The road continues through rural land and enters Roaring Brook Township, where it heads across the forested Moosic Mountains, passing east of Coon Hill.
[3][4] At this point, PA 307 turns north to form a concurrency with US 11 on a divided road and comes to a southbound exit and northbound entrance with the western terminus of the President Biden Expressway.
The road runs past downtown commercial development as it heads to the west of the University of Scranton campus.
The two routes turn northwest onto state-maintained four-lane undivided Mulberry Street and runs past more businesses.
At this point, US 11/PA 307 becomes a four-lane freeway called the North Scranton Expressway and passes over a Delaware-Lackawanna Railroad line and the Lackawanna River.
PA 307 splits from the US 11 freeway at a diamond interchange by heading west on four-lane undivided Keyser Avenue, passing under the Norfolk Southern tracks.
PA 307 curves west-southwest and reenters South Abington Township, running through a mix of fields and woods with some development.
[3][4] PA 307 enters Falls Township in Wyoming County and becomes Roosevelt Highway, continuing to wind west through forests with some farm fields and homes.
[citation needed] On March 18, 1965, truck driver Eugene P. Sesky was involved in a fatal crash on this highway, that would later be chronicled in the 1974 Harry Chapin song "30,000 Pounds of Bananas"