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星期二, 6月 09, 2015

State Police, MassDOT Announce Highway Safety Corridor Program; Enhanced Speed Enforcement

State Police, MassDOT Announce Highway Safety Corridor Program; Enhanced Speed Enforcement


BOSTON– Tuesday, June 9, 2015 – This week, The Massachusetts State Police and the Massachusetts Department of Transportation announced the continuation of the new Highway Safety Corridor Program for I-495 and I-95 through the greater Foxboro area.  

The program posts public safety signs that read, “Highway Safety Corridor / Laws Strictly Enforced” at eight locations through the corridor.  In partnership with the State Police, additional patrols will be on hand to enforce speed limits, reduce aggressive driving and prevent distracted driving. 

This corridor has been selected because of the incidence of speeding and for driving-related crashes involving injuries and fatalities.  The shared goal of the State Police and MassDOT is to drastically reduce the number of crashes and to encourage motorists to drive safely and observe the posted speed limit. 

The program uses radar technology to calculate the average rate of speed through segments of I-495, and I-95 and will be used to deploy State Police patrols during times where the data show vehicle speeds above the posted limit.

The enforcement program is a $201,000 effort funded through the Highway Safety Improvement Program as a strategy to curb speeding and other moving violations under the Massachusetts Strategic Highway Safety Plan.  The program includes the purchase of the eightVariable Message Boards with radar.  The data collected from the radar will be used to measure the reduction of average vehicle speeds because of the additional State Police patrols.  In the future, the equipment will be deployed along other portions of state highway to establish additional Highway Safety Corridor campaigns.

The radar equipment does not have the capability to identify individual vehicles or drivers; the technology captures the average rate of speed of the whole corridor, which is used to determine the most effective periods for increased speed enforcement. 

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