bumpity bump
Howard, on host 205.184.139.42
Sunday, February 6, 2000, at 12:28:55
Interstate highways are funded by the federal government. The states oversee their construction and maintaince using flow-through federal money.
If I have that figured out correctly, then all Interstate highways should be equal. They're not.
On a recent trip through Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and Louisiana, I observed vast differences. I think the states rank somewhat like this: Tennessee - best Georgia Alabama Mississippi Louisiana - worst I crossed Louisiana from east to west almost to Texas and then came back the other way. I-10 was mostly concrete with jarring expansion joints and painful bumps. There were crews out applying asphalt over the concrete and completed sections were some relief, but in a relatively short time, I expect the shifting concrete underneath will break up the asphalt.
I observed the same conditions to a lesser degree in Alabama and Mississippi on I-59. Traffic was light, so I think drivers were taking a longer but smoother route to avoid the uncomfortable roads.
There was a vast improvement at the Georgia line and things got still better in Tennessee.
But why, with similar funding, aren't these highways closer to equal from state to state?
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