ODOT’s 2016 Construction
Season:
Transportation for Today and Tomorrow
Projects to focus on safety, efficiency and economic impact
COLUMBUS (Tuesday, March 29, 2016) – The Ohio Department of Transportation will invest $2.1 billion in
the state’s transportation network this construction season.
The 2016 program is driven by two key
components: addressing major critical infrastructure needs today, and
introducing an enhanced, data-driven business strategy for maintaining the
43,000 miles of roads and 14,000 bridges on the state system.
THE 2016 PROGRAM
ODOT will deliver more than 1,100 projects
across the state in 2016. Altogether, they are designed to improve the
condition of roads and bridges, increase safety, and make the transportation of
people and goods more efficient.
“We’re
charged with the care of Ohio’s largest man-made asset—the transportation
network,” said ODOT Director Jerry Wray. “We take this very seriously, because investments
in our infrastructure are vital to Ohio’s economic growth and development. By maintaining
a safe, reliable, and efficient system, we help to create the environment for
more jobs, easier commerce, and a stronger Ohio—for today and for tomorrow.”
Of the 1,100 projects in 2016, 157 will
focus specifically on safety, at a cost of $256.4 million. The program includes
$417.5 million for improving the condition of more than 1,167 bridges and
$629.3 million for 6,485 miles of pavement.
ODOT is also
adding capacity to the system where it is most needed today, after careful
planning, research and project development. This year, the state will invest
$207.1 million—or approximately 10 percent of the overall construction
budget—in expanding roads to ease current congestion.
The 2016 construction program features 27
projects valued more than $10 million, with a combined value of $769 million. It
also represents a fourth consecutive year of near-record dollars invested, made
possible in large part by Governor Kasich’s Jobs & Transportation Plan. From
2011 to 2016, ODOT has committed roughly $12.5 billion across 5,934 projects—the largest overall transportation investment in Ohio’s
history.
THE PLAN
As it has for decades, ODOT is committing
roughly 90 percent of this year’s construction budget to activities related to taking
care of existing roads and bridges. This year, the department is introducing an
enhanced three-part strategy to strengthen its preservation efforts.
The first component is data, which ODOT gathers and analyzes
through advanced software systems. Following a decade of refinement, the data
now drives decisions related to the second component: a range of preservation treatments such as asphalt, microsurfacing,
and bridge cleaning among many others. The third component, collaboration, unifies the work plans
of ODOT’s planning and maintenance divisions, creates greater statewide
consistency, and depends on strong partnerships between ODOT and its business
contractors.
“In order to take care of our
transportation network, we have to accurately measure it. That information helps
us determine the right actions to take, at the right time, and in the right
places, for everything from replacing a culvert on a two-lane state road to
adding lanes to an interstate,” said Director Wray. “With greater consistency
and collaboration across the state, we are making sound business decisions on
behalf of Ohio. Once again, this is for the benefit of our transportation
system now and into the future.”
ODOT’s preservation plan is estimated to
create savings that will redirect approximately $300 million back into safety,
capacity and preservation projects over the next six years.
In District 8 covering seven counties in Ohio’s
southwest region there will be 109 active projects totaling $477.3
million.
A CALL FOR WORK ZONE SAFETY
As a consequence of record number of work
sites, ODOT has seen an alarming rise in crashes and fatalities in Ohio’s work
zones, where drivers and passengers are more than twice as likely as workers to
be victims. Last year, Ohio recorded 6,035 work zone crashes, the highest
number in a decade. Those crashes resulted in 1,150 injuries and 30 deaths.
A work zone may be a mile of orange
barrels, or a single vehicle parked on the side of the road with flashing
lights. Whatever the case, Ohio’s Move Over law requires drivers to slow down
and, if they can, move over a lane to give roadside workers safe space to
perform their jobs.
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The Ohio Department of Transportation maintains the state's
largest man-made asset--the transportation system. ODOT's mission is to provide
the safe and easy movement of people and goods from place to place. As a $2.8
billion per year enterprise, ODOT invests the bulk of its resources in system
preservation through maintenance, construction and snow and ice operations.
The environmental review, consultation, and other actions
required by applicable Federal environmental laws for this project are being,
or have been, carried out by ODOT pursuant to 23 U.S.C. 327 and a Memorandum of
Understanding dated December 11, 2015, and executed by FHWA and ODOT.
For more information, contact: ODOT Press Secretary Matt
Bruning, (614) 466-6906, matt.bruning@dot.ohio.gov, or your local ODOT
District 8 Communications Office, Brian Cunningham (513)-933-6517, brian.cunningham@dot.ohio.gov, Liz Lyons (513) 933-6534 elyons@dot.ohio.gov