Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lead-footed B.C. Drivers To Get Digital Reminder To Slow Down In Bad Weather

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2015 02:03 PM
  • Lead-footed B.C. Drivers To Get Digital Reminder To Slow Down In Bad Weather
VANCOUVER — B.C. drivers oblivious to bad weather conditions will soon have a high-tech reminder to slow down.
 
The Transportation Ministry is installing variable speed signs along sections of the Coquihalla, Trans-Canada and Sea-to-Sky highways in an effort to cut down on weather-related crashes.
 
Transportation Minister Todd Stone says 47 digital signs will be installed along routes where the weather can change quickly and catch drivers off guard.
 
The $12.5-million project will take continuously updated data from traffic, pavement and visibility sensors and feed the information to each of the signs, which will adjust the speed limit to reflect conditions.
 
Testing will be conducted over the next two or three months to ensure the signs are reliable and appropriately calibrated to detect conditions such as drizzle changing to freezing rain.
 
Eighteen speed signs will be installed along Highway 1 from Perry River to Revelstoke, 13 on the Coquihalla from the Portia Interchange to the former toll plaza and 16 on the Sea-to-Sky from Squamish to just south of Whistler.

MORE National ARTICLES

More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose

More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose
The new interim Conservative leader is promising to change the party's tone, but Rona Ambrose was not as willing Wednesday to say she would abandon the practice of using cultural wedge issues as a political tactic.

More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose

RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January

RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January
A hearing on alleged violations of the Canada Labour Code by the RCMP related to the force's response to a deadly shooting rampage last year in Moncton, N.B., has been adjourned until next year.

RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January

Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO

Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO
Canada's budget watchdog says a series of improvements to benefits for veterans, introduced in the waning days of the Harper government, will likely cost the federal treasury $231.6 million over the next decade.

Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO

Saskatoon's Icy Streets Get The Better Of Stand-Up Comedian Kevin Hart

Saskatoon's Icy Streets Get The Better Of Stand-Up Comedian Kevin Hart
SASKATOON — A winter storm that's hitting parts of the Prairies is more than a match for comedian Kevin Hart.

Saskatoon's Icy Streets Get The Better Of Stand-Up Comedian Kevin Hart

Calgary Charter Airline Offers To Help Bring Syrian Refugees To Canada

Calgary Charter Airline Offers To Help Bring Syrian Refugees To Canada
CALGARY — A Calgary-based charter airline is offering to help the federal government bring Syrian refugees to Canada.

Calgary Charter Airline Offers To Help Bring Syrian Refugees To Canada

Premier Brad Wall Says Saskatchewan Will Set Up A Refugee Settlement Centre

Premier Brad Wall Says Saskatchewan Will Set Up A Refugee Settlement Centre
The announcement comes just days after Wall said the federal government should suspend its plan to bring in 25,000 Syrian refugees by year's end because of safety concerns.

Premier Brad Wall Says Saskatchewan Will Set Up A Refugee Settlement Centre