Pinellas County commissioners give them the green light to build a 4-story parking garage adjacent to the terminal that would be used for economy parking. The proposed garage would have roughly 2,000 spots and be where the current âStrawberry Lotâ sits.
What You Need To Know
Proposed parking garage would be 4 stories and have roughly 2,000 spots
Bulk of project would be paid for in funds from customer facility charges and airport reserves
Was approved Tuesday, design phase expected to begin in early 2026
2025 is busiest year in airport historyÂ
The airportâs interim director, Mark Sprague, says this is the busiest year in airport history. They have already had a record-breaking roughly 2.6 million passengers in 2025 with 15 days remaining in the year.
Sprague says the parking garage would cost an estimated $60 million. The airport already has funding sources in place that would include roughly $6 million from an FDOT grant and nearly $30 million in airport reserves. Over $24 million would come from revenue from whatâs called a âcustomer facility chargeâ â a surcharge placed on rental cars.
To pay for the garage, Sprague says the airport would not have to take out any type of loan.
âWhich Is really unheard of,â he said. âA lot of airports go out and get either bonds or loans for this, but we saw the growth and we saw what we needed to do and we saved the money in order to keep the costs low.â
Sprague presented the parking garage plans to county commissioners during a workshop last week.
Some commissioners agreed that updates to parking are much-needed at the airport while Pinellas County Commissioner Vince Nowicki questioned the net-gain of 1,500 spots at a $60 million cost.
âWith PIE not having much land constraint, have we exhausted all surface-level parking lot options before diving into $40,000 per parking space?â he asked Sprague. âIt seems we could be shorting a project somewhere else by using 1/3 of our reserves.â
Te design phase of the parking garage construction is expected to begin early next year.
Pinellas County commissioners give airport officials the green light to build a 4-story parking garage adjacent to the terminal that would be used for economy parking. (FILE IMAGE)
UPDATE:Â After the story aired, Pasco County officials told Spectrum Bay News 9 Real Time Traffic Expert Tim Wronka that the road is now expected to open in the next couple of weeks, before the end of the year.Â
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PASCO COUNTY, Fla. â The ongoing road closure at Morris Bridge Road and Chancey Road in Pasco County continues to frustrate drivers.
What You Need To Know
Morris Bridge Road and Chancey Road is still closed in Pasco County
It was originally set to open in September
Officials say a water main break there needs to be replaced
Officials say there is currently no date set to reopen Â
When Spectrum Bay News 9 last covered the issue, Pasco County officials said the road would be open in mid-September. As of Dec. 15, itâs still closed.
âItâs been terrible,â said Zephyrhills resident Karol McGinn. âAnd you just canât predict how long itâs going to take you to get anyplace these days. So have a 15-minute drive? Count on at least 30. So itâs more than annoying.â
The road closed in June for repair work. Officials say a further evaluation showed that the water main there needs to be replaced. Thatâs what is causing the extra delay.
âIt was supposed to be a couple months. Then it was a couple more months. Then a couple more months,â McGinn said.
Closing off this intersection has only increased congestion in east Pasco County, where there has been a lot of new development in places like Zephyrhills and Wesley Chapel.
The work at Morris Bridge and Chancey Roads has led to even more traffic on surrounding roads like Coats Road and U.S. 301.
âItâs a miserable situation that has gone on way too long,â McGinn said.
Officials say there is no set timeline on when the repairs will be done. They say they will update the community when they know more.Â
In addition, thereâs now another closure on Morris Bridge Road. This one is in Hillsborough County, just south of Cross Creek Boulevard. That is set to reopen on Dec. 23.
In a windowless room at Denver police headquarters on a recent Thursday afternoon, Officer Chris Velarde activated a police drone to investigate a potential car break-in.
Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Several floors above, the drone launched from the roof and flew itself â essentially on autopilot â to the site of the call, reported as a man breaking into a car with a crowbar near the Santa Fe Arts District.
The drone whizzed along, 200 feet up, in a straight line across blocks, buildings and streets during the roughly mile-long flight from police headquarters at 1331 Cherokee St. Velarde didnât pick up the Xbox video-game controller that manually pilots the drone until it reached the area of the call. Then he took control and trolled the block for the supposed break-in, watching live video footage transmitted from the drone on his computer monitor as he flew.
After a few moments, Velarde spotted two people jiggering the passenger-side window of a vehicle. He zoomed in on the pair, and on the carâs license plate. He ran the plate to see whether the vehicle was stolen; it was not. The people on the street didnât look up. They didnât seem to know a police drone was hovering above them, that they were being recorded and watched a mile away by officers and a reporter.
Two more people joined the pair at the vehicleâs window and Velarde made the call â this didnât look like a vehicle break-in. More likely, someone had just locked their keys in their car. He cleared the call with 911 dispatchers and told them there was no need to send an officer to the scene. Then he sent the drone back to headquarters; it flew itself to the rooftop dock, landing autonomously on a platform stamped with bright blue-and-yellow QR codes.
The Denver Police Department began testing drones as first responders â that is, sending them out on 911 calls â in mid-October after signing up for two free pilot programs from rival drone companies Skydio and Flock Safety. The effort has raised concerns among privacy advocates, Denver politicians and the cityâs police oversight group, particularly regarding the departmentâs contract with Flock, the company behind the cityâs controversial network of automated license-plate readers.
Police see the drones as a way to speed up call-response times and provide more information to officers as they arrive on scene, improving, they say, both public safety and officer safety. If a drone arrives at a scene before officers, and the drone pilot can tell police on the ground that the man with the knife actually put down the weapon before the officers arrived, that helps everyone, police said.
âThe more knowledge, information and intelligence that we can provide our officers on the ground, the better methods that they can use to respond to certain situations, which may cause them to not escalate unnecessarily,â said Cmdr. Clifford Barnes, who heads the departmentâs Cyber Bureau.
Critics say the eyes in the sky raise serious privacy concerns both with how the drones and the data they collect are used now, and with how they might be used in the future as the technology rapidly changes. They worry that the drones could create a citywide surveillance network with few legal guardrails, that the footage they collect will be used to train private companiesâ AI algorithms or that police will misuse emerging AI capabilities, like facial recognition.
âWhen it comes to the decision of, are we going to use this thing that could potentially increase public safety, that will erode privacy rights â no one should get to decide the public is willing to give away our constitutional rights, except the people,â said Anaya Robinson, public policy director at the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado. âAnd when law enforcement makes that decision for us, it becomes extremely problematic.â
Almost 300 drone flights in 55 days
So far, only Skydio drones have flown as first responders over Denver.
Denver police signed a zero-dollar contract with Flock â without public announcement â in August for a year-long pilot of drones as first responders, but the company has yet to set up its autonomous aircraft. Skydio, on the other hand, moved quickly to get drones in the air after Denver police in October signed a contract to test up to four of the companyâs drones during a free six-month pilot.
Skydioâs drones can reach about a 2-mile radius around the Denver police headquarters. The company advertises a top speed of 45 mph with 40 minutes of flight time; Denver pilots have found the drones average around 28 mph and around 25 minutes of battery life per flight.
From the first flight on Oct. 15 through Tuesday, two Skydio drones flew 297 times, according to data provided by Denver police in response to an open records request. Most of those flights â 199 â were to answer calls for service; another 82 were training flights, according to the data.
Skydio drones also surveilled events â a function police call âevent overwatchâ â seven times, the police data shows. Overwatch might include flying over a protest to track where the demonstrators are headed and alert officers on the ground for traffic control, Barnes said. (The police data showed that all seven overwatch flights occurred on Oct. 18, the day of Denverâs âNo Kingsâ rally.)
The drones flew to 29 calls about a person with a weapon, 21 disturbances, 20 assaults in progress, a dozen suspicious occurrences and 11 hold-up alarms, according to data from Denverâs 911 dispatch records. The drones also flew to 39 other types of calls, including reports of prowlers, fights, burglaries, domestic violence and suicidal people.
The most common outcome for a call was that the officers were unable to locate an incident or the suspect was gone by the time the drone or police officers arrived, the records show. Across about 200 calls for service that included drone responses, police made 22 arrests and issued one citation, the dispatch data shows.
When responding to calls for service, the drones reached the scene before patrol officers 88% of the time, the police data shows. A drone was the sole police response in 80 of 199 calls for service, or about 40% of the time.
Barnes said answering calls with solely a drone improves police efficiency.
âIf an officer on the ground doesnât need to respond, and the drone pilot is comfortable with cancelling the other officers coming, we can assign those officers to more important, more pressing matters, so call-response times come down,â he said.
That approach raises questions about what the drones (which are equipped with three different cameras and a thermal imager) can and canât see, and how officers are making decisions about call responses without actually speaking to anyone at the scene, the ACLUâs Robinson said.
âHumans have bias,â he said. Drone pilots might be more inclined to send officers to a potential car break-in in a low-income neighborhood and more likely not to in a higher-income neighborhood, he said. Or they might miss something from above that they could have seen at street level.
Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
But minimizing in-person police interactions with residents, particularly in over-policed neighborhoods, can also be a positive, said Julia Richman, chair of Denverâs Citizen Oversight Board, which provides civilian oversight of the police department.
âWhere my head goes is the other outcome, where they roll up on those people who are trying to get keys out of the car and then they shoot them,â she said. âActually, (the drone-only response) seems like a really good outcome.â
The oversight group has talked with Denver police over the last two years about developing its drone program, she said. The department created a seven-page policy to guide their use; the policy aims to ensure âcivil rights and reasonable expectations of privacy are a key component of any decision made to deployâ a drone.
But Richman said she was surprised by aspects of the police departmentâs pilot programs despite the ongoing conversations with department leadership.
âWhat was never discussed, not once, was the idea of a third party running those drones or those drones being autonomous,â she said, referring to the drone companies. âWhat has changed with this latest pilot is the key features and key aspects that would create public concern had never been discussed with us.â
Both Flock and Skydio advertise autonomous features powered by artificial intelligence. Skydio uses AI for its autonomous flight paths, obstacle avoidance and tracking people and cars.
Flock, which also offers autonomous flight, advertises its drones as integrating with its automated license-plate readers. The license-plate readers â there are more than 100 around Denver â automatically photograph every car that passes by them. If a license plate is stolen or involved in a crime, the license-plate readers alert police within seconds.
Police Chief Ron Thomas and Mayor Mike Johnston defended the surveillance network as an invaluable crime-solving tool this year against mounting public discontent around how much data the machines collected and how that data was used â particularly around sharing information with the federal government for the purposes of immigration enforcement.
That privacy debate around Flockâs license plate readers unfolded in communities across Colorado and nationwide this year. In Loveland, the police department for a time allowed U.S. Border Patrol agents to access its Flock cameras before blocking that access. In Longmont, councilmembers voted Wednesday to look for alternatives to replace the 20 Flock license plate readers in that city.
When Denver City Council members, some driven by privacy concerns, voted against continuing Flockâs license-plate readers in May, Johnston extended the surveillance anyway through a free five-month contract extension with Flock in October that did not require approval from the council. Against that backdrop, Denver police quietly signed on for Flockâs drone pilot in August.
Barnes said the police department will not use any license-plate reader capabilities available on Flock drones. Such a feature would constitute ârandom surveillance,â which is prohibited under the departmentâs drone policy. The drones never fly without an officerâs direct involvement, he added.
The blue 2-mile-radius line seen on a computer screen shows the range of Denver police Skydio drones flown from Denver Police headquarters. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
The policy also prohibits drones from filming anywhere a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy unless police have a warrant, and says officers should take âreasonable precautions ⌠to avoid inadvertently recording or transmitting images of areas where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy.â
Denver police do receive search warrants to fly drones for particular operations outside of the drones-as-first-responder program. In October, a Denver police detective sought and received a warrant to fly a drone over a shooting suspectâs home in Cherry Hills Village to check whether a truck involved in the shooting was parked at the wooded property.
The warrant noted that when driving home from anywhere outside Cherry Hills Village, the suspect could not reach his house without passing by Flock license-plate readers, and that photos from those license-plate readers suggested the truck was at the property.
Denver Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez and Councilman Kevin Flynn both told The Post they were not aware of the police departmentâs Skydio drone pilot before hearing about it from the newspaper, even though they are both on the cityâs Surveillance Technology Task Force. The new group began meeting in August largely to consider Flock license-plate readers, as well as other types of surveillance technology, Gonzales-Gutierrez said.
âWe havenât talked about it in the task force, and the charge of our work in the task force is to come up with those guardrails that need to be put in place for these types of technology being utilized by law enforcement,â she said. âI feel like they just keep moving on without us being able to complete our work.â
Police donât need permission from the City Council to carry out the pilot programs, Gonzales-Gutierrez said, but she was disappointed by the lack of communication and collaboration from the department.
Flynn sees the potential of police drones, particularly in speeding up officer response times, which can sometimes be dismal in the far-flung areas of his southwestern district.
âIf a drone can get there to a 911 call and it can help an officer at headquarters assess the scene before a staffed car could get there, I would love that,â he said.
But he wants to be sure they are used in a way that respects residentsâ rights. He would not support using the drones for general patrolling or surveillance, he said.
âThis pilot is an excellent opportunity to test all of those boundaries and see if there are ways to operate a system that can be very useful for public safety without crossing boundaries,â he said.ââŚAnd maybe we donât keep using them. That is the point of a pilot.â
âThese are flying copsâ
The Skydio drones film from the moment they are launched until they drop in to land.
When the drone is on its way to a call â flying at the 200-foot altitude limit set by the Federal Aviation Administration â its cameras remain pointed at the horizon. In Denverâs denser neighborhoods, the Skydio drones at that height flew among buildings, sometimes at eye-level with balconies, offices and apartment windows, according to video of four flights obtained by The Post through an open records request.
âWhat if someone is in their apartment unit in one of these giant buildings and theyâre changing, and they have their window open because theyâre way up high and they donât think anyone is watching them?â Gonzales-Gutierrez said. âThat is crazy.â
The drones buzzed over rooftop decks, balconies and elevated apartment complex pools, the videos show. On one trip, a drone flew past the Colorado State Capitol Building, recording three people on a balcony on the tower under the buildingâs golden dome. Another time, the drone pilot zoomed in on a license plate so tightly that the carâs small, decorative âLOVEâ decal was clearly visible.
Flynn noted that a 200-foot altitude would put the drones well above most of the homes in his less-dense district, and that people on their porches or balconies arenât somewhere private.
âIf someone is out on a balcony, sitting there reading a book⌠generally speaking, if you are out in public thereâs no expectation of privacy,â he said.
The Skydio drones recorded about 54 hours of footage in the first eight weeks of their operation, according to data provided by the police department. Police leadership opted to have the dronesâ cameras on and recording whenever the drone is in flight to boost transparency about how the drones are being used, Barnes said.
âIt makes sense to keep the camera rolling,â Barnes said. âThen, if thereâs an allegation, we just make sure that footage is recorded and treated like digital evidence, uploaded to the evidence management platform so it could be reviewed as necessary. Weâre just trying to make sure we establish that balance, being as transparent as possible.â
Drone footage unrelated to criminal investigations is automatically deleted after 60 days, he said. While itâs retained, itâs stored in an evidence system that keeps a record of anyone who looks at it. The drone unitâs sergeant, Brent Kohls, also audits the flight reports monthly. (Footage used in criminal investigations will be on the same retention schedule as body-worn camera footage, police said.)
Kohls noted it would be unusual for the drone footage to be viewed only by the pilot. The feed is often displayed on the wall of the police departmentâs Real-Time Crime Center as it comes in.
ACLU attorney Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the organizationâs speech, privacy and technology project, would rather see police keep the recording off while flying a drone to a call, even if the camera is still livestreaming to police headquarters. In that scenario, a drone pilot might still see a woman tanning topless on her rooftop pool deck, he said, but the government wouldnât then keep a recording of that privacy violation, amplifying it further.
âThe thing we are really worried about is police start deploying drones as first responders for the majority of their calls for service and suddenly you have this crisscrossing network of surveillance all over the city,â Freed Wessler said. âYou have the potential for a pervasive record of what everyone is doing all the time.â
Kohls said an officer flying a drone who spotted a different crime occurring while en route to another call would stop to report and respond to that secondary crime, just like an officer would on the ground.
âAbsolutely, if an officer sees a crime happening, theyâre going to get on the radio, alert dispatch to what theyâre observing,â Kohls said. âHopefully, if they have a few minutes of battery time left still, they can extend their time and circle or overwatch on that scene to provide hopefully life-saving radio traffic, whatever information they need to relay to dispatch to get other officers heading, or the fire department heading that way.â
State and federal laws have not yet caught up to how police are using drones, Freed Wessler said. The Fourth Amendment has whatâs known as the plain-view exception, which allows police officers who are lawfully in a place to take action if they see evidence of a crime happening in plain sight.
âThe problem here is we are not talking about police doing a thing we would normally expect them to do,â Freed Wessler said. âWe are talking about police taking advantage of a new technology that gives them a totally new power to fly at virtually no expense over any part of the city at any time of day and see a whole bunch of stuff happening.â
A Denver police drone lands on its docking station on the roof of Denver Police headquarters in Denver, on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Police have broad leeway to watch suspects without first getting a search warrant â like by peering through a fence or climbing the steps of a nearby building to look into a yard. But thatâs different from using a subtle video camera to record a person 24/7 for months, the justices concluded.
So far, thatâs the closest ruling in Colorado on the issue of drone surveillance, Freed Wessler said. Robinson, the policy director at the ACLU of Colorado, said lawmakers should act to regulate police drone use â either at the state or local level.
âThese are flying cops,â said Beryl Lipton, senior investigative researcher at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit focused on digital privacy. âThat is another one of those slippery slopes.â
Aside from the legality of surveillance, another question is how the drone footage and flight data is used by the drone companies, Lipton said.
âWe live in a time where all these AI-fueled companies have a real drive to integrate AI into everything, and theyâre really hungry for new data,â she said. âAnd we have law enforcement helping to feed these companies in a way they donât really understand.â
Under its current agreement with Denver police, Skydio doesnât use drone footage to train its algorithm or improve its product. Flock spells out in its contract that the company can âcollect, analyze and anonymizeâ drone footage, then use that anonymized footage to train its âmachine learning algorithms,â and enhance its services.
Lipton added that technology is moving fast â Axon, a company that powers many police departmentsâ body-worn cameras â this month started testing facial recognition on its cameras to automatically alert a police officer if a person theyâre encountering has a warrant out for their arrest.
Prisons are experimenting with âmovement analysisâ to automatically flag a personâs movements as potentially aggressive before the person perpetrates violence, she said.
âWe are technologically at a place where it would not be hard for a drone to fly over an area and basically serve as a license-plate reader for humans,â Lipton said. â⌠Some of this analysis is just not being done because it is not publicly palatable yet. But it is not like it is technologically difficult for some of these companies.â
To mark National Older Driver Safety Awareness Week from Dec. 1-5, AAA Northeast is spotlighting the rising number of fatal traffic crashes involving older drivers across the United States.
Between 2014 and 2023, the population of people 65 and older in the United States increased by 28%. During this same time, the number of older drivers involved in fatal crashes increased by 41%, while the number of older licensed drivers increased by 38%.
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The new speed limit will be 55 MPH for both work zones.
In a news release, FDOT said: “The speed reduction will help ensure a consistent and clear speed for all drivers along the I-275 corridor throughout each project limits. Please remember to slow down, stay alert, and drive safely through work zones.”
Spectrum Bay News 9 Traffic Expert Tim Wronka has more above in Wednesday’s Getting There report. Just click the video to watch.
CINCINNATI â Preparations continue for Brent Spence Bridge Corridor Project work and crews are set to start surveying before they break ground.Â
The surveys on I-71/I-75 downtown will happen overnight, meaning there will be separate overnight ramp closures next week â so long as weather conditions permit.
On Tuesday, Dec, 2, at 10 p.m., the ramps from U.S. 50 EB to I-71 NB and I-75 SB/2nd St. will close. They will reopen by 5 a.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 3.
On Wednesday the ramp from 8th St. to I-75 SB will close at 10 p.m. and reopen at 5 a.m. on Thursday.
MANCHESTER, N.H. â A Lowell man is facing a pile of charges after an early-morning pursuit that topped 100 mph ended with him ramming a State Police cruiser with his pickup truck when cornered in Manchester.
Alejandro Vargas, 27, was captured by police after the alleged vehicle pursuit turned into a foot pursuit following the crash. According to the New Hampshire State Police, it was later determined that Vargas had an outstanding U.S. Marshals warrant.
The incident began at about 1:20 a.m. Tuesday, when the State Police said they received reports that Epping police officers had briefly pursued a 2026 Chevrolet Silverado on Route 101 westbound. Shortly afterward, members of the Candia Police spotted the pickup truck, which was allegedly clocked traveling at 105 mph.
Police said Trooper Brian Knell observed the truck as it entered Interstate 93 South in Manchester. He caught up with the vehicle at Exit 1 on Interstate 293 North and attempted a traffic stop, which the driver â later identified as Vargas â allegedly ignored.
The pursuit that ensued continued onto Exit 4 of I-293, where the truck turned onto Arnold Street, which is a dead end. Vargas is alleged to have turned the vehicle around and struck a State Police cruiser driven by Trooper Brian Taylor.
Police said the truck then crashed into two additional parked vehicles before Vargas and a passenger jumped out of the truck and fled on foot in opposite directions.
Manchester police officers arrived with a drone and spotted Vargas running south near Hill Street, less than a half-mile from the crash scene. Officers quickly tracked him down and took him into custody.
The passenger, meanwhile, was not located.
Vargas is charged with felony reckless conduct with a deadly weapon, along with misdemeanor counts of disobeying an officer, resisting arrest, simple assault, and conduct after an accident, in addition to several violations.
Details of Vargasâ U.S. Marshals warrant were not immediately available, nor was the outcome of his arraignment, which was scheduled to take place in Manchester District Court on Wednesday.
Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.
Are you traveling by car on this Thanksgiving eve? One expert says the best time to hit the road this holiday travel season is before 10 a.m. or after 8 p.m.
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Travelers along I-95 in Northern Virginia share their Thanksgiving hopes, excitement
Are you traveling by car on this Thanksgiving eve?
A Google tech expert told WTOP they predict the best time to drive Wednesday in the D.C. area is before 10 a.m. or after 8 p.m.
The worst time to be on the road ahead of Thanksgiving is between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.
WTOPâs Luke Lukert spoke with travelers along Interstate 95 in Northern Virginia.
Erskine Alexander, a psychotherapist from New York, said he was thankful for being able to get off work and have some family time.
âA lot of patience during this time, especially in New York City. So to be able to get on the highway and listen to some nice music in zero traffic is perfect,â he said.
Stay with WTOP for the latest this holiday travel season.
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OHIO â The Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure Commission has issued a High Wind Travel Ban for the entire 241-mile toll road for high-profile vehicles.Â
What You Need To Know
The Ohio Turnpike said high-profile vehicles are those with a height exceeding 7 feet and 6 inches
The ban begins at 8 a.m. on Wednesday and lasts through 11:59 p.m. on Thursday
Wind chills will drop into the 20s on Wednesday
The ban begins at 8 a.m. on Wednesday and lasts through 11:59 p.m. on Thursday.Â
Spectrum News 1 meteorologists say there will be an active weather pattern through the rest of the week and into the weekend. Starting on Wednesday, a strong cold front will bring a few more showers, but mostly a blast of cold air, that send temperatures plummeting through the day. After starting off in the 50s, we’ll see afternoon temperatures in the 30s, and wind chills in the 20s. A full forecast can be found here.Â
The Ohio Turnpike said high-profile vehicles are those with a height exceeding 7 feet and 6 inches. This means the ban applies to the following vehicles:Â
All high-profile tow-behind trailers, campers, boats and enclosed trailers (fifth wheel trailers are excluded)
Commercial trucks towing an empty single 53-foot trailer
All mobile homes, office trailers and livestock trailers
All long combination vehicles (LCV) that include long double-trailer combinations exceeding 90-feet in length (enclosed trailers only, including Conestoga type trailers)
All LCV triple-trailer combinations
2-axle buses longer than 40 feet
Buses with three or more axles greater than 45 feet
(Ohio Turnpike)
Here are the types of vehicles that will be allowed on the turnpike:Â
Self-propelled motor homes
Low-profile trailers
Fold-down camper trailers
Pickup trucks with slide-on camper units
Vehicles towing fifth-wheel type trailers or any other type of trailers towed by passenger vehicles or pickup trucks
Commercial trucks towing single flatbed or box-type trailers
Commercial trucks towing a single 53-foot trailer with cargo/loaded
Commercial trucks towing a car hauler trailer
Commercial trucks towing flatbed double-trailer combinations more than 90 feet
Commercial trucks towing any double-trailer combinations less than 90 feet
FLORIDA â AAA is once again offering its Tow to Go program to help keep impaired drivers off the road over the holiday weekend.
What You Need To Know
AAA’s free Tow to Go service is available again over the Thanksgiving weekend
It is open to members and non-members from 6 p.m. Wednesday through 6 a.m. Monday, Dec. 1
AAA urges drivers to plan ahead and designate a sober driver or use a rideshare, if possible
The service will tow the driver and vehicle within 10 miles of pickup
The service provides a free, confidential ride and tow for impaired drivers and their vehicles to a safe location within 10 miles of where they are picked up. It is open to AAA members and non-members as a safety net when other options, like a designated driver or a rideshare service, fall through and cannot be scheduled in advance.
Tow to Go will be available starting at 6 p.m. Wednesday through 6 a.m. Monday, Dec. 1 across specific states, including Florida. Those needing the service can call 855-2-TOW-2-GO.
âSince holiday celebrations can lead to risky choices, AAA offers Tow to Go to prevent those choices from turning into tragedies,â AAA spokesperson Mark Jenkins said. âIf you find yourself without a safe ride, call AAA and weâll help get you and your vehicle to a safe place.â
He urged everyone to plan ahead, however, and designate a sober driver, use a rideshare service or stay overnight, if needed.
A trek by state Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr, R-Gloucester, and local leaders over the bridge to Connecticut recently may make Bay State highways safer from wrong-way drivers.
Tarrâs visit to the Connecticut Department of Transportationâs Highway Operations Center in Newington to see a potential technological solution to the problem comes after a driver is accused of heading north on Route 128 south on the A. Piatt Andrew Bridge and colliding with a car carrying four young adult Gloucester residents.
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OHIO â Officials across the state are urging drivers to follow traffic laws this week with increases in traffic expected for the Thanksgiving holiday.Â
The Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure Commission and the Ohio State Highway Patrol want to remind drivers to buckle up, drive sober and avoid distractions when behind the wheel.
What You Need To Know
The Ohio Turnpike is aiming to accommodate the increase in traffic by reducing construction in work zones to two work zones from Wednesday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 30
In 2024, 800,000 vehicle transactions were recorded Wednesday through Sunday and nearly 50 million vehicle miles were traveled
Over the past five years, or 25 total days, during the Thanksgiving Holiday reporting period the OSHP has issued more than 1,200 speeding citations on the turnpike
âWe have much to be thankful for, and weâd like to see everyone arrive safely for the holidays,â said Executive Director Ferzan Ahmed, P.E., of the Turnpike Commission. âPlan ahead, leave early and take a break if you need to at one of our conveniently located 14 service plazas.â
The Ohio Turnpike is aiming to accommodate the increase in traffic by reducing construction in work zones to two work zones from Wednesday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 30. Officials said at least two lanes of traffic will remain open in both the eastbound and westbound directions along the turnpike.Â
In 2024, 800,000 vehicle transactions were recorded Wednesday through Sunday and nearly 50 million vehicle miles were traveled.Â
âWeather conditions across the northern counties are currently looking favorable, but as we all know, this is Ohio â things can change quickly,â said Chief Engineer and Deputy Executive Director Chris Matta, P.E. âIf snow does arrive, please give our snowplow operators the space they need to work safely. Never pass them on the right and always maintain a distance of at least 200 feet behind them.â
Over the past five years, or 25 total days, during the Thanksgiving Holiday reporting period, the OSHP has issued more than 1,200 speeding citations on the turnpike. These include nearly 500 for speeds of 20 mph or more over the limit.Â
âAs motorists, there are many choices within our control when we get behind the wheel,â said OSHP Sgt. Ryan Purpura. âWearing your safety belt, staying focused, driving sober and obeying the speed limit are simple steps that will make this Thanksgiving travel period safer for everyone. This holiday is about family, friends and loved ones coming together, and we do not want a preventable mistake to turn celebration into tragedy.â
A customer appreciation event is being held on Wednesday, Nov. 26, from 10:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m. at the Middle Ridge Service Plaza (milepost 139.5 westbound) in Amherst to promote roadway safety
The public is encouraged to call #677 to report impaired or reckless drivers and stranded motorists.
RALEIGH, N.C. â Itâs the holiday travel season again. Millions of travelers will either travel by car, plane or public transit this Thanksgiving to spend it with their loved ones.Â
What You Need To Know
AAA projects we will see an increase of 1.6 million travelers this ThanksgivingÂ
Over 2 million North Carolinians will travel by car
Over 100,000 will travel by planeÂ
AAA projects gas prices will be similar to last Thanksgiving at an average $2.87 per gallon
âThere’s going to be a record number of North Carolinians traveling 50 miles or more or less away from home this holiday season,â said Carolinaâs Public Affairs Director for AAA Tiffany Wright. Â
And although flights are back to normal after the government shutdown, travelers are still worried about air travel.Â
âThere was concern with cancellations and delays. We saw over the last, I would say, week and a half, a lot of people changing their plans because they were nervous. So a lot of people have opted to drive to their destinations versus flying,â Wright said.
According to AAAâs holiday travel projections, we will see an increase of 1.6 million travelers this Thanksgiving, still making it the busiest traveled holiday of the year.Â
With most travelers taking the roads, we can expect around 73 million Americans traveling by car. That includes over 2 million North Carolinians. AAA also projects over 100,000 North Carolina residents will be traveling by air. Stephanie Hawco with Raleigh-Durham International Airport says skeptical air travelers shouldnât worry about their holiday travels next week.
âWe’re confident that things will be back to normal in the next week and a half. We really hope that travelers will have a nice, smooth experience here at RDU when they’re traveling to see family and friends next week,â said the media relations director for RDU, Stephanie Hawco.
Hawco says the airport starts to see traffic pick up the Tuesday and Wednesday before Thanksgiving. She says make sure to arrive extra early before your flights and you can also book your parking online ahead of time to get the best rate and a guaranteed spot.
âWe did see some ripple effects here at RDU from those flight restrictions with some delays and cancellations, but we feel good about the idea that things will be back to normal next week and everybody will have smooth travels,â Hawco said.
AAA also projects gas prices will be similar to last Thanksgiving at $2.87 and recommends filling up your tank the night before and checking your battery and tire pressure.Â
Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.
SANFORD, Fla. â Millions across the country are gearing up for the busiest travel period of the year.
This year, AAA is projecting that there will be 4.2 million Floridians traveling by car for Thanksgiving, which is up by 2% compared to last year.
Florida Highway Patrol officials say this is because people are changing their plans following recent airline disruptions caused by the government shutdown.
As officials brace for the upcoming travel period, safety remains top of mind.
What You Need To Know
4.2 million Floridians expected to hit the road during busy Thanksgiving travel period this year
FDOT and FHP officials are reminding drivers to keep safety top of mind this next week
Busiest travel days are Tuesday, Wednesday, and Sunday after Thanksgiving
FDOT officials are reminding drivers to avoid any distractions and to be prepared.
âBuckle up every time you get behind the wheel. Make sure that you are avoiding distractions. You donât need to look at your text messages while youâre driving. You can wait until you stop, until you pull over at the next rest area,â FDOT District 5 Public Information Director Cindi Lane said.
Lane said distracted driving attributed to 43% of last yearâs road fatalities.
In the event of a roadside emergency, whether itâs an accident or a flat-tire, drivers are being reminded to call the *FHP or *347 number for roadside assistance.
Road Ranger Program Manager Garrett Popovich warned, âBe prepared. Youâre going to encounter traffic. Thereâs no way around that. Plan your trip. Make sure your vehicle has plenty of fuel â your tires are properly inflated.â
Meanwhile, the Florida Highway Patrol will increase the number of state troopers on the roads to keep an eye out for reckless drivers.
âThe number one cause of crashes and fatalities here in Florida is reckless driving, so thatâs making sure that you put that GPS in before you start driving. Give yourself plenty of time before you hit the road so that you have that extra buffer of time so youâre not tailgating, youâre not speeding,â FHP Public Affairs Officer Lt. Tara Crescenzi explained.
Crescenzi also urges drivers to call *347 if they see reckless driving on the road.
AAA expects the busiest road travel days to be Tuesday, Wednesday, and the Sunday after Thanksgiving.
PALM HARBOR, Fla. â Palm Harbor residents are wondering why large potholes near several businesses and homes have never been repaired.
What You Need To Know
Neighbors would like to see large potholes repaired on a Palm Harbor road
Itâs in a neighborhood off U.S. 19 and CR 95
Pinellas County confirmed the road is privately owned
The potholes are on a small road off U.S. 19 and CR-95, behind the old Sweet Tomatoes restaurant.
âJust the worst Iâve seen here in Palm Harbor,â said neighbor Avis Milton.
Milton lives near the road with the holes and often walks and drives by them.
âYou get over one pothole, then you get up on another one. You donât expect it,â Milton said.
She says the holes have been an issue for years and have become bigger. But recently, more traffic is using the side road to avoid the ongoing construction on U.S. 19.
âA lot of us use this back road because of U.S. 19, and with the congestion and the construction going on. So probably now there is a lot more traffic coming through here,â Milton said.
Because the road connects to several businesses and the Stone Gate Apartment complex, Milton would like to see the potholes finally repaired.
Pinellas County confirmed to Spectrum Bay News 9 that the road is on private property. Officials say they typically donât tell property owners to repair roads â and that public use of the road is at the ownerâs discretion.
Spectrum Bay News 9 reached out to the property owner but did not receive a response. Property records show it has changed hands in recent years.
âYou can tell just by looking at the coloring of the road that itâs been years or decades since itâs been paved. Even if it is a private owner, just fill in the pothole. Just fill in those. Put some gravel in there or something.â
âI think the shutdown at this point is history for air travel. The airlines understand this time of year so well. They know exactly what they need to do,â said Sheldon H. Jacobson, an airport and airlines operations expert. âThe real challenge is making sure travelers can help themselves.â
Here’s a guide to navigating the busiest travel week of the year:
Travel forecasts point to packed airports and roads.
A week after lifting the unprecedented flight restrictions it placed on commercial airlines during the shutdown, the Federal Aviation Administration is preparing for its busiest Thanksgiving week in 15 years, with more than 360,000 flights scheduled between Monday and next Tuesday. Thatâs more than 17.8 million people who will be screened by the Transportation Security Administration.
AAA projects 1.3 million more travelers will be on the roads than last year, pushing the total number of people traveling by car to at least 73 million.
You canât control the weather, but you can control how prepared you are if a winter storm hits. If your flight is canceled or delayed, will you drive instead or postpone or cancel your trip? Knowing your options ahead of time can reduce stress if a storm leaves you stranded.
James Belanger, vice president of meteorology at the Weather Company, recommends checking the forecast frequently while planning your trip.
The Weather Channel offers a Thanksgiving weekly forecast highlighting major airports and highways that could be affected by bad weather â including snow, ice and rain â along with a free online tool that shows how the weather might impact your travel route.
On Tuesday, the FAA’s busiest day with more than 52,000 flights scheduled, forecasters say rain could cause problems in the Pacific Northwest and for much of the eastern U.S. Airports in Atlanta, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle and Washington, D.C., could be impacted, according to the Weather Channel.
Jacobson, whose research contributed to the design of TSA PreCheck, recommends starting your packing by unpacking.
Check every pocket in case TSA-restricted items, like full-sized bottles, were left behind from a previous trip. This simple scan can help you get through security faster, especially when airports are crowded.
If youâre traveling with gifts, Jacobson suggests wrapping them at your destination because TSA agents may need to open them.
When deciding which clothes and shoes to pack, Belanger says to check the âfeels likeâ temperature for a better sense of the weather, especially if youâre not used to the cold.
And don’t forget a REAL ID is required to fly within the U.S., or you’ll need to bring another accepted form of ID, like a passport or military ID.
People with iPhones can now also add their U.S. passport details to Apple Wallet, which can be scanned at participating airports if travelers donât have a REAL ID. More than a dozen states already accept some form of a mobile ID at airport checkpoints, and travelers can go to the TSA website for more details.
Whether driving is your top choice or backup plan, AAA spokesperson Aixa Diaz suggests checking your tires, car battery and fluids, then hitting the road with a full tank of gas as early as possible to avoid traffic. Last year, AAA said, it responded to nearly 600,000 emergency roadside assistance calls during the Thanksgiving travel period to help drivers stranded by dead batteries, flat tires and empty tanks.
According to an analysis by Google Maps:
â Traffic on Wednesday is expected to be 14% heavier than usual between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., with peak traffic from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
â On Thanksgiving Day, the roads will be busiest between noon and 3 p.m.
â When itâs time to head home, avoid driving from 12 to 3 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, when traffic is heaviest.
â…is an informed passenger,â Jacobson likes to say.
Download your airline’s app to track your flight status, and check it regularly as your travel date approaches. That way, if your flight is canceled the day before, you can quickly look for alternatives.
Driving or flying, leave earlier than you think you need to. Knowing you won’t have to rush to your destination can help calm any nerves, whether it’s lingering anxiety from the shutdown or because you’re traveling with young kids or someone who needs extra help getting around.
âThese are some very simple things to think about, but theyâre important things to think about,â Jacobson said.
âI think the shutdown at this point is history for air travel. The airlines understand this time of year so well. They know exactly what they need to do,â said Sheldon H. Jacobson, an airport and airlines operations expert. âThe real challenge is making sure travelers can help themselves.â
Here’s a guide to navigating the busiest travel week of the year:
Travel forecasts point to packed airports and roads.
A week after lifting the unprecedented flight restrictions it placed on commercial airlines during the shutdown, the Federal Aviation Administration is preparing for its busiest Thanksgiving week in 15 years, with more than 360,000 flights scheduled between Monday and next Tuesday. Thatâs more than 17.8 million people who will be screened by the Transportation Security Administration.
AAA projects 1.3 million more travelers will be on the roads than last year, pushing the total number of people traveling by car to at least 73 million.
You canât control the weather, but you can control how prepared you are if a winter storm hits. If your flight is canceled or delayed, will you drive instead or postpone or cancel your trip? Knowing your options ahead of time can reduce stress if a storm leaves you stranded.
James Belanger, vice president of meteorology at the Weather Company, recommends checking the forecast frequently while planning your trip.
The Weather Channel offers a Thanksgiving weekly forecast highlighting major airports and highways that could be affected by bad weather â including snow, ice and rain â along with a free online tool that shows how the weather might impact your travel route.
On Tuesday, the FAA’s busiest day with more than 52,000 flights scheduled, forecasters say rain could cause problems in the Pacific Northwest and for much of the eastern U.S. Airports in Atlanta, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle and Washington, D.C., could be impacted, according to the Weather Channel.
What to pack (and what to skip)
Jacobson, whose research contributed to the design of TSA PreCheck, recommends starting your packing by unpacking.
Check every pocket in case TSA-restricted items, like full-sized bottles, were left behind from a previous trip. This simple scan can help you get through security faster, especially when airports are crowded.
If youâre traveling with gifts, Jacobson suggests wrapping them at your destination because TSA agents may need to open them.
When deciding which clothes and shoes to pack, Belanger says to check the âfeels likeâ temperature for a better sense of the weather, especially if youâre not used to the cold.
And don’t forget a REAL ID is required to fly within the U.S., or you’ll need to bring another accepted form of ID, like a passport or military ID.
People with iPhones can now also add their U.S. passport details to Apple Wallet, which can be scanned at participating airports if travelers donât have a REAL ID. More than a dozen states already accept some form of a mobile ID at airport checkpoints, and travelers can go to the TSA website for more details.
Whether driving is your top choice or backup plan, AAA spokesperson Aixa Diaz suggests checking your tires, car battery and fluids, then hitting the road with a full tank of gas as early as possible to avoid traffic. Last year, AAA said, it responded to nearly 600,000 emergency roadside assistance calls during the Thanksgiving travel period to help drivers stranded by dead batteries, flat tires and empty tanks.
According to an analysis by Google Maps:
â Traffic on Wednesday is expected to be 14% heavier than usual between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., with peak traffic from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
â On Thanksgiving Day, the roads will be busiest between noon and 3 p.m.
â When itâs time to head home, avoid driving from 12 to 3 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, when traffic is heaviest.
â…is an informed passenger,â Jacobson likes to say.
Download your airline’s app to track your flight status, and check it regularly as your travel date approaches. That way, if your flight is canceled the day before, you can quickly look for alternatives.
Driving or flying, leave earlier than you think you need to. Knowing you won’t have to rush to your destination can help calm any nerves, whether it’s lingering anxiety from the shutdown or because you’re traveling with young kids or someone who needs extra help getting around.
âThese are some very simple things to think about, but theyâre important things to think about,â Jacobson said.
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
TACOMA, Wash. – A 64-year-old Puyallup man had to be hospitalized Saturday night after a pedestrian threw a brick into a passing car. The victim was the passenger, the 63-year-old female driver was uninjured.Â
Timeline:
Just after 10 p.m. on Nov. 22, the Washington State Patrol report that the driver was heading south on I-705 just north of State Route 509 in Tacoma when a male pedestrian launched the brick at her and her passenger driving past him.
The 38-year-old pedestrian was standing in the right shoulder of I-705 when the incident happened, according to WSP. The right lane of the roadway was blocked for about an hour.Â
A Washington State Patrol car seen in Seattle, Wash. (FOX 13 Seattle)
The suspect now faces two assault charges, in addition to malicious mischief. The circumstances around the incident remain under investigation, according to WSP.
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The Source: Information in this story came from the Washington State Patrol in a press memo released to the public.Â
A woman walking in the traffic lanes of I-440 died Friday night after being struck by several vehicles.
File photo
A woman who was walking between traffic lanes on I-440 died after being struck by several vehicles Friday night, Raleigh police said Saturday morning.
Quiyanna Kellon, 46, was walking on the white lines diving lanes on westbound I-440 between Wake Forest and Six Forks roads about 9 p.m. when she was struck by a 2024 Hyundai Elantra, police said. She was then stuck by several other vehicles, which the police did not identify.
Police said all of the drivers remained on the scene.
Kellon died as a result of her injuries, police said. The investigation is continuing.
Dave Hendrickson is the N&Oâs growth and business editor. In 40+ years of journalism, he has worked for newspapers in Wisconsin, Virginia and North Carolina.