On April 13, 2026, the Ohio Department of Transportation said it was reviewing safety measures after a March 10 crash on the west side of Columbus that killed one driver, and it laid out a list of technology upgrades and routine engineering reviews it says are aimed at cutting down on similar high speed crashes along Interstate 270.
The late morning collision unfolded around 10:30 a.m. on March 10, when a dump truck reportedly lost a tire, punched through the median cable barrier, and shot into the westbound lanes, slamming into a Chevrolet Impala. The car’s driver was pronounced dead at the scene, and the truck driver was taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, according to WHIO. Video of the aftermath and comments from state transportation officials were also included in reporting by WBNS.
ODOT Touts Wrong Way Tech And Engineering Reviews
ODOT spokesman Matt Bruning told reporters the agency has been expanding wrong-way driver detection and other countermeasures around central Ohio and that it routinely reviews serious crash sites for possible engineering changes, according to AOL. Bruning said wrong-way crashes make up roughly 0.01% of crashes statewide, but are far more likely to be deadly. Detectors were triggered 354 times in 2024, he said, and about 83% of those drivers turned around before reaching the highway.
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