Kansas DOT Completes First Year of Safety Corridor Program

Sept. 10, 2024
Initiative aims to decrease fatalities and serious injuries along four state highway corridors

The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) said it recently completed the first year of the agency’s five-year-long Safety Corridor pilot program.

The agency noted that this pilot program is a strategic initiative of the Drive To Zero or DTZ Coalition, and, as such, groups within the DTZ Coalition will support the program with initial and long-term safety messaging to area communities and their organization’s customers.

The program aims to decrease fatalities and serious injuries along four state highway corridors by implementing several proven safety countermeasures, such as increased law enforcement, traffic safety education campaigns, low-cost engineering improvements, and a review of emergency response issues.

The safety corridors are on stretches of Interstate 135, U.S. 83/50, U.S. Highway 69, and U.S. Highway 24 – each spanning 10 to 35 miles of highway – and are clearly marked with yellow “Safety Corridor/Increased Enforcement” signage. 

Between October 2023 and June 2024, state and local law enforcement worked nearly 1,300 hours in the safety corridors, making 2,600 contacts with the traveling public, ranging from warnings to citations. The most common citation was speeding more than 10 mph over the posted speed limit, noted Vanessa Spartan, transportation safety bureau chief for KDOT, in a statement.

“We know driver behavior improves when motorists expect and see law enforcement,” she said. “Law enforcement officers are dedicated to helping save lives on our highways and their efforts on the safety corridors are making an impact.”

Spartan added that enforcement, education messaging, and the deployment of proven engineering countermeasures will continue in those four highway corridors through 2028.

“An increased presence on and near the four designated safety corridors deters dangerous driving behaviors that cause an increased risk for crashes,” said Colonel Erik Smith, superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol. “Ensuring that every motorist makes it to their destination safely will continue to be a focus of law enforcement partners across Kansas.”

Several state departments of transportation have also collaborated on the creation of similar safety corridors to reduce traffic fatalities and injuries along specific highway stretches.

Source: KCLYradio.com, AASHTO.com

Sponsored Recommendations

The Science Behind Sustainable Concrete Sealing Solutions

Extend the lifespan and durability of any concrete. PoreShield is a USDA BioPreferred product and is approved for residential, commercial, and industrial use. It works great above...

Proven Concrete Protection That’s Safe & Sustainable

Real-life DOT field tests and university researchers have found that PoreShieldTM lasts for 10+ years and extends the life of concrete.

Revolutionizing Concrete Protection - A Sustainable Solution for Lasting Durability

The concrete at the Indiana State Fairgrounds & Event Center is subject to several potential sources of damage including livestock biowaste, food/beverage waste, and freeze/thaw...

The Future of Concrete Preservation

PoreShield is a cost-effective, nontoxic alternative to traditional concrete sealers. It works differently, absorbing deep into the concrete pores to block damage from salt ions...