Close X
Friday, November 8, 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

Richmond Predator Martin Tremblay Declared Dangerous Offender, Given Indeterminate Prison Sentence

Richmond Predator Martin Tremblay Declared Dangerous Offender, Given Indeterminate Prison Sentence
Friends and family of 17-year-old Martha Jackson and 16-year-old Kayla Lalonde cried and cheered as a B.C. Supreme Court judge handed down his decision

Richmond Predator Martin Tremblay Declared Dangerous Offender, Given Indeterminate Prison Sentence

Ontario University Hockey Team Changes It's Offensive Name, Destroys Jerseys After Complaint

Ontario University Hockey Team Changes It's Offensive Name, Destroys Jerseys After Complaint
The co-ed team of law students at Western University was called Dixon Cider — a name that the dean of the university's faculty of law says isn't immediately clear that it's offensive until it is spoken aloud

Ontario University Hockey Team Changes It's Offensive Name, Destroys Jerseys After Complaint

Suspect In Alberta Triple Homicide Shot By RCMP, No One Else Hurt

Suspect In Alberta Triple Homicide Shot By RCMP, No One Else Hurt
RCMP say that earlier today they went with a warrant to arrest Mickell Bailey in the deaths of Roxanne Berube, another female and Daniel Miller.

Suspect In Alberta Triple Homicide Shot By RCMP, No One Else Hurt

Rape Group Won't Be Heard At Ivan Henry's Compensation Hearing

A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has rejected an attempt by Vancouver Rape Relief to argue that a man acquitted of sexual assault after nearly three decades behind bars is actually guilty.

Rape Group Won't Be Heard At Ivan Henry's Compensation Hearing

2-Year-Old Girl Found Safe After Missing For Hours Near Powell River, B.C.

2-Year-Old Girl Found Safe After Missing For Hours Near Powell River, B.C.
Const. Tim Kenning with the Powell River RCMP says police believed the little girl walked away from her home.

2-Year-Old Girl Found Safe After Missing For Hours Near Powell River, B.C.

Waterloo, Ont. Startup Sober Steering Aims To 'Sniff' Out Drunk Driving

Waterloo, Ont. Startup Sober Steering Aims To 'Sniff' Out Drunk Driving
WATERLOO, Ont. — Inside a few Canadian school buses a new sensor technology is helping keep drunk drivers off the roads.

Waterloo, Ont. Startup Sober Steering Aims To 'Sniff' Out Drunk Driving