Iowa Work Zone Safety Guidelines for Utilities

Iowa Work Zone Safety Guidelines for Utilities

Author: Iowa. Department of Transportation

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 60

ISBN-13:

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This handbook generally represents minimum requirements for typical situations. It is not intended as a substitute for engineering judgment and may need to be altered to fit the conditions of a particular site. All traffic control used must be in compliance with the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD), which contains information in addition to what is in this guide. For work zones on primary or interstate roadways, please consult the Iowa DOT area maintenance supervisor. Proper traffic control must be used when utility operations, or other types of road or street construction, may interfere with the movement of traffic. Appropriate measures must be taken to protect drivers, workers and pedestrians.


Iowa Comprehensive Highway Safety Plan

Iowa Comprehensive Highway Safety Plan

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 28

ISBN-13:

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In Iowa, hundreds of people die and thousands more are injured on our public roadways each year despite decades of efforts to end this suffering. Past safety efforts have resulted in Iowans benefiting from one of the best state roadway systems in the nation. Due to multi-agency efforts, Iowa has achieved 90 percent compliance with the state's mandatory front seat belt use law, earned the nation's second-lowest percent of alcohol involvement in fatal crashes and made safety gains in system-wide roadway design and operational improvemens. Despite these ongoing efforts, the state's annual average of 445 deaths and thousands of life-changing injuries is a tragic toll and an unacceptable public health epidemic in our state. To save more lives on our roadways, Iowans must be challenged to think differently about life-saving measures addressing young drivers, safety belts, and motorcycle helmets use and accept innovative designs such as roundabouts. Iowa must apply evidence-based strategies and create a safety culture that motivates all citizens to travel more responsibly. They must demand a lower level of tolerance for Iowa's roadway deaths and injuries. The Iowa Comprehensive Highway Safety Plan (CHSP) engages diverse safety stakeholders and charts the course for this state, bringing to bear sound science and the power of shared community values to change the culture and achieve a standard of safer travel for our citizens. How many roadway deaths and injuries are too many? Iowa's highway safety stakeholder's believe that, "One death is one too many" and effective culture-changing policy and program strategies must be implemented to help reduce this death toll from an annual average of 445 to 400 by the year 2015.