MDOT criticism here is absolutely warranted.
Don’t necessarily blame the engineers on your district level. The district map lines are not to be crossed without personnel, equipment, and material charges approved. It’s a long, boring, bureaucratic story, but it helps explain the slow nature of response and the too-little-too-late half-asssery they will now throw at this with both barrels.
This is a recurring issue in many DOT’s
I read they’re dispatching milling machines to break up the ice.
1. Much more expensive and slower than plows/brine
2. If the knuckledragger operating the miller falls asleep at the controls, you may have some extensive and expensive repairs in the coming thaw. I would expect a fair amount of spalling in the surface from milling in such cold conditions.
Snow/ice event equipment and crews STATEWIDE should have been strategically mobilized to North MS on Friday, knowing this was coming.
The only time I see the DOT cooperate STATEWIDE is during hurricane evacuation, and that’s because all lanes of interstates are directed inland, and that additional funding for manpower is reimbursed by the Feds.
Your mother-ship-level DOT spin doctors in Jackson will not focus on the ridiculous bureaucratic turf wars the District Engineers on the State level are stuck with, or the near criminal mis-management of equipment and personnel we all see. They will predictably deflect from the idea that upper level laziness and pisss-poor planning on their part left the northern districts to face the music on their own, but by Saturday night it was too late.
They will instead blame lack of funds.