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Lieutenant
Tim Spaulding poses as a surveyor
Highway construction zones are dangerous - not only for the people who work
in them, but for motorists who travel through them as well. Large trucks
moving equipment or hauling dirt, limerock, and asphalt while traveling
in and out of traffic lanes, construction workers standing close to moving
traffic, narrow lanes bordered by barricades and traffic cones, speeding
vehicles, and vehicles following too close are some examples why these areas
can be dangerous.
In an effort to increase
motorist awareness that construction zones are dangerous and that speeding
fines are doubled in those areas for a reason, the Florida Highway Patrol
in Troop G initiated "Operation Hardhat" to slow motorists down.
Lieutenant Tim Spaulding, dressed as a highway construction worker, utilized
a laser speed measuring device and set up in the construction zones in
plain view in Nassau and St. Johns Counties to clock speeding motorists
as they traveled through the area. Speeding motorists were then pulled
over by waiting motorcycle troopers and citations were issued. During
a total of four hours, 50 citations were issued in Nassau County and 38
more were issued in St. Johns County.
During the last five years in Florida, 134 people have been killed and
12,376 injured in traffic crashes that occurred in highway construction
zones. Interstate 95 has been undergoing construction to add additional
lanes in Nassau, Duval, and St. Johns counties for the past year and will
be continuing for the next few years as well. Several crashes have occurred
in these areas over the past few months and a construction worker was
killed in St. Johns County on July 23, 2002.
Consideration is
being given to expand Operation Hardhat to other areas of Florida in the
future.
Trooper Garry Bones
issues a citation to a speeding motorist
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Troopers wait for the call from Lt. Spaulding
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