- Joined
- Feb 7, 2024
- Messages
- 1,596
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- Age
- 70
- Location (town/city + country)
- Mannum South Australia
- Driving
- MG4
Often, they mark out areas that will be worked on between the start of scheduled work and the planned end date.I usually have a slightly different experience. It's a big temporary sign saying slow 60km/hr, road workers, in a 110km/hr zone. I dutifully travel for about 10km at very reduced speed, to come across an end speed limit sign, with no evidence of said work or workers.
The people that do the traffic control get these areas and between this date and that date, they have no choice, even if the workers aren't in that actual area, they have no idea if they might move to that area, or if the road is in that bad condition the safe speed has been deemed to be 60km/h rather than 110km/h, so they are obligated, and get paid, to mark those areas at the speed they have been advised to post .....
Gone are the days when one mob did the lot, it's all specialised, each traffic control officer needs a different level of licence to do a particular function in the traffic management ..... the one with the lolli-pop sign is now a graded traffic control officer, a step above the one that puts the speed signs out, but not as high as the one who operates the traffic lights where a single lane is all that is available ..... next level is the person driving the speed control vehicle to stop anyone from exceeding the perceived safe speed .... the next is the one who sits in the air conditioned vehicle with a heap of walkie talkies and over-sees the whole circus ......
I worked with a contract industrial fitter on a 14 hr shut down, big $$ work, and he told me he only does this stuff now when there is no lolli-pop sign work available, the sign work pays more .... a strange world we live in that's for sure .... someone with 15 yrs experience as an industrial fitter get better pay working the lolli-pop sign at road works ....
T1 Terry