The Day

TWO KILLED IN CRASH ON I-95 IN OLD LYME

Accident shuttered northbound lanes between Exits 70 and 71

- By AMANDA HUTCHINSON Day Staff Writer

Interstate 95 northbound was closed for hours Wednesday between Exits 70 and 71 in Old Lyme after a crash that left two people dead. It was the second time in 24 hours that an accident involving a tractor trailer closed the highway. The earlier accident occurred Tuesday night in Waterford.

Old Lyme — Police have confirmed two people were killed in a multi-vehicle crash on Interstate 95 north between Exits 70 and 71 Wednesday afternoon, creating hours of traffic delays on and off the highway, as police cleared the latest wreckage in what has historical­ly been a treacherou­s section of the interstate.

The highway remained closed by mid-evening, although traffic had eased on many of the local roads that had taken the excess traffic from the interstate.

Police released few details of the accident, which was first reported just before 2 p.m., and said only that one of the vehicles was a truck pulling an excavator on a trailer and a car, which caught on fire. Names of the victims were not immediatel­y available.

Northbound traffic was being diverted all Wednesday afternoon off Exit 70, as all northbound lanes of I-95 were closed between Exits 70 and 71. State troopers assisted drivers stuck on the highway to turn around and safely exit the highway, according to an email by state police spokeswoma­n Kelly Grant. Traffic was backed up south of the Baldwin Bridge and up Route 9 all afternoon, and it continued to clog up the bridge into Wednesday night.

The section of I-95 that runs through southeaste­rn Connecticu­t has historical­ly been a common site of serious crashes, as reported by The Day in 2015. From 1995 to 2013, crashes in the stretch between Exit 71 and the I-395 interchang­e had 745 reported injuries and fatalities, the most in the state east of the Connecticu­t River and about a quarter of all crashes with injuries or fatalities.

After two severe crashes in two days in January 2016, one of which killed two women, state Sen. Paul Formica, R-East Lyme, and state Rep. Devin Carney, R-Old Saybrook, called on the Office of the State Traffic Administra­tion to reduce the speed from the Baldwin Bridge past the I-395 interchang­e to 50 miles per hour.

In their 2016 letter, they said the

speed reduction, in addition to lane expansion and extra patrols, would improve driver safety in the area, which carries about 70,000 cars every day.

In response, Department of Transporta­tion spokesman Kevin Nursick said the vast majority of crashes between East Lyme and the I-395 interchang­e are caused by driver errors rather than road conditions. However, in May 2016, DOT Commission­er James P. Redeker said widening the highway in the area would become the long-term solution to the issue after being “on the back burner, if any burner, for too long.”

In November 2016, the DOT announced a study to investigat­e safety improvemen­ts to I-95, with the stretch between the Baldwin Bridge and the Gold Star Bridge between New London and Groton the area “most in need of improvemen­ts.”

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DANA JENSEN THE DAY

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