Community Corner

5-1-1 Traffic Reports End In STL

Tech company calls it quits; local office closes.

For drivers in the St. Louis region who took out their cell phones and punched in 5-1-1 to check for traffic delays before starting a trip—they will have to find an alternative beginning February 1.

The MoDOT service for the St. Louis area ends January 31.

For the past five years MoDOT 5-1-1 has been provided by Navteq, a computer mapping and traffic reporting service owned by the Finnish company Nokia.

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The contract between MoDOT and Navteq expired last June, but the service continued on a month-to-month basis.

In December, Navteq announced it was discontinuing its traffic reporting service and closing regional offices across the country.

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An editor with the St. Louis Navteq office told Patch that MoDOT wants to restore the 5-1-1 service in the future, and expand it on a statewide basis.

In St. Louis, Navteq’s main office was at Tesson Ferry and I-270 with a desk at the MoDOT Traffic Management Center at I-64 and Highway 141. 

The company also provided producers and on-air talent for St. Louis television stations. 

The employees working at TV stations began working for a new company spun off from Navteq in November.

The St. Louis office closed Tuesday, January 31.


     


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