The Interstate 10 closure spans nearly the entire state, ending west of the Mississippi state line east of New Orleans.
I-10 east from Gramercy in the Baton Rouge area to the Mississippi state line has remained closed since Tuesday after 10 inches of snow dropped on the New Orleans area. Officials have made strides in opening most of the city's other major roadways, but were still working to clear off ice from the popular thoroughfare.
Truckers who move goods across hundreds of miles of Louisiana highway must make their own calculus in the face of a snowstorm.
The Interstate 10 Mississippi Bridge eastbound and I-10 east at La. 415 to Louise Street is closed Tuesday morning due to hazardous weather conditions, the state Department of Transportation and ...
Remember to heed all local and state guidance.” Interstate 10 is open in both neighboring Mississippi and Alabama. Louisiana’s Transportation Department has also closed Interstate 55 from Ponchatoula to New Orleans across the Bonnet Carré Spillway ...
The latest closure means that nearly three-quarters of Louisiana’s portion of the coast-to-coast highway is shut. A rare winter storm brought record snowfall to the state on Tuesday.
The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Safety announced that crews are hoping to open Interstate 10 in sections by 3 p.m. Friday.
Snowfall rates of 1 inch per hour, combined with wind gusts up to 35 mph, could create whiteout conditions at times. Travel will be nearly impossible Tuesday, especially on elevated roadways and bridges, where snow and ice are expected to accumulate quickly.
Remember to heed all local and state guidance." Interstate 10 is open in both neighboring Mississippi and Alabama. Louisiana's Transportation Department has also closed Interstate 55 from ...
(The Center Square) – After a historic winter storm hit the Interstate 10 corridor on Tuesday, parts of the vital east-west artery remain closed due to icy road conditions in both Louisiana and ...
Interstate 10 in the Baton Rouge metro area reopened to both eastbound and westbound traffic Thursday afternoon, the Department of Transportation and Development announced.
A record-breaking winter storm swept through the southeastern U.S., bringing unprecedented snowfall and freezing temperatures. Cities like New Orleans experienced more snow than Anchorage, Alaska, during this period.