Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A trip in the express lanes from Broward to State Road 836 in Miami-Dade can cost about 10 bucks at peak time. ... Only two-axle cars and buses with a properly displayed SunPass are allowed to use ...
SunPass was introduced on April 24, 1999, and by October 1 of the same year, more than 100,000 SunPass transponders had been sold. [1] [2]In early 2009, all Easy Pay customers automatically became SunPass Plus customers if they opt-in and have the privilege of using their transponders to pay for airport parking at Tampa, Orlando, Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale and Miami airports.
A trip in the express lanes from Broward to State Road 836 in Miami-Dade cost more than 10 bucks at peak time. ... Only two-axle cars and buses with a properly displayed SunPass are allowed to use ...
You also can file a complaint with the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center, www.ic3.gov This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: SunPass toll road texting scam crackdown ...
The agency's old logo when it was MDX. In December 1994, the state of Florida along with the Miami-Dade County commission created the Miami-Dade Expressway Authority. This gave the county full control of five toll-road expressways that were formerly under the control of the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT).
Dolphin Expressway (SR 836) eastbound with Downtown Miami in the background I-395 spur heading east past Downtown Miami. The highway begins just north of the intersection of Southwest 137th Avenue (unsigned SR 825) and U.S. Highway 41 in Tamiami, built in 2007 and initially accessible only to motorists with SunPass transponders, passing through the first toll gantry.
First Coast Expressway/Cecil Commerce Center Parkway 2009: current SR 112: 4.132: 6.650 Miami International Airport in Miami: I-95 in Miami Airport Expressway/Airport Tollway: 1961: current Becomes I-195 just west of I-95; open road tolling; cash collection ended on November 14, 2014 SR 293: 11: 18 Mid-Bay Bridge near Niceville
Drivers who frequently use SunPass, E-Pass, Uni, or Leeway transponders on Florida’s Turnpike and other toll roads in the state will get a break soon.