Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. New Jersey continues to use humor in its highway safety messages, like this one advising against “camping” in the left lane.
The Biden Administration sometimes takes a stand that is truly inexplicable. Case in point: the administration’s hand-wringing over vernacular on amusing electronic road signs. Don’t get us wrong, ...
The imaginative folks at the Ohio Department of Transportation who write those eye-catching overhead signs that help drivers pay attention to important safety messages by couching them in witty ...
DOVER, Delaware (WPVI) -- At some point during our summer road trips, we may have encountered some witty traffic signs on highways. Delaware DOT is driving home the laughs while delivering serious ...
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 ...
The federal government banned “humorous” messages from being displayed on electronic highway signs. Photo from the Mississippi Department of Transportation It turns out, road signs are no laughing ...
“Ho ho ho! Please drive slow!” If you enjoyed the puns and Jersey humor on the highway safety signs, it appears they’re here to stay. The signs first popped up along New Jersey roadways in 2022 and ...
DELAWARE — Delaware's entertaining and witty road signs might be under threat as new guidelines from the US Federal Highway Administration tighten restrictions on the use of jokes on traffic control ...
Your favorite snarky highway public service announcement may be a thing of the past, per new federal rules. In December, the Federal Highway Administration released its latest manual for road managers ...
(WISH) — Officials are not laughing. They say it’s no joke. Humorous and quirky messages on electronic signs will soon disappear from highways and freeways across the country. According to The ...
COLUMBIA - 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- ...