Despite new recommendations to axe funny road signs, Delaware’s roadway humor is here to stay. Nationwide reports of a ban on overhead electronic signs with references to pop culture were widely ...
This holiday season, the New Jersey Department of Transportation is ramping up the spirit along New Jersey roadways, including a bit of humor in warnings against reckless and distracted driving. Busy ...
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 ...
You’ve likely seen the funny electronic signs on highways around the country: “Drive Hammered, Get Nailed,” “Don’t Drive Intexticated,” or, for Chicago hot dog fans, “No Texting, No Speeding, No ...
You’ve likely seen the funny electronic signs on highways around the country: “Drive Hammered, Get Nailed” and “Don’t Drive Intexticated” are just two examples. Did you also hear the one about the ...
Drivers, those beloved highway message signs with trendy and catchy sayings about road safety will soon disappear from Delaware highways thanks to a federal ban. Have you ever read a road sign and ...
It's no joke. A federal agency is discouraging humorous and quirky messages that could distract or confuse drivers on highways and freeways across the country. The Federal Highway Administration ...
The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), part of the U.S. Department of Transportation has opted to bypass a sense of humor and will instead introduce a ban on quirky, funny or pop-culture ...
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- ...
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