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{{:USA/CommonState|Naming Fire Departments=Fire Departments exist as agencies and can have identifiers such as stations or equipment. When naming a fire department, use the following format: | |||
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Examples: Reading Fire Department - Engine 3 & Ladder 1 | |||
Only append with an identifier if the department has multiple stations or noted equipment.}}<!-- | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:31, 12 February 2020
This page serves as the primary resource for editors of Pennsylvania. Review all the sections to better understand how the guidelines for this state might deviate from the overall USA or worldwide guidelines. If you have any comments or questions about this page or state refer to the community links below.
If you think any changes are needed on this page, please discuss them at: Pennsylvania Wiki Page Discussion |
Introduction
Pennsylvania is a part of the Northeast region, which includes the states and/or territories of:
- Delaware / New Jersey / New York / Pennsylvania.
Current Issues in Pennsylvania
- Places with addresses damaged by City Merge
- Get WME City Merge Place Address Fixer. Enable this Tampermonkey script and click on a place that looks like it has no address. If the script can get that street and city name from the smae place the app gets it from, it will. Otherwise, it will let you know. Either way, double check before you save. For more information, please see Addresses damaged by City Merge
Mapping resources
Before editing the maps in Pennsylvania, be sure to fully review and understand the editing manual.
The Waze user community follows the Waze etiquette guidelines discussed in the Wiki. Be sure to familiarize yourself with these guiding principals while editing the maps and this Wiki, as well as when communicating with other Waze users.
Map Editing Resources
- Common Editing Mistakes
- Map Editing Quick-start Guide
- Best map editing practice
- Editing Manual
- Junction Style Guide
- Community Plugins, Extensions and Tools
- More PA Mapping resources including all known links for Pennsylvania county maps and GIS.
Tip: Editors are strongly encouraged to download & install the WME Toolbox & Waze Validator Plugins. These are VERY helpful tools for identifying problems and even offers advice how to fix them.
Community
The Waze forum is a great place to find answers to previously asked questions and also a place to ask new ones. Below are links to the forums specific to Pennsylvania.
- Pennsylvania section of Waze forum
- The Northeast region forum
- The USA section of Waze Forum
- The USA segment unlock requests
Area Managers for Pennsylvania can be found in the table below.
New editors should consider checking into the formal mentoring program available at no charge.
Many Pennsylvania editors use Discord to share information and chat. If you are editing or plan to edit in PA, please join the Northeast Discord Server listed below.
- Northeast Region Waze Map Editors Discord Server
- Pennsylvania section in the Waze Forums
- US Unlock and Update Requests section in the Waze Forums
- USA section in the Waze Forums
- You can check this sheet to find out if anyone has contacted a new editor yet or use '!Outreach <username>' in Discord
- Please use this form when you contact a new editor for the first time
Update Requests
Pennsylvania follows the Northeast Region (NOR) standard for addressing URs.
Cities and towns
One of the most common errors when editing the maps is when an editor creates a road and does not confirm the road by setting the city and road name (or stating it has none).
Duplicate cities can be caused by incorrectly named segments and should be corrected following the guidelines in the duplicate cities article.
City names on segments are used for two things:
- to generate the city names you see on the map
- to find a destination when you enter an address into the waze app.
Every segment in Pennsylvania is located within a city, borough, or township, so every segment of every Minor Highway, Primary Street, Street, Private Road, Parking Lot Road, and Dirt Road/4x4 Trail should have a city name applied to it. Major Highways should have a city name applied to all segments that also have street addresses. City names are not required on Freeways and Ramps. Railroads should have the "none" box checked for city.
If you think you have found a place that needs an exception to the rules below, please contact a Pennsylvania state manager.
City, borough, or township?
- If the segment is within a city or borough, use the name of the city or borough
- If the segment is not within a city or borough, but within a Census Designated Place (CDP) that is used as though it were a town name by the businesses and residents then use the CDP name. This means that the CDP name does not appear only in mailing addresses (many CDP names are identical to post office names), but is used in the names of businesses, schools, religious centers, as in "Exton Square Mall"
- If the segment does not satisfy the rules above, then use the township name.
- If the segment runs along the border of two different city names, then use one in the primary city name and one as the alternate. Example: Street Rd, Willistown, with alternate name Street Rd, Thornbury.
- Where a segment crosses a city boundary, make sure there is a junction at the border, and that each segment gets the correct city name or names.
- Do NOT use Post Office names that don't match an official township, boro, or CDP in the segment primary address. Do not use names of villages, neighborhoods, or other unincorporated places in the primary address.
- If the above rules do not resolve address search issues, talk to a state manager about use of alternate name(s).
- The above rules should take care of all segments in the state.
Names and duplicate names
- Whenever possible, just use the name of the city, borough, or township, with nothing added. Example: "East Goshen" for East Goshen Township
- If there are a borough and township of the same name in the same county, then append "Twp" to the township name and "Boro" to the borough name For example: Tionesta township surrounds Tionesta borough. In this case, use "Tionesta Boro" for the borough and "Tionesta Twp" for the township.
- If there is a city of the same name as a township or borough in the same county, use "Twp" or "Boro" for the township or borough, and no designation of City (Examples: "Bethlehem", "Bethlehem Twp" both in Northampton county; "Chester" and "Chester Twp", both in Delaware County)
- If the same name is used in several different counties for the same type of municipal subdivision, add a comma followed by the county name in every county.
- If there are a township and a borough of the same name in the same county, use "Twp" and "Boro" (see above) in addition to the county name
- If the county name is identical to the city name, leave off the county name (Example: The city of "Washington", in Washington County. The 22 Washington townships in the other counties get the county name appended)
- If the county name is "Delaware", leave off the county name
- If there is a township in one county and a borough in another county, the county names are enough to distinguish them (Example: "Hanover, Northampton", "Hanover, Lehigh", "Hanover, York")
- If the city name itself includes the word "City" or "Boro", this is not considered a duplicate of a city without this string in the name. (Examples: "Broad Top City" - borough, Huntingdon and "Broad Top" - township, Bedford; "Washington Boro", a CDP in Lancaster County, not a duplicate name of the other 23 Washingtons in PA)
More Information
You can learn more about what a CDP is, see a list of Census Designated Place names, and read more about Duplicate cities. See Mapping Resources for more information about municipal and CDP maps.
Major roads
Pennsylvania follows the general road naming and road type guidelines of the USA.
The Functional Classification chart shown below has been modified from the national chart to more closely reflect the roads in Pennsylvania.
Functional Classification reference chart
Use this chart to determine the road type for Pennsylvania roads based on the functional class.
First, find the functional class of the road in the MPMS IQ map in the operational layers and determine if it is a signed, numbered highway in one of the highway systems.
Follow the column for the road's highway system down to the row for the road's functional class to find the proper road type for that particular road.
The PennDOT color coding is cross-referenced in the first column of the table for your convenience.
Highway Systems | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Interstate | Interstate Business, Loop, Spur | US Hwy (incl. some special routes) | US Hwy BUS, SPUR, LOOP | State Route Shielded | State Route Unshielded | Locally Maintained | |||
Examples | I-80 | I-94 Business | US-190 | US-460 Business | SR-23 SR-309 | SR-2006 | Roberts St | ||
F u n c t i o n a l C l a s s |
Interstate |
Fw | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
Other Freeway[a] | n/a | Fw | Fw | Fw | Fw | Fw | Fw | ||
Other Expressway[a] | n/a | Major | Major | Major | Major | Major | Major | ||
Other Principal Arterial | n/a | Major | Major | Major | Major | Major | Major | ||
Minor Arterial | n/a | Major | Major | Minor | Minor | Minor [c] | Minor [c] | ||
Urban or Rural-Major Collector | n/a | Major | Major | Minor | Minor | PS | PS | ||
Rural Minor Collector | n/a | Major | Major | Minor | Minor | PS [b] Street |
Street | ||
Local Roads or Not Classified |
n/a | Major | Major | Minor | Minor | PS [b] Street |
Street |
^a Since Pennsylvania combines these two classes, use the criteria from the Freeway page to determine if the road should typed as a freeway or major highway.
^b Some 4-digit State Routes are numbered for legacy or maintenance reasons, but they do not serve as primary thoroughfares for the area and should be classified as Street .
^c These two categories were changed from PS to Minor per PA Forum discussion November 2017.
Naming
State routes with 2 or 3 digit route numbers
In Pennsylvania all State Routes should have any common name as displayed on street signs as the primary name in WME, and the route number in the alternate name field. The city name should be the same for both the common name and route number. SR-111 is the current acceptable format. The use of State Hwy or PA-xxx and other variations should not be used unless it is on the road signs that drivers would see.
State Route naming should follow the following format:
- SR-28 S (divided one-way segments).
- SR-309 (undivided two-way segments).
Note: Some state routes have mixed signage, with route numbers at major intersections and road names at minor intersections. Until Waze gets state shields working completely, the best practice is to name the segments according the the signage that the motorist will see as he approaches the state route, with priority given to the major intersections.
State routes with 4 digit route numbers
State Routes with 4 digits (e.g. SR-3001) may have the route number in the alternate field ONLY if it has been verified and deemed useful for identifying roads named in PennDOT notices. Note that PennDOT may re-use the same 4-digit numbers in unrelated roads in many different counties.
County or township roads
County (Co) and Township (T) roads need no special designation or road type. Road number info is not needed in the alternate name field.
Ramps
When naming a Ramp to a State Route, use the SR-111 format. PA-111 format should not be used unless it matches exactly what is on the big green sign directing you to the ramp. It is best to reference Google Street View in WME, where available.
Adhere to national standards for Exit ramps and Entrance ramps (on-ramps). Ramp names should use these formats:
Off-ramps:
- Numbered exit: (Exit 16: SR-15 / Scranton)
- Numbered exit with multiple Cities or Routes: (Exit 16: SR-15 N / SR-86 E / Wilkes / Scranton)
- Numbered exit with multiple exits: (Exit 16A-B: SR-15 N / SR-86 E / Scranton)
- Non-numbered exit: (to SR-15 / Scranton)
Abbreviating Pennsylvania
When naming roads or Ramps, use Penna. as the abbreviation for Pennsylvania. Penn causes text-to-speech conflicts with the numerous items named after William Penn. PA should not be used except as shown below.
Penna. Tpk is the proper abbreviation for naming ramps, and for alternate names for the Turnpike.
Shortened state route names
The format SR-xxx (State Route) should be used when naming ramps (e.g., to SR-28 S / Pittsburgh). See also: Ramps. To maintain uniformity across the state, the PA-xxx format should not be used unless it is on the road signs that drivers would see.
Locking Standard
In Pennsylvania we have a set minimum standard for locking roads based on segment type. Any road of a certain segment type must be locked at least to the rank (level) in the chart below. Roads may be locked higher for protection and special situations (areas with construction, tricky design, frequent mistakes, imaging inaccuracies, and the like), but should not be locked lower.
A great time to implement these locks is while bringing the road types of an area into compliance with the current US road type standards (FC and highway systems). Lock the roads based on type after they've been set to current US road type standards.
Segment Type | Statewide |
---|---|
Freeway | 5 |
Ramp | Highest rank of connected segments |
Major Highway | 3 |
Minor Highway | 3 |
Primary Street | 1 (Auto) |
Street | 1 (Auto) |
Private Road | 1 (Auto) |
• • • • Ferry • • • • | 5 |
|-|-|-|-|-|-|-|-|-| Railroad |-|-|-|-|-|-|-|-|-| | 2 |
Note: Do Not Mass Edit just to update locks to these standards, these can be adjusted as you find them while editing other aspects of the segments such as FC, speed limits, naming, etc.
Some segments still warrant higher locks and care should be taken when setting segment lock to these standards to look for and protect these special setups with higher locks. Some examples; segments which are part of BDP, U-turn prevention, or using micro-doglegs, or other complex intersection setups.
Speed Limits
Pennsylvania follows the national guideline for speed limits, with a few exceptions listed below.
Pennsylvania guidelines
- When a speed limit changes at an intersection, the sign for the new speed zone can be found up to 200 feet after the intersection.[1] If the speed limit changes more than 200' from the intersection, add a junction at the sign and make the speed limit change there.
- Long term work zone speed limits may be mapped instead of the "ordinary time" speed limits.
- Speed limit signs are supposed to be posted on every street, no further than 1/2 mile apart.[2]. If you can verify that there are no posted signs, follow the PA guidelines:[3]
- 35 miles per hour in any urban district.
- 25 miles per hour in a residence district (unless it is a numbered route classified as a local highway)
- 55 miles per hour in other locations.
Summary of National Guidelines
- Only map speeds found on regulatory white rectangular signs with black lettering.
- Do not map advisory speed limits (generally an orange or amber rectangular sign with black lettering).
- Where there are variable speed limits, map only the speed limit which is in effect most of the time during daylight hours (most hours of the day, days of the week).
- Do not map special speed limits for special vehicles. Waze only supports speed limits for private passenger cars.
- Where the speed limit changes, make it change in the map. A new junction may need to be added. But do not add a new junction for a speed limit if it will be within 200 feet of an existing junction.
PA Speed Limit Resources
Links to PA speed limit laws
- ↑ PA Title 67 PA Title 67, 212.108 (e) If the new speed limit begins at an intersection, the first sign should be installed within 200 feet beyond the intersection.
- ↑ PA Title 75 The Pennsylvania Vehicle Code (Title 75), §3362 indicates that speed limit signing must be in accordance with Department regulations to include “…posting at the beginning and end of each speed zone and at intervals not greater than one-half mile”. In addition, the installation of speed limit signing will function as a constant reminder of the roadway’s speed limit. "
- ↑ PA Title 7575.3362
Special roads
Drivable roads
Pennsylvania follows the standard USA guidelines for all of the following special road types.
- Divided highways and roadways
- Carpool, HOV, Transit lanes
- Roundabouts and traffic circles
- Dead ends and culs-de-sac
- Toll roads
- Partial and scheduled restrictions
- Private installations and military bases
Non-drivable roads
Review the Wiki guidelines for non-drivable roads to ensure compliance with the general guidelines.
Alleys
An alley should be mapped if:
- An alley should be mapped if it is named.
- An alley should be mapped if it is the address of a home or business.
- An alley is normally mapped if it is acknowledged by the municipality.
If an alley does not meet the above criteria, mapping is discouraged unless it solves a navigation issue. Check the "No name" box in WME if it has no name.
- If mapped, an alley should always be set to type "Private Road".
Non-drivable roads
Review the Wiki guidelines for "non-drivable" road types to ensure compliance with the general guidelines.
"Emergency and Authorized Vehicles Only" and PennDOT Service Roads are to be treated as non-drivable roads as well. You primarily see these between interstate freeway lanes and on the Turnpike. These should not be mapped and should be removed if found since they do not benefit users.
Railroads may be mapped since some people use Waze while on the train, contributing false traffic data to the system. This false data has been known to affect drivers on adjacent roads.
- AS OF OCTOBER 2014: Railroads can be junctioned with a driveable road segment as per the Road types Wiki entry. This will allow for Waze to collect more accurate historical data and better determine if there are delays at the railroad crossing at various times of the day. There is no need for mass editing of railroads, but these changes can be made as encountered on the map. The elevation should be set to 'Ground'. If a railroad is junctioned with a driveable road segment, all turns should be restricted for the junction to and from the railroad segments. If an automated Map Problem (MP) is seen at a railroad junction with the turns restricted, mark it as "Not identified."
Time restricted turns
The Waze Map Editor and routing engine supports scheduled restrictions (time of day, day of week, turns, traffic flow direction, vehicle type, etc.).
Please see the Scheduled Restrictions page for full documentation on this feature.
Closures
When managing a section of roadway under construction or being closed for a major event, follow the Wiki guidelines on construction zones and Real time closures.
For information about Closures from Penndot, please click on your Penndot engineering district and then on roadwork PennDOT Engineering districts
The 511PA website is also a good source of information about current closures.
Pennsylvania should follow the US Standard for Road Closures or Major/Long Term Construction projects. Please see the US Construction Zones & Road Closure Wiki for information regarding closing & flagging roads in the editor that are under construction or closed.
Places
Pennsylvania follows the USA standard for Places. Do not deviate from the guidelines without first obtaining consensus to do so via the state forum linked on this page.
Editors are encouraged to use the Place Harmonizer script "WMEPH" when editing places, this will help you follow state + national standards. Use caution with the automatic options and be aware of what it is changing.
Any editor may edit any place in their EA. If it is locked above their rank a PUR will be generated for a senior editor to review and approve.
Pennsylvania standards for places differ in some ways from the US standard:
- Locking:
- Once you have correctly filled in as as much information as is available, Places should be locked to a minimum level of Rank 2. This prevents "trusted Wazers" who are not editors from automatically adding photos to places.
- These areas below are more sensitive + important to Wazers and should be locked higher, reach out to a senior editor if needed for assistance in locking new places:
- Lock at 3:
-
- College / University
- Courthouse
- Government
- Jail / Prison / Correctional Facility
- Military
- Parking Lot
- Lock at 4:
-
- EV Charging Station
- Fire Department
- Gas station
- Hospital / Urgent Care
- Park
- Police Station
- Lock at 5:
-
- Airport
-
- Address
- Fill out address information completely, this is not used for navigation, it is informational-only but is important for the Waze user.
- For the City field, consider what the business uses on their website and what will make the most sense to the Waze user. You can use the city name from a nearby road, or use an other local city or CDP name that WME offers as an auto-complete.
- R4+ editors, do NOT create a "new" city name, check with a State Manager if you feel none of the names is sufficient since creating a "new" City makes that available to other editors for roads too.
- Naming Fire Departments
- Fire Departments exist as agencies and can have identifiers such as stations or equipment. When naming a fire department, use the following format:
- Name - Identifier (if applicable)
- Examples: Reading Fire Department - Engine 3 & Ladder 1
- Only append with an identifier if the department has multiple stations or noted equipment.
Cameras
Not every camera-looking device at an intersection is a speed or red light camera. Generally speaking:
- a speed camera takes a photograph of a vehicle when it passes by the camera at too high a speed.
- a red light camera takes a photograph of a vehicle that enters an intersection after the light is red. In some areas, it takes the photograph when a vehicle is not clear of the intersection some period after the light turns red.
Be sure to know your cameras before accepting new camera reports.
When adding a camera, be sure to review the camera placement recommendations.
Laws regarding speed and red light cameras vary between the states and territories, so be sure to understand the details of camera legality in Pennsylvania.
Limited Red Light Cameras are legal in Pennsylvania.
Red light cameras
Red light cameras are legal in a few cites and suburban towns in Pennsylvania. The following cities & municipalities are the only places where the use of Red Light Cameras are permitted at this time. Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and municipalities with a population >20,000 and police departments accredited by the Pennsylvania Chiefs of Police Association in Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery Counties & have a local ordinance permitting the use of Red Light Enforcement Cameras. See Red Light Camera Laws in Pennsylvania
As of October 2014[update], red light cameras are in service at the following intersections:
- PENNDOT district 6 (Philadelphia area)
- Philadelphia: PPA list of red light cameras (also on github) or (PDF) or Red Light Camera Locations in AAA Mid-Atlantic Service Area
- Abington Html or pdf
- Springfield, Delaware County list
Speed cameras
As of October 2018, Gov. Tom Wolf signed Senate Bill 172 permitting PennDOT and the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission to deploy speed cameras in some work zones that will take photos of license plates of any vehicle exceeding the work zone speed limit by 11 mph or more when workers are present.[1]
Other camera types
These are cameras or signs that either provide driver feedback or are used for traffic control. These devices CANNOT issue tickets and should not be approved in WME. See How to Identify Cameras.
To do list
Many states and territories keep an active list of pending or closed actions that need to be done in the state by the editors. All editors are welcome to contribute to the list of activities.
Want to help out with the map in Pennsylvania? Check out the Pennsylvania Forum
- NOTE: You should always finish any work you start... Please do not leave it incomplete.
Area Managers
The table below identifies the editors also designated as Area Managers or higher who are editing in Pennsylvania. If you have any questions, please consider contacting them directly as needed. If you are an Area Manager that covers Pennsylvania, or a USA Country Manager that does a lot of work in Pennsylvania, please add yourself to this list (alphabetical by username) in the correct rank section.
The editor who also serves as the Regional Coordinator for Pennsylvania is automatically listed at the top of the table. That editor may not be highly active in this state and therefore may not be listed separately in the table.
This map shows assigned managed areas in the state. If any editors have been inadvertently omitted contact one of the SMs. Those editors whose area covers the entire state are not shown.
:
Pennsylvania — Area, State, Country Managers, and Regional Coordinators | ||
Regional Coordinator(s): [RC] orbitc (PM [Help]) [ARC1] PhantomSoul (PM [Help]) [ARC2] RussPA (PM [Help]) | ||
Username | Area Managed | Comments |
---|---|---|
Country Managers (Northeast region) | ||
orbitc(6) [PM [Help]] Orbit C |
Entire State of PA, also NY, NJ, DE, CT, ME, MA, NH, RI, VT | Region 9 Northeast & 8 New England |
PhantomSoul(6) [PM [Help]] G George |
NOR ARC, USA (Local Champ) | Resident of NJ |
RussPA(6) [PM [Help]] Russ Weissman |
NOR ARC, USA (Global Champ), PA State Manager | |
whoaitspete(6) [PM [Help]] | USA Local Champ / NY SM | |
SanzClew(6) [PM [Help]] | USA Country Manager, SM for MA/RI | Lives in MA, Grew up in SEPA |
DrNeubie(5) [PM [Help]] | USA Country Manager / LC Emeritus | |
jondrush(5) [PM [Help]] | Global Champ Emeritus | Resident of state |
Kodi75(5) [PM [Help]] D David T |
USA Country Manager | MD State Manager |
MGODLEW(5) [PM [Help]] M Matt |
USA Country Manager / LC Emeritus | Resident of state, Most active near Scranton & Pittsburgh |
Doctorblah(5) [PM [Help]] K Keith |
USA Country Manager NOR | PA State Manager |
sikemever(5) [PM [Help]] M Mike |
USA Country Manager NOR | MAR LAM |
phuz(5) [PM [Help]] M Matt |
USA Country Manager NOR | |
State Managers (Northeast region) | ||
ehcool68(5) [PM [Help]] E Eric |
Multi-State Manager NOR | Lives in SE PA |
G_W1Z(5) [PM [Help]] V Vince |
PA State Manager | AM in Washington DC and Maine |
Drummin4JC(4) [PM [Help]] Adam |
PA State Manager | DE AM |
Area Managers | ||
dhschneider(5) [PM [Help]] D dhschneider |
Area Manager | Eastern Pennsylvania |
Happy_Lyn(5) [PM [Help]] Lyn |
Area Manager in Cameron, Elk, McKean, and Potter counties | SM in Michigan, LAM in West Virginia |
Jdelosa(5) [PM [Help]] John ( JD ) |
NOR Multi-State Manager, NYC Closure Team | |
no1uknow(5) [PM [Help]] A Aaron |
All of Pennsylvania | |
HillsSnackBar(4) [PM [Help]] Zach |
Large Area Manager (LAM) | Editor in Southwestern PA, Resident of PA. Also AM in parts of WV and FL. |
Hobbz1701(4) [PM [Help]] R Ron |
Lackawanna, Luzerne, Lehigh | Resident of PA |
Dskwared(3) [PM [Help]] D Doug |
Area Manager (AM) Altoona, PA | Pittsburgh, PA |
JDTech4U(3) [PM [Help]] I Ike |
Western PA | |
RRM47(3) [PM [Help]] R RRM47 |
Philadelphia area, primarily Chester County | Resident of PA |
smitty15(3) [PM [Help]] T Todd Smith |
Central Pa, Montour & Columbia counties | |
steviejaydriver(3) [PM [Help]] | Central Pa, Montour & Columbia counties | |
tckma(3) [PM [Help]] T Tom |
Southern portions of Adams and York Counties | Resident of MD near PA line. I currently work in King of Prussia (long story) so also edit in Montgomery and Chester counties. |
tp8106(3) [PM [Help]] N Nate |
Central PA | |
voludu2(3) [PM [Help]] | All of Pennsylvania | |
XC_Runner18(3) [PM [Help]] N Noah |
Delaware, Montgomery PA, Pittsburg Area |
The following editors are also editing in the state and may be working towards an Area Manager position. Feel free to contact them for assistance in their respective areas.
Other Area Editors | ||
Username | General Editing Area | Comments |
---|---|---|
fuji2086(5) [PM [Help]] J Jason |
SW Pennsylvania | MAR Multi-State Manager |
eaglestailg8ter(4) [PM [Help]] Robert M |
||
JimBobNinja06(4) [PM [Help]] | Central PA - Adams, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin,and York Counties, AM in NY and North & Central AL | Adams Co. resident |
kmart27(4) [PM [Help]] K Kenton M |
||
krzycholub(5) [PM [Help]] K krzycholub |
East Stroudsburg and Mount Pocono | NJ SM |
MTBSpeedy(4) [PM [Help]] M Michael Berry |
Westmoreland County | |
Odessit68(4) [PM [Help]] Alex Dreyzin |
||
APettyJ(3) [PM [Help]] A Alan P |
Philadelphia | |
cshinn89(3) [PM [Help]] Christopher |
Pike county PA, northern NJ, & Orange county NY | Thailand RM. Former NJ Resident and Currently living in PA |
eichmat(3) [PM [Help]] | Lehigh Valley (Lehigh & Northampton Counties) | |
LookBothWaaze(3) [PM [Help]] | Lancaster, Berks | |
mphinneb(3) [PM [Help]] M Matt |
Pittsburgh area | |
Phlipnull(3) [PM [Help]] M Matt Phillips |
Adams County and surrounding | |
roarlions1(3) [PM [Help]] roarlions1 |
Bucks/Montgomery/Schuylkill/Columbia/Luzerne Counties | |
Britton28(2) [PM [Help]] | Pittsburg - Erie | |
Bruh924(2) [PM [Help]] | SE Pa | |
DaWeatherBoy(2) [PM [Help]] | Union & Snyder Co | |
RoadRunnerPA(2) [PM [Help]] D Doug |
Bucks + Lehigh Co | |
Ynpmoose(2) [PM [Help]] | Berks, SE PA | Northern Berks Resident |
JLofties(2) [PM [Help]] | PennDOT D8 & D5 | York Co Resident |
CranMalReign(2) [PM [Help]] | SE PA, some SW and NW PA | Retired? Last edit Mar 2020 |
iPatric(1) [PM [Help]] | Scranton PA | New to editing AUG 2022 |
Wlbaird(1) [PM [Help]] | York Co | |
ArcadeDrive(1) [PM [Help]] | Pittsburgh, Westmoreland County | Retired? Last edit Aug 2018 |
ArcaneFeenix(1) [PM [Help]] | Berks/Chester/Montgomery Counties | Retired? Last edit Dec 2019 |
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