The Ohio Department of Transportation has largely dealt with big snow events this winter season but are now trying to avoid roads becoming iced over.
The Ohio Department of Transportation is working around the clock as truckloads of snow, slush, and ice are moved off the motorway. Transportation manager Joe Thompson says crews will
Plows are large, heavy vehicles with blind spots. If you're involved in a crash with one, your vehicle will get damaged. Drive responsibly, Ohio.'
The first super load of the year will move through Central Ohio starting this Friday, the Ohio Department of Transportation announced.The 19+ foot truck will le
Ohio Department of Transportation District 2 plows were struck by drivers last Wednesday and Friday. The district's third in a week, ODOT's 28th, happened Tuesday.
The Ohio Department of Transportation sent crews out to clear roads as the winter storm passed through. The Mid-Ohio Valley received over six inches of snow since Sunday afternoon. The snowplows travelled all over the county to clear county roads for residents.
As another winter storm arrives in Northeast Ohio, road crews with the Ohio Department of Transportation are on-duty around the clock.
DELAWARE COUNTY, Ohio — Temperatures will be taking a big drop starting next week, which could lead to more potholes. The Ohio Department of Transportation fixed a major pothole in the road on U.S. Route 23 caused by the weather. The drop off in the road has caused headaches for drivers in Delaware County.
Winter has arrived in full force, wrapping the region in a frosty layer of snow and ice. But it’s not the picturesque scene you’d want to cozy up to. Treacherous conditions have transformed
The Ohio Department of Transportation has a few hundred crews clearing the roads in southwest Ohio and more than 1,100 out across the state.
As the Ohio Valley continues to be hit with snow, the Ohio Department of Transportation is working around the clock to ensure safe roadways and clearer travel
The lawsuit says the United States Gypsum Co., on Sandusky Bay, failed to maintain underground mines that caused dangerous sinkholes near State Route 2, costing the Ohio Department of Transportation $16.8 million to stabilize the road to prevent its collapse.