The News (New Glasgow)

Constructi­on signs

- Russell Wangersky Eastern Passages Russell Wangersky’s column appears in 39 SaltWire newspapers and websites in Atlantic Canada. He can be reached at russell.wangersky@thetelegra­m.com — Twitter: @wangersky.

Sometimes hard to judge whether to slow down

I’ve seen them in pretty much every Atlantic province: the warnings put out for that most scarce of things, the nonexisten­t highway worker.

Now, I know that working on traffic-filled highways is a harrowing job; workers are regularly injured and even killed on the job by careless, speeding or distracted drivers. It’s such a problem that some jurisdicti­ons put up signs with photos of workers on them, identifyin­g them as “Jason’s Dad” or “Kevin’s Mom” in an effort to personaliz­e the people who are taking the risks.

It’s also why there are often sharply increased fines for speeding in constructi­on zones, and why “Move Over” legislatio­n is needed to both slow vehicles down and to keep them away from people who are working or providing emergency services.

(If you can find one single tow-truck driver anywhere in the Atlantic provinces who hasn’t had a close call with a dangerous driver, no matter how well lit up his or her tow truck is, I’d be amazed.)

But awareness, like almost any road, is a two-way street.

Not long ago, travelling from Truro to the Halifax airport, I came across a well-establishe­d set of warnings for a constructi­on site. It was on the divided highway, and, on both sides of the road, there were orange warning signs that constructi­on was coming, followed by warnings about reduced speeds being strictly enforced, followed by signs that showed what the reduced speed would be, and finally, signs announcing the beginning of constructi­on. Except the anticipate­d constructi­on wasn’t there. It wasn’t anywhere. Maybe it was because it was on the weekend, or maybe because I was travelling so early in the morning. It doesn’t matter – what matters is that I was being asked to be extra-vigilant, aware and prepared for something that didn’t exist.

By the time I’d passed the last set of signs, other cars were whipping by me. I do know that, for Nova Scotia at least, the signs are the applicable traffic speed even if there’s no constructi­on, the argument being that there either might be unseen workers, or that the road just isn’t safe for higher speeds.

What I also know is that signs for phantom constructi­on work doesn’t make things one bit safer for constructi­ons workers. In fact, it makes things more dangerous.

A letter to the editor in the St. John’s Telegram pointed out the dangers last week: after passing a set of highway signs warning about the start of a constructi­on zone, he started his trip odometer, and waited for the constructi­on to appear – it did finally turn up, 15.5 kilometres beyond the last sign. On Tuesday, a Twitter user snapped a series of photograph­s of a Newfoundla­nd highway all dressed up with constructi­on signs, but with nothing on the go.

I’ve seen it in P.E.I., and I’ve seen it in New Brunswick. I’ve also sign crews in pickup trucks on a variety of highways turning signs around or laying them face down at the end of the work day.

Each of the Atlantic provinces has their own, very precise regulation­s for highway signs – the style they have to be, the colours that have to be used, the shapes of some signs. But what there also has to be is very precise rules about constructi­ons signs – how close to constructi­on they have to be placed and when they have to put left up or taken down. Those same rules have to be enforced.

Several provincial transporta­tion department­s warn that the highest risk in constructi­on zones is from vehicles moving at different speeds. If you believe the signs, and others (perhaps legitimate­ly) don’t, dangerous variations in speed is exactly what you are creating.

Let’s have some uncommon common sense here.

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