Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
August 13, 2024 at 8:29 AM. RICHMOND, Va. - The Virginia Department of Transportation is warning drivers who use E-ZPass about a text message scam that seeks payment for bogus toll charges. VDOT ...
Most E-ZPass lanes are converted manual toll lanes and must have fairly low speed limits for safety reasons (between 5 and 15 miles per hour (8 and 24 km/h) is typical), so that E-ZPass vehicles can merge safely with vehicles that stopped to pay a cash toll and, in some cases, to allow toll workers to safely cross the E-ZPass lanes to reach booths accepting cash payments.
NH E-ZPass customers get a 30% discount at Dover and Rochester plazas. Tolls by Mail or E-ZPass on the entire length, cash collection ended on 17-18 October 2022. [59] Mount Washington Auto Road: 7.6 12.2 Route 16 in Green's Grant: Mount Washington summit Tolls serve as an entrance fee
Motorists can obtain an E-ZPass transponder or a non-interoperable RiverLink one for use on RiverLink facilities only. The E-ZPass system was branded as I-Zoom on the Indiana Toll Road from 2007 to 2012. In Massachusetts, the E-ZPass system was branded as Fast Lane between 1998 and 2012. As of 2016, all toll facilities in Massachusetts use open ...
PayByCar, which the program that allows you to pay for gas on your phone using E-ZPass, announced Tuesday it will be expanding into several states. The expansion will take place over the next two ...
Massachusetts has had the PayByCar technology through E-ZPass since 2022. ... to the card linked to the user's E-ZPass account. ... Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia, West Virginia, and Georgia
Smart Tag is the former name of a transponder -based electronic toll collection system implemented by the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT). It was launched as Fastoll on April 15, 1996. Fastoll was rebranded as Smart Tag in 1998, [ 1] and was placed under the umbrella of Smart Travel. In November 2007, the Smart Tag brand name was ...
State Route 267 Toll. State Route 267 (SR 267) is an expressway in the US state of Virginia. It consists of two end-to-end toll roads – the Dulles Toll Road and Dulles Greenway – as well as the non-tolled Dulles Access Road, [3] which lies in the median of Dulles Toll Road and then extends east to Falls Church.