PROCEED WITH CAUTION - Many have probably noticed the workmen in yellow hats and safety vests, big machinery and dump trucks full of steaming asphalt at work on Ga Hwy. 15. According to GDOT officials, the resurfacing includes 8.34 miles of highway stretching from Hwy 280 in town to connect to Hwy 1 at John's Country Junction. McLendon Enterprises of Vidalia is in charge of what GDOT describes as mill and inlay resurfacing, a process in which the old road is milled out and new, hot asphalt is inlaid back into the roadbed. The project will also install Americans with Disabilities Act certified wheelchair ramps where necessary. At a cost of a little over $2 million, the project should be completed by mid June or the first of July and GDOT's goal is to limit the interruptions to normal everyday traffic patterns. PROCEED WITH CAUTION - Many have probably noticed the workmen in yellow hats and safety vests, big machinery and dump trucks full of steaming asphalt at work on Ga Hwy. 15. According to GDOT officials, the resurfacing includes 8.34 miles of highway stretching from Hwy 280 in town to connect to Hwy 1 at John's Country Junction. McLendon Enterprises of Vidalia is in charge of what GDOT describes as mill and inlay resurfacing, a process in which the old road is milled out and new, hot asphalt is inlaid back into the roadbed. The project will also install Americans with Disabilities Act certified wheelchair ramps where necessary. At a cost of a little over $2 million, the project should be completed by mid June or the first of July and GDOT's goal is to limit the interruptions to normal everyday traffic patterns.
SUGGESTING ADDITIONAL RESTRICTIONS – Citizen Matthew Beggarly spoke to Montgomery County Commissioners about additional restrictions that could be added to the land use ordinance draft to help further deter data center developers from building within the County.Photo by Makaylee Randolph
APPEARING BEFORE SERGEANT MAJORS – To earn the Camp Leadership Award, JROTC Thunderbolt Regimen Colonel Jasmine Nichols had to appear before five U.S. Army Command Sergeant Majors, and discuss with them topics centered around JROTC, leadership, and current events. L to R: Jasmine Nichols, JROTC Instructor Captain DeCarlos Ware.
A $4.5 MILLION INVESTMENT – Toombs County Schools are investing in the district’s Career, Technical, and Agricultural Education (CTAE) programs, as they have announced the construction of a new facility, which will house several classrooms and hands-on learning labs.
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