Thursday, July 5, 2018

Three bridges in Kiowa County on U.S. 400 set to be repaired, more projects let



PCI Roads of Saint Michael, Minn., will make repairs to three bridges on U.S. 400 in Kiowa County as part of a $706,224 project approved in the Kansas Department of Transportation’s  June 20, 2018, monthly bid letting.
Crews will perform compaction grouting at a box bridge just east of the Ford County line. Compaction grouting is a technique that reinforces soil and stabilizes the ground. This work is to help correct some settlement issues at the bridge.
PCI Roads also will patch the deck and replace expansion joints on a bridge crossing the Union Pacific Railroad and patch the deck of a third bridge that crosses U.S. 54.
A total of 31 projects totaling approximately $9.5 million were approved as part of the June 20 letting. To see all of the approved projects, click here.

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Celebrate the Fourth of July with these safety tips in mind



Kansans will hit the road and celebrate the Fourth of July with their loved ones. It is also close to the halfway point in the 100 Deadliest Days, the time period between Memorial Day and Labor Day where more teens are involved in crashes. 

The Kansas Department of Transportation, The Kansas Highway Patrol and the Kansas Turnpike Authority  want to encourage travelers to plan ahead to and be prepared for their trips and celebrations.

From June 30 to July 4 last year, there were 549 crashes with seven people killed and 159 people who were injured.

Before travelers pack their cars, they can check their route for delays or construction with the help of KanDrive at www.kandrive.org, which can also be accessed from mobile devices. KanDrive includes camera images and interactive maps, as well as links to rest areas and travel and tourism sites.

Here are some additional safety tips to help travelers get the most of their Fourth of July celebrations and summertime fun:
  • Begin a trip with a full tank of gas and a fully charged phone.
  • As you travel, remember to move over for first responders and highway maintenance crews. If you are unable to move over, then slow down.
  • Keep emergency supplies in your car, including bottles of water, a phone charger and non-perishable food items.
  • Confirm that everyone in your vehicle is using their seat belt and/or an appropriately-fitted child safety seat.
  • Before you consume alcohol designate a sober driver ahead of time.
  • If you’re hosting a party provide non-alcoholic drink alternatives for guests who don’t plan on drinking or who are designated drivers. 


If you are involved in a crash or need assistance on a Kansas highway, call *47 (*HP) from a cell phone for a highway patrol dispatcher, or if on the Kansas Turnpike, dial *582 (*KTA). 

Have a safe and happy Fourth of July!

Monday, July 2, 2018

Evel Knievel Museum



Color Kansas lucky, because the Evel Knievel Museum is at the historic Harley Davidson location in Topeka.
The Evel Knievel Museum in Topeka has numerous attractions.
A few of them pictured on this page include a truck named "Big
Red" that hauled all his motorcycles across the country, lots
of memorabilia and a interactive game where riders
can experience a jump.
For many, Evel Knievel was Batman, Superman and Captain America all rolled up into one. The 13,000 square-foot museum explores Knievel’s early days of jumping over a box of rattlesnakes until his retirement after approximately 175 jumps on physics-defying motorcycles that turned him into a legend.
The museum showcases a massive collection of authentic artifacts that belonged to Evel Knievel. Toys, action figures and other licensed products are also part of the exhibit.

One of the biggest attractions is the 1974 Mack Truck and Trailer, dubbed “Big Red,” which was famous for hauling Knievel and his motorcycles around the country and is one of the big reasons why the museum exists.
Lathan Mckay, former professional skateboarder, actor and an avid Evel Knievel enthusiast, reached out the crew at Harley Davidson to restore “Big Red,” which was left at an abandoned junk yard in Clearwater, Fla., and had seen better days. Upon its restoration, they decided to build a museum around the luxury vehicle.

Visitors to the museum can see the Skycycle X-2, which is a rocket with wheels that Knievel attempted to jump across Snake River Canyon in.  They can also interact with areas of the museum by trying out the museum’s Plan a Jump interactive wall game. There is also a virtual reality simulation where visitors can experience a jump through their own eyes while riding a motorcycle. A scene that was filmed on location in Topeka with the help of Doug Danger, who rode a vintage bike and a helmet that gives the viewer a 360-degree view of the jump as it happens.
The Evel Knievel Museum opened last year and so far, Evel Knievel enthusiasts from 37 different countries have visited. More than 54 percent of the visitors who enter are from outside Kansas.
Recently, the Evel Knievel Museum was an answer on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and it has been featured on USA Today’s Top New Attractions in 2017.
Through Labor Day, the museum will be open Tuesdays through Sundays.
For more information check out www.evelknievelmuseum.com.





 

Friday, June 29, 2018

New law to protect life-saving efforts from good Samaritans to take effect July 1


It’s summer time and we don’t need to tell you that we are in the middle of a heat wave. It’s hot outside and heat advisories and warnings are in effect. The dangers of being exposed to heat for long periods are fresh on our minds.

But even when the weather is slightly cooler, danger still exists, especially when a child, pet or vulnerable person are trapped in a car.  According to Safe Kids Kansas, every 10 days in the United States, a child dies when they are left alone in a vehicle and hundreds of animals also lose their lives every year.

According to the Humane Society Legislation Fund (HSLF) we now have more information about why it is so dangerous:
  • 80% of the temperature increase inside a hot car happens in the first 10 minutes.
  • Cracking a window has been proven to not slow down the heating process or decrease the car’s maximum temperature.
  • A child’s body temperature rises 3 to 5 times faster than an adult.
  • Since pets do not sweat the way we do, they cannot cool their bodies efficiently. An animal can sustain brain damage, organ damage or failure or die from a heatstroke within just 15 minutes of being trapped in a hot car. 


The HSLF says that when it comes to rescuing an individual or pet trapped in car, time is critical.

"Because heat-related deaths can happen quickly, KS HB 2516 passed during the 2018 legislative session," The HSLF said. "This new law grants good Samaritans the legal right and immunity (under certain conditions) from civil liability to rescue a vulnerable person or domestic animal (livestock not included) from a locked vehicle when the individual believes that the person or animal is in imminent danger unless saved."

This new law goes into effect July 1, and Kansas will join 20 other states who protect good Samaritans from legal retribution for assisting people or animals in imminent danger who are trapped in a hot car.


Hot car deaths are preventable, breaking a window may save a life and the new law will protect Kansans who
exercise their right to save someone from dying. (Photo Courtesy of John Reeves, KDHE) 

Events have been held across the state to help educate the public about the new law. On Monday, KidsandCars.org partnered with the HSLF and Safe Kids Kansas to answer questions and demonstrate how to safely exercise their right to rescue a trapped person or animal from a hot car.  


Miranda Pratt, the HSLF Development Director said that they also used the platform to bring awareness to the dangers of hot vehicles.

"Every year, at least 37 children and dozens of animals die from vehicular heat stroke," Pratt said. "We hope that the new law will help lower that statistic and empower the Kansas community to act quickly to rescue a child or animal trapped in a hot car without fear of legal retaliation. Educating our community on this issue and how they are empowered through the new law is key. 


Hot car deaths are 100% predictable and preventable."




Cherie Sage, State Coordinator for Safe Kids Kansas, said that in more than 50 percent of all the cases where a child died from heatstroke in a vehicle, they were accidentally left behind. 

"Any parent would be grateful to a bystander for taking action that might save their child from a horrific death," Sage said. 

According to the HSLF before exercising your right to save a child, vulnerable person or animal, please be sure to check the following:
  • Is the car locked?
  • Is the person or animal suffering in imminent danger?
  • Have you notified local law enforcement?
  • Are you using reasonable force to break entry?
  • Can you remain with the person or animal until law enforcement arrives?
  • Is the animal in question domestic? This law does not apply to livestock animals.
Remember, the first line of defense when it comes to heat-stroke safety is to prevent it from happening in the first place. NEVER leave your child or pet in a car, even when you don’t believe it’s that hot out. 

Here is a short video from WIBW out of Topeka that explains how to help safely:
http://www.wibw.com/content/news/Minutes-matter-What-you-need-to-know-to-get-kids-pets-out-of-hot-cars-486898511.html


Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Transportation enhancements save lives

Truncated domes are an enhancement that provide individuals living with sight disabilities a cue to stop at intersections and wait until it safe to cross. 
By Mallory Goeke, KDOT Communications Specialist 

June is Pedestrian Safety Month. At some point throughout our day, we are all pedestrians. To get from one destination to the other, we navigate sidewalks and cross the streets safely.  
As a person who lives with the ability to see, I never realized how challenging it could be for someone who lives with a visual impairment to travel if life-saving equipment isn’t in place to help. It took an experience to help me learn about enhancements that help people living with disabilities travel. 

I was leaving a local store recently when one of the cashiers noticed that an individual who lives with a visual impairment and walks by the location every day was headed in a different direction after pacing for a few minutes. While they had chosen to use a long white cane to help them detect where they were, it appeared that they needed assistance.

I left the store and offered to help them. I learned that they were trying to find their regular bus stop but were unsure where they were. They told me that they usually relied on the sound from the intersection WALK indicators but said the sound was distorted because of high winds.

After we talked for a few minutes about their experience, we were able to cross the street and make it to the correct bus stop safely.

As I walked back to my vehicle, I couldn’t help but realize that this world looks and feels very different to people who are living with disabilities. I wanted to understand some of the transportation enhancements that help make travel better for others.

There are many ways that people who are living with a visual disability can detect where streets are located. They can feel the curb or the slope of a street. They can listen for the sound of traffic on the street beside them or the street they are approaching. But there are also some great enhancements that can be made to the infrastructure itself.

Truncated domes are an enhancement that provide individuals living with sight disabilities a cue to stop at intersections and wait until it safe to cross. 

One of these enhancements that is overlooked by people who can see are the bumps in the sidewalk just before an intersection called truncated domes. This enhancement was originally invented in Japan to be used in train terminals to help those living with visual impairment know when to stop.

Truncated domes can be found at many intersections and vary in design depending on where they are located and how they are used. Some truncated domes can indicate direction as well as help someone know when they need to stop at an intersection before crossing.  Truncated domes are usually put in place on either side of the intersection so the pedestrian can know when they have reached the other side safely.



Walk Indicators provide assistance to individuals living with both vision and hearing
impairments as they cross the street. Some indicators even make sounds or talk to pedestrians.
Another great enhancement is of course, the WALK indicator at intersections. In many communities, this indicator will either beep or talk to the pedestrian and indicates when it is safe to cross. 

This enhancement also assists persons living with hearing disabilities and helps provide visual cues.

All Kansas Department of Transportation projects follow the Public Rights-of-Way Accessibility Guidelines (PROWAG). These guidelines cover the design specifications for pedestrian features in all new or altered public rights-of-way. This applies to all sidewalks, paths, street crossings, medians and traffic islands, overpasses, bridges, parking, transit, signage and even furniture that exist within a transportation project.

Even though these guidelines are only proposed, KDOT and the Federal Highway Association in Kansas support the guidelines and recognize that they are needed to serve all Kansans and those who visit.

You can learn more about PROWAG here.

We are just cracking the surface on what transportation enhancements are doing to help everyone travel safely. KDOT also makes sure that every project has an accessible route through the construction of projects. We will discuss that topic and more in future blogs.

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Good old fashioned road trip games


Remember the days of the family vacation when the entire family piled into the car and hit the road for two weeks?  According the New York Times, the American road trip is making a rebound.  It may be a shorter four- or five-day road trip versus the two-week road trip of the past, but it still counts.   

Road trips in general offer a families a chance to unplug from social media and their devices. They can also build memories. Here are some good old fashioned road games that are sure to keep you and your loved ones entertained on your next road trip.

20 Questions
One player thinks of a person, place or thing. The other players then ask that player up to 20 yes-or-no questions to figure out what the person is thinking about. Whomever figures it out wins, unless nobody figures it out by the 20th question. If that happens, the player who thought of the person, place or things wins.

I spy
The classic game "I spy" is yet another guessing game. In this game, one person looks around the car and chooses an object. They decide which of the object's characteristics will serve as a clue and then say, "I spy, with my little eye, something that is _____." For instance, if he or she chooses a banana, the phrase would be, "I spy, with my little eye, something that is yellow." The other players then take turns guessing the object until someone figures it out and wins.

Geography
In this game, the first player thinks of a location that can be found on a map. The location can be anything — a continent, city, mountain or landmark — it must be found on a map. The first player says the location he or she has in mind, and then the next player has to think of a location that starts with the last letter of the named location. For example, if the first person says, "Florida," the next player must name a location that starts with the letter "A." The players take turns naming locations until someone takes longer than 10 seconds to come up with an answer. That person is out of the game, and the game continues until one player wins by being the last one remaining.  This can also be played with numerous other topics.

My Cows
This one only works if you're driving through rural areas, but it's great for long drives. When driving past a farm with cows, the first person to spot them calls out "My Cows!" and makes a quick count/guesstimate of how many he or she got. The object, of course, is to "collect" the most cows. If the car passes over a bridge, whoever spots it first gets to erase another player's cows. The erase landscape object doesn't need to be a bridge; it can be a graveyard or anything else you might pass periodically on a road trip well-supplied with cows.  Instead of counting cows, you could also count windmills, horses, oil derricks or whatever you and your fellow players decide!

If you aren’t driving you can also play Guess the Phrase with your fellow passengers.  It is also commonly known as Hangman or Snowman.

The rules for this game may vary. One player comes up with a secret phrase and the other players keep guessing letters one at a time until the phrase is completely spelled out on paper or until the player who guessed the phrase draws a complete figure (whichever happens first). Each time the players guess a letter that isn't in the phrase, the player who came up with the phrase draws a body part of the man (first the head, then the torso, then an arm etc.). If the guessing players guess all letters in the phrase before a complete character is drawn, they win. If not, the player who drew the man wins.

What are some of your favorite road trip games? 

Monday, June 25, 2018

Open Range Zoo


In the photos on this page are just a few of the unique creations that Jim Dickerman has designed
and can be seen throughout Lincoln County.

If you travel Lincoln County in north central Kansas, keep your eye out for Jim Dickerman’s “Open Range Zoo.” For more than 25 years, Dickerman has been combining scrap metal, old farm equipment, car parts, animal bones and feathers, driftwood, limestone, antlers and just about anything else you could think of to create his magical creatures. He sees himself as rather passive in this process, letting the pieces he finds decide what kind of creature they want to be. 
Since 2000, Dickerman, who lives in Lincoln County, has been creating his “Zoo.” He asked friends and land owners if it would be okay to exhibit his creations in their pastures, on top of billboards, utility poles, fence posts, hilltops, yards and all sorts of unexpected places. It is a visual surprise around every bend.
From just west of Lincoln moving east to Tescott on K-18, and from Lincoln south to I-70 on K-14, you will spy some very unlikely creatures as Dickerman has dotted the landscape with his creations.
While Kansas has a wonderful interstate system, sometimes you need to forego the beaten path to find the interesting and unique.