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Study: Illinois Bottom Half Of Worst Roads In The Country

A new report puts the cost and condition of Illinois’ state-run roads near the worst in the
country.

The 25th Annual Highway Report, compiled by The Reason Foundation, looks at state
highways in 13 different categories, including pavement condition, traffic congestion,
structurally deficient bridges, traffic fatalities, and spending per mile.

The organization’s placed Illinois at 37th overall, behind all neighboring states, including
second-ranked Missouri.

“It might be beneficial for Illinois DOT folks and Illinois leaders to speak with their
counterparts in Missouri and see why they're able to, for example, maintain a roadway at
a cost as much lower as Illinois,” said Baruch Feigenbaum, lead author of the report and
senior managing director of transportation policy at Reason Foundation. “Ask how
they're able to get such smooth pavement.”

Illinois ranks 32nd in structurally deficient bridges, 32nd in urban interstate pavement
condition, and 42nd in capital and bridge costs per mile. Its worst category performance
was traffic congestion, ranking 49th.

Feigenbaum admits there’s not much room for new capacity to deal with that congestion
in the Chicago area, but advises that leaders could become creative in their thinking.

“We’ve seen a lot of states going to pricing, where they'll add new capacity and they will
take a lane, or they’ll convert their high occupancy vehicle lane, to create a toll lane,”
Feigenbaum said. “Pricing is good because it gives folks a guaranteed travel option if
they need to get somewhere on time.”

Illinois’ annual battle with ice and snow appears to be no excuse for its performance.

“In terms of weather, it does not seem to be a factor because the No. 1 state this
year is actually is North Dakota,” Feigenbaum said. “They have a very active freeze/frost
cycle with a lot of cold weather and a lot of extremes.”

One bright spot is the relative safety found on roadways across Illinois. The state ranked
15th in overall fatality rate, 16th in rural fatality rate, and 22nd in urban fatality rate.

“We tend to see a higher fatality rates in states with higher speed limits because higher
speeds can lead to accidents that have more fatalities,” Feigenbaum said. “Illinois does
have some rural areas and the fact that the road fatality rate there is 16th is still pretty
good. This is overall a positive story and something that the state should want to
continue.”

Illinois’ state-controlled highway system is the 14th largest in the county. Feigenbaum
said it wouldn’t take much effort to make a big difference for drivers.

“We found states can make improvements just by making some small changes in their
overall system,” Feigenbaum said. “For example, if Illinois was able to reduce its
spending even slightly and increase the pavement quality even slightly, we think that the
ranking for the state would really improve.”

The report places North Dakota and Missouri at the top of the list, while Alaska and New
Jersey take the bottom two spots.