The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. traffic snarled as evacuees hit the road in flight from Irma

Toll lanes opened, road constructi­on halted to accommodat­e drivers.

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com and David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com

Rachel Fang loaded two dogs into her car and left North Miami Beach on Thursday afternoon bound for her aunt’s home in Kennesaw.

After a five-hour car nap somewhere in South Georgia, she made it to Forsyth, about 50 miles outside Atlanta, around 11 a.m. Friday. But the Exxon where she stopped along I-75 had run out of gas. So she commiserat­ed with other Floridians standing around the station while her collie and Australian shepherd yapped with other dogs.

“Driving was terrible,” Fang, 31, said. “It was jammed at all times.”

With Hurricane Irma bearing down, hundreds of thousands of people are evacuating coastal areas of Georgia and Florida. That has snarled traffic in parts of the Peach State, especially on I-75 headed toward Atlanta.

Georgia officials have opened toll lanes and halted road constructi­on to accommodat­e the glut of motorists leaving ahead of the hurricane.

Beginning Friday, the State Road and Tollway Authority suspended the usual rules for the I-75 South Metro Express Lanes in Clayton and Henry counties.

Using those lanes normally requires a Peach Pass or a Florida SunPass, and motorists are charged a toll. But the state is allowing anyone to use the 12 miles of lanes south of Atlanta — whether they have a pass or not — and has stopped collecting tolls for the time being. Tractor-trailers are still prohibited from using the lanes.

In addition, the SRTA will keep the reversible lanes headed northbound. Typically, they are reversed in the afternoon to accommodat­e southbound rush-hour traffic. The lanes will continue to carry northbound traffic until further notice.

Meanwhile, the Georgia Depart- ment of Transporta­tion has suspended constructi­on-related lane closures on area interstate­s and secondary routes until 7 p.m. Tuesday.

The state will also convert all lanes on I-16 to eastbound beginning at 8 a.m. today to accommodat­e people evacuating from the Georgia coast.

Transporta­tion officials are also reminding motorists they don’t have to stick to crowded interstate­s, and Atlanta doesn’t have to be their destinatio­n.

“Right now the trend we’re seeing is the entirety of Florida is coming to Atlanta,” said GDOT spokeswoma­n Natalie Dale. “We just want people to know there are more options.”

Dozens of vehicles occupied by weary Floridians packed rest stop No. 19 in Bibb County on Friday.

For some, a pause at the building containing bathrooms and vending machines represente­d the first proper break after 12 hours on the road escaping a hurricane threatenin­g to destroy

their homes. Sarvireddy Eppaturi, a 36-yearold software developer, was sitting on a concrete bench outside the rest stop scrolling through his phone.

Lying on the bench was his driver, fast asleep and using a bunched-up sweatshirt as a makeshift pillow.

They left Tampa with family and friends Thursday night and had stopped twice before Macon. Florida traffic was awful in Ocala and Jacksonvil­le, Eppaturi said,

stopping them from getting much beyond 40 mph for long stretches.

His game plan was to head for the Hindu Temple of Atlanta, which he heard was taking in

evacuees. “Otherwise I don’t know where I’d stay the next couple of days,” he said. Eppaturi was one of the many people who took a bottle of water from a local church handing out snacks and drinks at the rest stop.

Chris Fuller, with Northway Church in Macon, said his congregati­on brought between 500 to 600 snacks and an unknown amount of donated bottles of water and Coke — the latter of which went the fastest — to the rest stop.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Angelica Granados, 14, looks for cold drinks as her family makes a stop at Chevron gas station in College Park. Her family evacuated their trailer home in Naples before the arrival of Hurricane Irma on Friday.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Angelica Granados, 14, looks for cold drinks as her family makes a stop at Chevron gas station in College Park. Her family evacuated their trailer home in Naples before the arrival of Hurricane Irma on Friday.
 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A note is posted to a gas pump after the station ran out of gas ahead of Hurricane Irma in Daytona Beach, Fla., on Friday.
DAVID GOLDMAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS A note is posted to a gas pump after the station ran out of gas ahead of Hurricane Irma in Daytona Beach, Fla., on Friday.

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