PennDOT earlier this week it was closing interstate highways’ rest areas and not allowing access to parking at them. Instead, the state says it will close the facilities but still allow trucks - and only trucks - to park there. The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation appears to have changed its mind about closing rest areas on Interstate highways and not allowing trucks to park in them. Pennsylvania convert rest areas to truck parking only Find more information via this link.Ĭustomers without I-PASS are encouraged to visit the Tollway website () to calculate missed tolls and pay online within seven days, or use the “search by plate” feature after seven days, the authority notes. Toll collection will be entirely handled via I-PASS, E-ZPass and through the Tollway’s online payment portal. Grace period tolling will be extended, and violations will be held through the duration of these toll plaza service interruptions. ![]() The Tollway’s maintenance staff, incident management personnel and HELP truck drivers will remain on duty. All Illinois Tollway roadways will remain open to traffic through the implementation, yet toll booths at mainline toll plazas will be offline, and automatic toll payment machines at ramp and mainline toll plazas will be deactivated. Illinois Tollway operators also moved to what it called a temporary implementation of all-electronic tolling as a precaution to limit the potential spread of the coronavirus disease to customers, as well as Tollway employees. Drivers will not need to hand their cards to the toll collector. If drivers wish to pay with credit or debit cards, the toll collector will hold the credit card device out to the driver so they can insert their card. The MBA and toll staff will be encouraging transition to non-cash payments for the next few days until cash is no longer accepted though MBA noted it would re-evaluate the policy should conditions change Bridge users will need to pay with a credit or debit card, or use a MacPass card or windshield sticker. Gretchen Whitmer and Michigan Department of Health and Human Services’ recommendations designed to help prevent the spread of COVID-19, the Mackinac Bridge Authority will not accept cash transactions starting March 21. Mackinac Bridge, Illinois Tollway system moving to no-cash tolls Trucking news and briefs for March 18, 2020:
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