“Are we there yet Dad?” cried Junior from the back seat. “Only two more exits to go, Son” said the Father, scanning the roadway ahead of him. Many miles later, Junior was moaning again. “You said two more exits, not dozens of miles!”
Well, Junior, that’s about to
change. CDOT, pressured by the Feds, is
about to renumber all of the exits on the Merritt & Wilbur Cross Parkways
and our interstate highways. No longer
will the exits be numbered sequentially but, instead, will reflect their
mileage from the NY state line.
This scheme has long been in
place on the Garden State Parkway, giving motorists a better sense of their
distance to a desired exit.
Mileage-based exit numbers also help first responders find an incident’s
location. And because this renumbering
is being done nationwide, it will add uniformity to all signage.
The Parkways’ sign conversions
will take place next year followed by renumbering on I-91 (in 2027), I-84
(2028) and I-95 (2029). When the new
exit number signs are in place there will be a smaller sign attached to each
indicating the “old” exit number, at least for a couple of years to help
drivers adjust.
CDOT is also working with GPS
app providers like Google and Waze to get their maps reprogrammed. All of this work is being paid for with
federal money and the work will only take a couple of weeks to be completed on
each highway.
Meanwhile, Uncle Sam seems to
have lost his sense of humor about changeable interstate traffic safety signs,
like the one I saw recently in New Jersey:
“Texting while driving? Fuhgetaboutit!” Or “Get your head out of your apps” … “Hands on the wheel, not your meal”… and for our Boston accent fans: “Use Your Blinkahs!”
Funny? Attention getting? Or just confusing? The Federal Highway Administration (FHA) says
too often these signs are just distracting so they’re encouraging states to
keep it simple and serious.
But when their rule making was
announced there was serious blowback. In
Arizona they’ve actually held contests for the best sign-messaging and received
thousands of entries.
Among last year’s
winners: “I’m Just a Sign Asking a Driver to Use Turn Signals”, a
rather obscure reference to the 1999 movie “Notting Hill”. Didn’t ‘get it’? Neither did I, which is exactly the Feds’
point. While you’re scratching your head
about some weird pop culture reference are you really watching the road?
After
the recent public outcry, the FHA quickly clarified their rules: a little humor
is OK as long as the sign’s intent is clear and the wording concise.
The
CDOT seems sober enough in its signage, aside from an occasional congratulatory
sign for a winning UConn championship, as if I could care. And so far there’s been no repeat of the
incident awhile back when a hacker took control of a portable variable message
sign and changed it to read “Weicker blows”.
The
then-Governor and the CDOT were not amused.