Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Road projects are off track, leaving drivers frustrated

- By Wayne K. Roustan Staff writer By Erika Pesantes Staff writer SWIM, 11B DRIVERS, 11B

We were promised several transporta­tion projects would be completed by the holidays, but not all of them appear to be on track.

From constructi­on on the highways to new train services, progress is mixed and drivers are frustrated.

“Traffic backs up on I-95 and creates not just a slowdown but a dangerous situation,” said Mark BegelLaude­rdale. man, of the constructi­on he encounters by Interstate 95 in Deerfield Beach.

Here is the status of projects that were supposed to be finished before New Year’s Day.

Brightline, the higher speed passenger service that will eventually go from Miami to Orlando, was supposed to begin service between Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach by late 2017. Test runs are underway along that stretch but there is still no

Emmanuel Shaw loved his PAW Patrol cartoons, could easily navigate a smartphone and enjoyed splashing around in the bath tub.

The 3-year-old boy was fascinated by water, but did not know how to paddle or float. He visited his great-grandparen­ts, who have a pool, in Lauderhill every weekend and they wanted him to learn how to swim.

But those lessons would not come soon enough. Emmanuel drowned in that pool Nov. 27, 2016.

His death inspired Lauderhill SunSentine­l.com/Boatparade official start date.

Quiet zones, created when rail crossings are upgraded so engineers don’t have to blast their horns, were supposed to be in place by now. But freight and Tri-Rail trains still sound their horns. “I am not exaggerati­ng when I say that hundreds of thousands of Florida residents who live near the tracks have no option to move,” said Enrique Bargioni, who lives two blocks from the Florida East Coast Railway tracks in Fort Police Chief Constance Stanley to create the “Swim with a Cop” program to prevent other drowning deaths in the city. Three Lauderhill police officers have become certified to offer swim instructio­n, and the police chief hopes the city’s firefighte­rs also join in.

“I think that all kids in South Florida, because we’re surrounded by water, should know how to swim and survive,” Stanley said.

The program is in its infancy, but the police chief knows she wants children to learn to swim with a police officer in a city pool On southbound I-95 in Deerfield Beach, contractor­s vowed rampwideni­ng work on Exit 41 to Southwest 10th Street would be done. And it looks close. The ramp is now two lanes, and becomes three lanes at the top. Contractor­s still have to finish an additional right lane between the entrance ramp from Hillsboro Boulevard and the Southwest 10th

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