. The biggest wrinkle in all of this will be for the 30,000 drivers who are used to coming down through the East Street valley on the right side to get to the Veterans Bridge. They will now have to get to the left side at McKnight Road to get into the crossover onto the HOV lane.


CBS News
30-05-2025
- General
- CBS News
MDOT invites I-75 travelers to respond to survey on HOV lanes
The Michigan Department of Transportation is asking motorists who use the high-occupancy vehicle lanes of Interstate 75 to participate in a survey on how the feature is working for them. The HOV lanes on I-75 are in Oakland County, between 12 Mile Road and South Boulevard. During the designated hours, which are weekdays from 6 to 9 a.m. and 3 to 6 p.m., vehicles must have at least two people occupying the vehicle in order to use the lane. Emergency vehicles, transit buses and motorcycles also can use the HOV lane, regardless of how many people are rising. The survey is open until June 30 to anyone who live or works nearby, and travels along the HOV feature. This 14-mile section has the first HOV designated lanes in Michigan. The intentions were to reduce congestion, promote carpooling and improve travel time.


CTV News
12-05-2025
- Automotive
- CTV News
OPP catch 6 drivers without insurance on Ottawa highways this weekend
Ontario Provincial Police say officers charged six drivers for not having insurance while driving on Ottawa highways this weekend. (OPP/X) Ontario Provincial Police are reminding drivers to ensure they have insurance after catching several drivers without insurance on Ottawa roads. Police say officers charged six drivers for having uninsured vehicles on the roads this weekend. 'If you can't afford to properly insure your vehicle, don't drive it,' OPP Const. Michael Fathi said on X. The fine for operating a vehicle without insurance is a minimum of $5,000. Fathi says the OPP continues to see a rise in the number of drivers operating their vehicles without insurance. 'In the first third of 2025, Ottawa OPP members have laid 157 charges for operating a vehicle without insurance,' Fathi said. HOV lanes Police say there have also been numerous complaints about the improper use of High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes in Ottawa. An officer stopped a vehicle speeding 147 km/h while in an Ottawa HOV lane on Saturday. 'The driver faces nearly $500 in fines as well as seven demerit points upon conviction,' Fathi said. The fine for improper use of an HOV lane is $110 and three demerit points. According to the Ministry of Transportation, HOV lanes are designated lanes that can only be used by vehicles carrying two or more people or other specific types of vehicles, including taxis, motorcycles and vehicles with a green licence plate.