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Hurricane Season Readiness: Why Portable Traffic Signals Should Be Part of Every Emergency Traffic Plan

Hurricane Season Readiness: Why Portable Traffic Signals Should Be Part of Every Emergency Traffic Plan

When hurricane season arrives, communities do not just prepare for wind and rain. They prepare for power outages, damaged intersections, blocked roads, emergency repairs, utility work, detours, and traffic signals that may stop working when they are needed most.

For cities, counties, utilities, contractors, and emergency management teams, traffic control after a storm can become a major public-safety issue very quickly.

That is why portable traffic signals should be part of every serious hurricane response and recovery plan.

When the Power Goes Out, Traffic Control Becomes Critical

After a hurricane or major storm, intersections can become dangerous fast. A signalized intersection without power can create confusion, congestion, crashes, and delays for first responders and utility crews.

In some areas, roads may be partially blocked by flooding, fallen trees, debris, damaged poles, or emergency repair crews. In other cases, traffic may need to be shifted into one lane while crews restore power, repair signals, or reopen a critical roadway.

These are not normal work-zone conditions. Storm recovery creates moving targets. Conditions change quickly, crews are stretched thin, and public safety becomes the top priority.

Portable traffic signals give agencies a way to restore organized traffic control quickly, even when permanent infrastructure is down or unavailable.

A Safer Alternative to Police-Directed Traffic Control

At a busy intersection, manual traffic control is not a simple flagging operation. In most cases, it requires law enforcement officers to physically direct traffic, especially when traffic signals lose power or storm damage creates major lane closures.

That creates several problems during hurricane response.

First, it can be dangerous. Officers may be standing in heavy traffic, poor visibility, rain, debris, heat, or post-storm conditions while drivers are distracted and roads are congested.

Second, it is costly. Staffing an intersection with police officers for hours or days can become expensive very quickly, especially when multiple intersections are affected at the same time.

Third, it pulls critical personnel away from other emergency needs. After a storm, police and first responders are already dealing with accidents, blocked roads, welfare checks, emergency calls, and public safety issues across the community.

Portable traffic signals give agencies another option. They provide organized, automated temporary traffic control without requiring officers to remain in the roadway for extended periods. This helps improve safety, reduce staffing costs, and keep law enforcement available for the calls where they are needed most.

Where Portable Traffic Signals Can Help After a Storm

Portable traffic signals can be used in many hurricane and emergency-response situations, including:

  • Intersections where traffic signals have lost power
  • Roads reduced to one lane because of flooding or debris
  • Emergency bridge or roadway repairs
  • Utility restoration work
  • Temporary detours
  • Damaged intersections waiting for permanent signal repair
  • Debris removal operations
  • Work zones created during storm recovery
  • Multi-approach locations where police traffic control would be difficult to sustain

The goal is simple: restore order, protect crews, and keep traffic moving safely while the community recovers.

The PTL2.4X Portable Traffic Signal System

Transportation Solutions & Lighting offers the PTL2.4X Portable Traffic Signal System, built for work zones, crossroads, intersections, and complex temporary traffic-control applications.

The PTL2.4X is designed for flexibility and reliability in the field. It can be used for lane closures, intersection control, emergency detours, and other temporary traffic situations where agencies need a dependable system that can be deployed quickly.

Key features include:

  • MUTCD and NEMA TS-5 compliance
  • Advanced Ring and Barrier setup
  • Large full-color display with easy-to-read menus
  • Electric actuator lift system
  • USB backup for traffic-control plans and performance logs
  • Dual-head signal options for increased visibility
  • Radio communication capability
  • Long battery operation
  • Solar charging capability
  • Support for complex work-zone and intersection setups

For hurricane response, solar and battery operation are especially important. When grid power is down or temporary power is not available, agencies still need a way to manage traffic safely and reliably.

Planning Before the Storm Matters

The worst time to create a traffic-control plan is after the storm has already hit.

Agencies should identify the intersections and roadways most likely to create problems during a hurricane or major weather event. That may include evacuation routes, bridges, major intersections, hospital accessroads, utility corridors, and areas that historically lose power or flood.

A strong emergency traffic plan should include:

  • High-risk intersections and corridors
  • Locations where portable signals may be needed
  • Detour and lane-closure plans
  • Coordination between public works, police, fire, utilities, and contractors
  • Equipment staging locations
  • Battery, solar, and maintenance checks
  • Vendor support for deployment, service, and replacement parts

Having portable traffic signals ready before a storm can save time, reduce confusion, and improve safety during recovery.

Built for More Than Construction

Portable traffic signals are often thought of as construction equipment. But during hurricane season, they become a public-safety asset.

They help communities respond faster when permanent traffic signals are out, when law enforcement resources are stretched thin, and when crews need to work safely in damaged or congested areas.

For cities, counties, utilities, and contractors, the PTL2.4X provides a practical way to prepare before the storm and respond after the storm.

TS&L Is Ready to Help

Transportation Solutions & Lighting supports traffic safety, emergency response, lighting, and public-safety infrastructure across Florida and the Southeast.

Our team understands that storm response is not a normal work-zone project. Agencies need reliable equipment, fast support, and practical solutions that work in real-world emergency conditions.

Whether you are preparing for hurricane season, planning emergency detours, supporting utility restoration, or replacing damaged signal control, TS&L can help.

Portable traffic signals should be part of every hurricane-season readiness plan.

Contact TS&L today to discuss the PTL2.4X Portable Traffic Signal System and how it can support your emergency traffic-control needs.

Transportation Solutions & Lighting, Inc.

(800) 216-4044

www.tsandl.us

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