Construction zones in Florida's roadways are dangerous. Workers want drivers to stay vigilant
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Every day before the sun rises, John Farnoly of Volusia County kisses his wife goodbye, gets in his pickup truck and drives to a staging area along Interstate 4, near L.B. McLeod Road in Orlando. Farnoly, 35, is a project manager for ongoing maintenance along that stretch of the interstate. Every day, he hopes he won’t get struck and be maimed or killed like one of the 2,550 casualties among construction workers on I-4 since 2015.
“It’s scary, you always have to have your head on a swivel,” Far
Every day before the sun rises, John Farnoly of Volusia County kisses his wife goodbye, gets in his pickup truck and drives to a staging area along Interstate 4, near L.B. McLeod Road in Orlando. Farnoly, 35, is a project manager for ongoing maintenance along that stretch of the interstate. Every day, he hopes he won’t get struck and be maimed or killed like one of the 2,550 casualties among construction workers on I-4 since 2015.
“It’s scary, you always have to have your head on a swivel,” Far