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29th Annual Highway Report: Virginia and Georgia have best-performing, most cost-effective highways, while Alaska and California have worst

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Key Findings of Reason Foundation’s 29th Annual Highway Report

Virginia, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Ohio have the best-performing, most cost-effective roads and bridges, according to Reason Foundation’s 29th Annual Highway Report.

Alaska, California, Washington, New York, and Louisiana have the worst-performing and least cost-effective highway systems, the study finds. Alaska ranked last overall for the second consecutive report, posting the worst rural fatality rate in the nation. California ranked 49th, with the worst urban arterial pavement condition. Washington finished 48th overall while ranking as the highest-spending state in multiple categories.

Massachusetts recorded the largest improvement in the nation, rising 23 spots from 40th to 17th. Arizona went in the opposite direction, falling 12 spots, from 29th to 41st, after significant declines in urban interstate and rural arterial pavement quality.

Traffic Fatalities

Twenty-five states recorded urban fatality rates at or above 1.0 per 100 million vehicle-miles. The states with the highest urban fatality rates were New Mexico, Wyoming, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Florida. Maryland posted the nation’s lowest rural fatality rate, Alaska the highest.

Pavement Conditions

Urban interstate pavement conditions improved slightly nationwide. Hawaii and Louisiana ranked at the bottom, each reporting more than 13% of their urban interstate pavement in poor condition, followed by California (10%) and New York (9%).

Several states are failing to maintain urban arterial roads. California, Nebraska, Rhode Island, and New York collectively account for nearly 40% of all urban arterial mileage rated poor nationwide, with California reporting 32.35% of its urban arterial mileage in poor condition.

Connecticut, Florida, and Maine reported the best rural interstate pavement quality. Meanwhile, four states, Alaska, California, Colorado, and Arizona, account for 44% of all poor-condition rural interstate mileage despite having only about 12.5% of total rural interstate mileage.

Structurally Deficient Bridges

More than 42,000 of the nation’s 618,923 highway bridges, nearly 7%, are still structurally deficient. Arizona, Nevada, and Texas reported the lowest percentages of deficient bridges.

Nine states have more than 10% of bridges rated structurally deficient: West Virginia, Iowa, South Dakota, Rhode Island, Maine, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, Michigan, and North Dakota.

Traffic Congestion

Commuters in New Jersey, Massachusetts, and New York lose more than 60 hours a year to traffic jams, the worst in the nation. Drivers in Delaware, California, Georgia, Illinois and Maryland also lost over 40 hours to traffic congestion.

Overview of the Annual Highway Report

Reason Foundation’s 29th Annual Highway Report evaluates state highway systems on cost versus quality using a method developed in the early 1990s by David T. Hartgen, Ph.D., emeritus professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. This method has since been refined by Hartgen, M. Gregory Fields, Ph.D., Baruch Feigenbaum, and Truong Bui.

Since states have different budgets, system sizes, and traffic and geographic circumstances, their comparative performance depends on both system performance and the resources available. To determine relative performance across the country, state highway system budgets (per mile of responsibility) are compared with system performance, state by state. States with high rankings typically have better-than-average system conditions (good for road users) along with relatively low per-mile expenditures (good for taxpayers).

The following table shows the overall highway performance of the state highway systems using 2023 data. This year’s leading states are Virginia, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Ohio. At the other end of the rankings are Alaska, California, Washington, New York, and Louisiana.

Similar to last year, the top-performing states are a mix of large and small states, as well as states that are more urban and more rural. (Tables 1, 2, 3, 4, and Figure 1).

Four large-population (more than seven million people) states place in the top five of the overall rankings: Virginia (1st), Georgia (2nd), North Carolina (4th), and Ohio (5th).

Numerous factors—terrain, climate, truck volumes, urbanization, system age, budget priorities, unit cost differences, state budget circumstances, and management/maintenance philosophies—all affect overall performance. The remainder of this report reviews the statistics underlying these overall rankings in more detail.

The overall rankings are not dramatically different from the previous version of the Annual Highway Report. However, one state’s overall ranking improved by double digits, while two states’ overall rankings declined by 10 or more spots:

  • Massachusetts improved 23 positions from 40th to 17th in the overall rankings, as the state made double-digit improvements in multiple categories. Maintenance disbursements improved by 26 positions, rural arterial pavement condition improved by 14 positions, and rural fatality rate improved by 22 positions.
  • Arizona worsened by 12 positions from 29th to 41st in the overall rankings, as two of the four pavement categories worsened significantly. Urban Interstate pavement worsened by 12 positions and rural arterial pavement condition worsened by 12 positions.
  • Idaho worsened 11 positions from 15th to 26th in the overall rankings, as the state decreased by double-digits in five categories. Urban arterial pavement condition worsened by 20 positions, urban area congestion worsened by 15 positions, rural fatality rate worsened by 12 positions, urban fatality rate worsened by 20 positions, and other fatality rate worsened by 19 positions. The state has bounced around in the rankings as its pavement conditions and fatality rate have varied year to year more than most other states.
29th Annual Highway Report: Each State’s Highway Performance Ranking By Category
State Overall Capital & Bridge Disbursements Ratio Maintenance Disbursements Ratio Admin Disbursements Ratio Other Disbursements Ratio Rural Interstate Pavement Condition Urban Interstate Pavement Condition Rural Arterial Pavement Condition Urban Arterial Pavement Condition Urbanized Area Congestion Structurally Deficient Bridges Rural Fatality Rate Urban Fatality Rate Other Fatality Rate
Virginia 1 2 26 10 4 11 21 11 15 38 10 29 6 26
Georgia 2 11 13 24 7 16 14 3 2 45 5 23 37 24
South Carolina 3 1 3 4 1 28 5 21 6 25 24 49 41 46
North Carolina 4 8 7 3 9 20 23 20 14 30 33 31 16 33
Ohio 5 10 6 30 17 19 25 9 35 18 14 6 18 27
North Dakota 6 30 8 9 29 7 3 23 24 2 42 26 2 12
Connecticut 7 19 11 16 22 1 11 32 21 28 18 18 15 23
Alabama 8 13 1 41 5 32 30 5 1 14 8 44 28 25
Missouri 9 3 10 5 27 23 27 13 22 26 40 15 30 16
Utah 10 33 38 20 41 8 17 10 9 19 6 22 12 3
Minnesota 11 32 43 32 38 9 16 22 3 24 11 5 1 6
Tennessee 12 17 17 23 2 14 12 27 13 36 12 20 47 42
New Hampshire 13 18 27 45 20 5 1 14 8 32 34 9 4 17
Florida 14 43 34 19 13 2 6 7 5 40 9 32 46 20
Kentucky 15 15 23 1 24 24 36 15 10 27 32 11 42 50
Maine 16 22 37 11 15 3 2 41 31 8 46 3 9 13
Massachusetts 17 6 15 38 10 36 20 17 46 49 38 2 3 2
Indiana 18 46 49 17 3 38 26 4 4 31 21 27 19 11
Kansas 19 47 21 34 45 13 18 8 19 3 20 28 8 31
Wyoming 20 24 28 13 14 27 44 1 17 4 28 46 49 8
Arkansas 21 23 5 6 26 40 38 25 28 17 22 45 35 37
Montana 22 16 36 28 30 29 15 26 27 7 31 43 45 32
Michigan 23 39 19 12 21 39 41 16 34 15 43 7 22 21
Mississippi 24 21 2 8 12 34 37 34 29 12 26 37 48 47
Nevada 25 36 31 49 35 10 22 2 11 33 2 40 38 29
Idaho 26 48 35 14 43 22 9 19 32 22 19 35 25 34
Texas 27 34 22 37 34 21 33 12 39 41 3 42 26 43
South Dakota 28 25 40 44 25 4 13 18 18 9 48 19 10 44
Nebraska 29 26 30 25 16 12 7 44 49 23 35 13 13 18
West Virginia 30 4 16 7 8 35 29 36 7 5 50 30 34 49
Wisconsin 31 24 10 24 39 26 35 39 44 24 27 7 10 10
Delaware 32 5 39 46 23 N/A 46 6 12 47 4 41 29 35
Oregon 33 40 41 40 37 15 19 24 23 34 15 47 36 41
Maryland 34 20 32 36 42 30 43 30 43 43 13 1 32 14
Iowa 35 42 24 26 19 33 32 38 26 1 49 17 24 19
Pennsylvania 36 7 20 15 39 41 40 37 37 42 45 8 21 36
Illinois 37 35 18 27 32 25 34 46 33 44 41 25 23 30
Vermont 38 37 47 50 46 18 4 43 25 6 7 10 7 10
New Mexico 39 12 4 47 31 42 31 35 38 13 17 38 50 22
New Jersey 40 44 42 31 40 17 42 31 41 50 27 16 14 4
Arizona 41 29 12 48 36 45 24 42 20 11 1 39 43 48
Colorado 42 27 33 33 18 46 45 33 36 35 16 33 39 28
Rhode Island 43 31 29 18 11 6 10 49 48 37 47 4 20 15
Hawaii 44 9 9 29 6 N/A 50 48 40 20 30 48 40 1
Oklahoma 45 38 48 42 44 31 39 45 30 16 36 24 44 45
Louisiana 46 14 25 2 33 44 49 47 42 29 44 21 33 40
New York 47 45 46 43 49 37 47 28 47 48 39 12 17 9
Washington 48 50 50 39 50 43 28 29 44 39 23 34 31 38
California 49 41 44 35 48 47 48 39 50 46 25 36 27 39
Alaska 50 49 45 21 28 48 8 50 16 10 37 50 11 5

View national trends and state-by-state performances by category:

Complete Report  PDF
Complete State-by-State Summaries  PDF

The post 29th Annual Highway Report: Virginia and Georgia have best-performing, most cost-effective highways, while Alaska and California have worst appeared first on Reason Foundation.


Source: https://reason.org/highway-report/29th-annual-highway-report/


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