TxDOT to replace digital messaging signs with full color, dynamic ones. (TxDOT) SAN ANTONIO – Texas Department of Transportation is upgrading some of its messaging signs to ones that will be more ...
With Interstate 15 already lined with dynamic messaging boards with more to come, U.S. Highway 95 is set to see many more of the boards added along a stretch between the Spaghetti Bowl and Summerlin ...
Electronic safety messages like “Buckle up, windshields hurt” or “We’ll be blunt, don’t drive high” will soon disappear from freeways and highways. The U.S. Federal Highway Administration has chosen ...
Elise Riker, a marketing professor at Arizona State University, shows off her winning contest entry for a state highway safety message displayed last fall. States are using more creative message to ...
Missouri will still use eye-catching electronic road signs after the Federal Highway Administration discouraged obscure messaging. Missouri will still be able to use humorous road signs- but according ...
Both clarity and perspective are in order after Stephen Colbert, Bill Maher and other comics poked fun at federal transportation officials for a supposed "ban" on witty road messaging signs. In ...
There’s No Place Like Home for the Holidays, Make it there safely. The state police message is straightforward. “Help keep ...
You may have heard that federal officials are cracking down on highway humor. Signs like “Seat belts are in, everybody’s wearing them” and “Don’t be a grinch, let them merge” are to be phased out by ...
Funny highway signs are not leaving Texas roadways anytime soon — despite numerous reports to the contrary. When the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration adopted its ...
A highway safety message on Interstate 55 in Jackson, Miss., refers to the lyrics of a Taylor Swift song, “Anti-Hero.” (Photo courtesy of the Mississippi Department of Transportation) States have had ...
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