VDOT Workers Memorial: Fact Sheet
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- The memorial honors state highway transportation workers who died performing
their jobs. It is a place where family members, friends and colleagues can
reflect on their loss and where the traveling public can become more aware of
sacrifices made by state highway transportation workers.
- The names of 131 employees are engraved on the memorial. The employees died
between 1928 and 2005. Their names appear randomly in columns. The state highway
organization was established in 1906. It is now known as the Virginia Department
of Transportation (VDOT).
- No public funds were used to build the memorial. It was entirely self-funded with donations of money, materials and time from VDOT employees and retirees, family members, businesses and organizations throughout the state. Nearly $172,000 was contributed for the monument and surrounding features.
- The monument was dedicated on Sept. 17, 2004, in a ceremony attended by
nearly 200 family members. The first of what is hoped to be an annual
remembrance ceremony was held on April 4, 2006, during VDOT’s annual Work Zone
Awareness Week.
- To qualify for inclusion on the memorial, the deceased must have been an
active full-time or part-time state highway transportation employee. The death
must have been from a work-related accident, injury or illness. All confirmed
for inclusion thus far died from on-the-job incidents. Many of the deaths
occurred in work zone incidents.
- The fund-raising effort was carried out through a non-profit group of VDOT
employees who represent a variety of positions and professions throughout the
agency. Pam Kida, founder of Pathways of Virginia, an organization that promotes
highway safety, was also a member. Mrs. Kida is the widow of VDOT employee Alan
Rotach, who was killed along Interstate 295 in 1993.
- The memorial is 13 feet long and nearly 10 feet high. It sits on a large
grassy area within the second scenic pulloff on I-64, east of Afton Mountain
between mile markers 103 and 104.
- The site was selected because it belongs to VDOT, it is easily accessible by
interstate and major highways, and it overlooks a beautiful, serene view of a
valley.
- The design shows three profiles of workers wearing hard hats cut into black,
white and gray granite layers. The layers are intended to reflect the diversity
of VDOT's employees. An open profile at one end implies a "missing" worker and
lets visitors see the scenic view of the overlook.
- The memorial's design was selected from 41 entries submitted by VDOT
employees. The design was submitted by Fredericksburg District Location and Design Engineer Harry Lee
and his daughter, Stephanie, a studio arts senior
at Mary Washington College at the time.
- A landscape plan featuring a native perennial wildflower bed, colorful trees
and a walkway was selected to complement the memorial. It was developed by Scott
Johnson, then VDOT’s Richmond District wildflower program and landscape design
manager. A daylily bed has been added to the site.
- Several state transportation agencies have employee memorials. Among them
are Arizona, Kansas, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Washington and Wisconsin. The memorials were built with donations, state funds,
grants or a combination. Their designs range from realistic statues to abstract
monuments, plaques and memorial gardens.
Page last modified: Tuesday, April 15, 2008





















