A group of state legislators visited the current Interstate 70 construction zone in Hancock County on Friday where Indiana’s worksite speed control pilot program, known as Safe Zones, is helping to keep both motorists and road crews safe.
The five-year pilot program, authorized by House Enrolled Act 1015 during the 2023 legislative session, uses speed detection technology to monitor the speeds of passing vehicles.
"From the beginning, the purpose of my legislation establishing Safe Zones has been to gather information on how to keep our roads and those working on them safe," said bill author, State Rep. Jim Pressel (R-Rolling Prairie). "Now, we have the opportunity to see for ourselves how this new law and the implementation of cameras in worksites impacts the overall safety of Hoosiers on roadways."
Rep. Pressel was joined on the visit by Representatives Alan Morrison (R-Brazil), Peggy Mayfield (R-Martinsville), Tonya Pfaff (D-Terre Haute) and Ed Clere (R-New Albany), as well as Sen. Michael Crider (R-Greenfield) and INDOT Commissioner Mike Smith. Rep. Morrison was a co-author of the legislation.
Sen. Crider, whose 28th District includes Hancock County, said "the first Safe Zones site in Hancock County has had both a positive impact on traffic and has kept motorists and road crews safe. As a leader on the Interim Study Committee on Roads and Transportation and the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Transportation, it is important to me to try to keep all Hoosiers safe on our roads. I hope motorists will continue to slow down and be more cautious in these work zones as the pilot program continues, and I look forward to seeing what else we will be able to accomplish with this new tool.”
Commissioner Smith said speed is a major factor in work zone crashes. “We have to reduce speeds to make construction zones safer not only for road crews but also for motorists,” Smith said. “So far, many drivers are slowing down and we hope that continues. Lives depend on it."
Over the past decade, 269 people have been killed in crashes in highway worksites or in worksite backups in Indiana. In 2023 alone, 33 people were killed and more than 1,750 were injured in INDOT work zones. Four out of five people killed in work zones are either drivers or their passengers.
Indiana Safe Zones aims to curb those numbers. The Hancock County site along I-70 is the first deployment of the program. By statute, INDOT may deploy the technology in up to four sites at any given time. Additional locations will be announced as the program expands.
Here’s how Indiana Safe Zones works:
Similar programs in other states have significantly improved work zone safety. Two years after Maryland launched its program, speeding violations in construction sites fell more than 80%, and incidence of worksite-related crashes, fatalities, and injuries were at their lowest in more than 10 years. In the first year Pennsylvania began continuously enforcing its program, it saw a more than 19% drop in worksite crashes.
INDOT will share annual reports throughout the pilot program with members of the Indiana General Assembly and the traveling public. To learn more about Indiana Safe Zones, including active locations and answers to frequently asked questions, visit SafeZonesIN.com.