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Update: Closure gets longer on Highway 99 exit near Modesto. What else is Caltrans doing?

An emergency closure has been extended by 12 hours on a Highway 99 off-ramp in Ceres.

The southbound exit to Hatch Road was closed Monday, Sept. 23, because of major soil erosion under a bridge. The California Department of Transportation initially said the ramp would reopen at 5 a.m. Sept. 30. An update has moved it to 5 p.m. that day.

The erosion happened near the top of an embankment on the west side of the Hatch bridge. Workers have been backfilling the dirt and building a retaining wall to guard against future damage.

The closest alternatives for Hatch-bound drivers are Crows Landing Road to the north and Whitmore Avenue to the south.

A California Department of Transportation crew is building a retaining wall on the southbound Highway 99 off-ramp at Hatch Road in Ceres, Calif., Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. Work is expected to be finished by Sept. 30.
A California Department of Transportation crew is building a retaining wall on the southbound Highway 99 off-ramp at Hatch Road in Ceres, Calif., Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024. Work is expected to be finished by Sept. 30. Andy Alfaro aalfaro@modbee.com

Caltrans on Friday also announced two Highway 99 off-ramp closures for routine maintenance:

Maze Boulevard, Modesto: The off-ramp from northbound 99 to westbound Maze will be closed from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 29, for replacement of pavement markings. This is also Sixth Street. Drivers can exit instead at Tuolumne Boulevard to the south or Kansas Avenue to the north.

Mitchell Road, Ceres: The exit from northbound 99 to Mitchell will be closed for five straight nights for bridge maintenance. The closures will be from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m., starting the night of Sept. 29 and ending the morning of Oct. 4. The closest interchanges are at Fourth Street to the north and Keyes Road to the south.

John Holland
The Modesto Bee
John Holland covers agriculture, transportation and general assignment news. He has been with The Modesto Bee since 2000 and previously worked at newspapers in Sonora and Visalia. He was born and raised in San Francisco and has a journalism degree from UC Berkeley.
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