Tools
Change country:

The most dangerous roads in America have one thing in common

bird’s-eye view of a wide road with three lanes going in each direction and a neighborhood nearby with homes and businesses. A pedestrian is seeing crossing in a crosswalk.
A pedestrian crosses Roosevelt Boulevard in Philadelphia, a maze of chaotic traffic that passes through some of the city's most diverse and low-income neighborhoods. | Julio Cortez/AP Photo

Some 110 years ago, a picturesque new road known as Roosevelt Boulevard began ferrying vehicles across the nascent but burgeoning neighborhoods of North and Northeast Philadelphia. At first, traffic was light, but it rapidly thickened as car ownership rose and the surrounding area developed. By the 1950s, when the boulevard expanded to meet the new Schuylkill Expressway, it was lined with row houses and shops. Today, what was initially a bucolic parkway has become a traffic-snarled, 12-lane thoroughfare snaking its way through neighborhoods that house 1 in 3 Philadelphians.

It is, by all accounts, a mess. 

Dubbed the “corridor of death,” Roosevelt Boulevard has been named the most dangerous street in the city (and among the most dangerous in the nation). In 2022, 59 pedestrians were killed there. Residents “want to get across the street to the pharmacy to get their medication or get across the street to the supermarket,” Latanya Byrd, whose niece and three nephews were killed in a crash on the boulevard in 2013, said in a video produced by Smart Growth America. “It may take two, maybe three lights, for them to get all the way across.” 

It’s not just pedestrians who loathe Roosevelt Boulevard. “People who walk, drive, or take public transit are all pretty badly screwed,” Philadelphia’s public radio station declared in 2017. 

Aware of the road’s shortcomings, city officials have long sought design changes that would reduce crashes. But they are powerless to act on their own, because the boulevard is controlled by the state of Pennsylvania.

That situation is common across the United States, where many of the most deadly, polluting, and generally awful urban streets are overseen by state departments of transportation (DOTs). Often they were constructed decades ago, when the surrounding areas were sparsely populated. 

Although only 14 percent of urban road miles nationwide are under state control, two-thirds of all crash deaths in the 101 largest metro areas occur there, according to a recent Transportation for America report. In some places, this disparity is widening: From 2016 to 2022, road fatalities in Austin, Texas, fell 20 percent on locally managed roads while soaring 98 percent on those the state oversees. 

“The country is littered with roads that are a legacy of the past, that don’t work very well, and that drive people crazy,” said US Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), who calls them “legacy highways.”

Instead of fixing such roadways, state officials tend to keep them as they are, citing limited resources or a need to maintain traffic speeds. In doing so, they constrain the capacity of even the most comprehensive local reforms to respond to urgent problems like car crash deaths, which are far more widespread in the US than among peer countries, or unreliable bus service. 

Unless state DOTs recognize that a successful urban road must do more than facilitate fast car trips, that problem will persist. 

Why we have state highways

In the early 1900s, states from coast to coast created transportation agencies to build smooth, wide roads that enabled long-distance car trips. New high-capacity roadways traversed forests and farmland, often terminating at what was then the urban edge. When Americans went on a car-buying binge after World War II, states like Michigan widened their highways with the goal of keeping traffic moving quickly, a prime directive for engineers. 

High-speed roadways fed rapid suburbanization, with new developments mushrooming on the city periphery. Columbus, Ohio, for instance, roughly doubled in population from 1950 and 2000, while its land area quintupled. Sprawling cities in the South and Southwest emerged seemingly overnight, while new suburbs encircled older metropolises in the North.

In these newly urbanized areas, state highways that had previously meandered through the countryside were now lined with retail and housing. Their designers had initially paid little attention to transit, sidewalks, or tree cover — features that are often afterthoughts for rural roads, but crucial in more densely populated areas.

As with Philadelphia’s Roosevelt Boulevard, the width and traffic speed of state roads in urban neighborhoods now frequently clash with local desires for street safety, quality transit service, and pedestrian comfort. But revising them is rarely a priority for state DOTs engaged in a Sisyphean battle against traffic congestion.

“If a state agency’s primary focus is on moving vehicles, they’re looking at reducing delays and building clear zones” that remove objects such as trees next to a road, where errant drivers might strike them, said Kristina Swallow, who previously led the Nevada DOT as well as urban planning for Tucson, Arizona. “At the local level, you’re looking at a bunch of other activities. You have people walking or on a bike, so you may be okay with some congestion, because you know that’s what happens when people are coming into an economically vibrant community.”

City-state tensions over state highways can take many forms. Roadway safety is often a flashpoint, since fixes frequently involve slowing traffic that state officials want to keep flowing. In San Antonio, for instance, the city negotiated for years with the Texas DOT to add sidewalks and bike lanes to Broadway, a state arterial with seven lanes. Last year the state scuttled that plan at the 11th hour, leaving Broadway’s current design in place. 

Local efforts to improve transit service can also face state resistance. In September, Madison, Wisconsin, launched its first bus rapid transit (BRT) line, a fast form of bus service that relies on dedicated bus lanes. But much of its route runs along East Washington, an arterial managed by Wisconsin, and the state transportation department prevented Madison from making the entire BRT lane bus-only during rush hour. That could sabotage the new service out of the gate. 

“These dedicated bus lanes would serve the bus best in the heaviest traffic, so it’s counterintuitive to typical BRT design,” said Chris McCahill, who leads the State Smart Transportation Initiative at the University of Wisconsin and serves on Madison’s transportation commission. Wisconsin’s DOT did not respond to a request for comment.

The whole point of fast transit programs like BRT is to get more people to ride transit instead of driving, thereby increasing the total human capacity of a road since buses are much more space-efficient than cars. But that logic can escape state transportation executives oriented toward longer, intercity trips instead of shorter, intracity ones, as well as highway engineers trained to focus on maximizing the speed of all vehicles, regardless of how many people are inside them. 

Even sympathetic state transportation officials may not fix dysfunctional urban roadways due to limited resources and competing needs that include expensive upgrades to bridges and interstates. Critical but relatively small-dollar projects, such as street intersection adjustments that better serve pedestrians or bus riders, can get lost in the shuffle. Lacking the authority to make changes themselves, city officials are stuck. 

“How do you create connected networks when you don’t own the intersection, and to fix it you have to compete at the state level with 500 other projects?” said Stefanie Seskin, the director of policy and practice at the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO).

As an example, Seskin cited the state-controlled St. Mary’s Street bridge in Brookline, a dense suburb adjacent to Boston. “It’s the only way to get to and from Boston that isn’t on a major, super busy arterial,” she said. “It’s not structurally deficient, but from the position of those walking, biking, and using transit, it’s just not functioning well. It requires a reconstruction” — something that Massachusetts has not done.

The beginnings of a paradigm shift in transportation policy

With deaths among US pedestrians and cyclists hitting a 40-year high in 2022, a growing number of state DOTs are starting to acknowledge that maximizing vehicle speed is not the only goal that matters on urban roadways. The Pennsylvania DOT, for example, is now working with Philadelphia to at last bring lane redesigns, bus lane improvements, and speed cameras to Roosevelt Boulevard. On the other side of the country, the head of the Washington state DOT has requested $150 million from the state legislature to address the shortcomings of legacy highways. 

“I think there are people in every single state DOT who want to be more proactive and to plan for safer streets for people who are moving, no matter what mode of transportation they use,” Seskin told me. “I don’t think that that was necessarily the case 20 years ago.” 

Still, fixing the deficiencies of state roadways requires a paradigm shift within state DOTs, with senior officials accepting that maximizing car speeds jeopardizes crucial local priorities like accommodating pedestrians, enabling rapid transit service, or supporting outdoor dining. 

Such nuance can escape state highway engineers trained with a myopic focus on vehicle speed. “Many of the people doing roadway design work for states are still stuck in the old model,” said Billy Hattaway, an engineer who previously held senior transportation roles in the Florida DOT as well as the city of Orlando.

McCahill, of the State Smart Transportation Initiative, empathized with those toiling within state DOTs. “Think about their position as engineers,” he said. “They’ve got their federal highway design guidelines, they’ve got their state guidelines. They’ve been conditioned to be conservative and not try new things.”

Historically, those roadway design guidelines have prioritized free-flowing traffic. Making them more malleable could empower engineers to get more creative. Instead of applying one-size-fits-all rules for elements like lane widths and traffic lights, “context-sensitive design” encourages engineers working in urban settings to add pedestrian crossings, narrow lanes, and other features that can support local transportation needs. McCahill applauded Florida’s DOT for recently “rewriting” its design guide to incorporate such context-sensitive layouts. 

Federal money could help finance such redesigns — if state officials know how to use it. “There’s a lack of knowledge about the flexibility of federal dollars, with misunderstandings and different interpretations,” said NACTO’s Seskin. Recognizing the issue, over the summer, the Federal Highway Administration published guidance and held a webinar highlighting dozens of federal funding programs available to upgrade legacy highways.

Then there is an alternative approach: Rather than revise problematic roads themselves, states can hand them over to local officials, letting them manage improvements and maintenance. Washington state, for instance, in 2011 transferred a 2.5-mile strip of state road 522 to the Seattle suburb of Bothell. But such moves are not always financially feasible. 

“The risk is that when you transfer a highway to local government, you take away the capacity to properly fund it over the long term” because the city becomes responsible for upkeep, said Brittney Kohler, the legislative director of transportation and infrastructure for the National League of Cities. Unless the revamped road spurs development that creates new tax revenue, as it did in Bothell, cash-strapped cities may be unable to afford the costs of retrofits and ongoing maintenance.

States and cities can work together to fix legacy highways — and federal support can help

In Portland, Oregon, pretty much everyone seems to agree that 82nd Avenue, a major thoroughfare that the state manages, is a disaster. 

Originally a little-used roadway marking the eastern edge of the city, 82nd Avenue has developed into a bustling arterial. It’s been a dangerous eyesore for decades, with potholed pavement, insufficient pedestrian crossings, inadequate lighting, and minimal tree cover, said Art Pearce, a deputy director for the Portland Bureau of Transportation. According to city statistics, from 2012 to 2021, crashes on the thoroughfare caused 14 deaths and 122 serious injuries. At least two-thirds of crash victims were pedestrians, bicyclists, or occupants of cars turning left at intersections without traffic signals. 

During winter storms, Pearce said state workers would often clear nearby Interstate 205 but leave 82nd Avenue unplowed, leaving the city to do it without compensation. “Our priority in snow and ice is to keep public transit moving, and 82nd Avenue has the highest transit ridership in the whole state,” he said.

Nearby residents and business owners have been begging local officials to revamp 82nd Avenue for decades, said Pearce and Blumenauer (whose congressional district includes Portland). The state was willing to transfer the roadway to the city, but the local officials wanted more than a handshake.

“We were like, if you give us $500 million, the city will take over 82nd Avenue and fix it,” Pearce said. “The state officials answered, ‘We don’t have $500 million, so hey, good meeting.’”

A breakthrough came in 2021, when the American Rescue Plan Act offered states and cities a one-time influx of federal funding. Matching that money with contributions of their own, the state and city negotiated a transfer of seven miles of 82nd Avenue from the Oregon DOT to Portland. Some $185 million will go toward new features including sidewalk extensions, trees, a BRT line, and curb cuts for those using a wheelchair or stroller. Blumenauer, who said that reconstructing 82nd Avenue has been a personal goal for 35 years, led US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on a tour of the roadway last year.

The success story is “a bit of a one-off,” Blumenauer admits, reliant on stimulus dollars tied to the Covid-19 pandemic. But a dedicated federal funding source could enable similar roadway reboots nationwide.

At the moment, President-elect Donald Trump and incoming congressional Republicans show little appetite for transportation reforms, but a golden opportunity will come during the development of the next multiyear surface transportation bill, which is expected to be passed after the 2026 midterms. Although Blumenauer did not run for reelection this month, he said he hopes the future bill will include a competitive grant program that invites state and local officials to submit joint proposals to upgrade state highways in urban areas, with federal dollars acting as a sweetener.

Otherwise, these state roads will continue to obstruct urban residents’ most cherished goals of safety, clean air, and public space. Flourishing cities cannot coexist with fast, decrepit roads. Too many state officials have not yet learned that lesson.


Read full article on: vox.com
Cynthia Erivo: ‘Hard conversations’ with ‘Wicked’ co-star Ariana Grande were needed to create ‘sister’-like bond
"We had a beautiful relationship offscreen," Erivo told Elle, explaining that their connection came from "vulnerability."
7 m
nypost.com
Get hitched without hassle with pop-up weddings and budget busters
Couples are saying yes to budget-friendly, easy-to-plan, pop-up weddings that first became popular during the pandemic.
8 m
nypost.com
Rays to play at Yankees’ Steinbrenner Field in 2025 after hurricane ravaged stadium
The Yankees are helping the rival Rays stay in Tampa for 2025 after their stadium was damaged by Hurricane Milton.
nypost.com
Meek Mill distances himself from Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs after mogul’s sex trafficking arrest: ‘No Diddy gang’
"This real life. No Diddy gang. Meek Milly in real life. Don't ever disrespect me, ya heard?" the rapper said before getting into a Rolls Royce.
nypost.com
The Weasley twins on their new baking show and how the ‘Harry Potter’ TV series will be ‘a bit odd’
“I dunno, it would be a bit odd, I think, because we’d be like,‘So, who’s that guy? That’s not Harry!'"
nypost.com
Mets ready to go ‘full blast’ to sign Juan Soto: Carlos Beltran
Steve Cohen and the Mets appear ready to go all in for Juan Soto.
nypost.com
Geraldo Rivera claims he ‘threw up’ after hearing Matt Gaetz was Trump’s AG pick
"When I heard that Matt Gaetz was picked to be attorney general, I threw up in my mouth,” Rivera, 81, told NewsNation’s "On Balance with Leland Vittert" Wednesday.
nypost.com
What are the best ways to get rid of credit card debt in retirement?
New research shows that retirees' credit card debt is growing. Here's how you can tackle yours now.
cbsnews.com
Harris backed out of Joe Rogan podcast over ‘backlash’ from lefty staffers
A campaign official reportedly said Vice President Kamala Harris backed out of appearing on Joe Rogan’s podcast out of fear of backlash within the Democratic Party. .
nypost.com
Nicole Kidman’s fictional home in ‘Babygirl’ can be yours in real life — and for a discount
Down from its $38 million ask last year, the 6,347-square-foot 200 Amsterdam penthouse — also featured in "Succession" — comes with four bedrooms and terraces.
nypost.com
Holiday travelers warned about fake TSA ‘scam’ that could bleed you dry
Don't get prechecked by crooks.
nypost.com
Inflation remains stubborn as wholesale prices accelerate after Fed rate cuts
The October report on producer prices comes a day after the Labor Department reported that consumer prices rose 2.6% last month from a year earlier.
nypost.com
Heir to British pie fortune charged with killing best friend also tried to break into Buckingham Palace
Thomas is accused slashing Bush in the neck and severing his jugular vein during “seven minutes of horror” at their shared home on Christmas Eve 2023.
nypost.com
Gary Vaynerchuk has some tough love for those who don’t embrace AI: Ride this wave or put your head in the sand and let it kill you
"The answer is to weaponize the opportunity instead of crying about it," the entrepreneur and media personality told The Post.
nypost.com
FEMA official fired for telling staff to avoid helping Trump supporters says agency scapegoating her
A former FEMA employee fired for instructing subordinates to avoid visiting Florida homes displaying Trump signs says the agency is scapegoating her for its own policy.
foxnews.com
‘Say Nothing’ Cast Opens Up About How Close the FX IRA Drama Hews to Their Real Life: “It Felt Like the Least Acting I’ve Ever Had to Do”
The real-life best friends revealed how the show honors the world of their native West Belfast. 
nypost.com
BetMGM Bonus Code NYP1600DM: Pocket a deposit match up to $1.6K for ‘Thursday Night Football’
Sign up with a BetMGM bonus code to unlock an exciting welcome offer, available for any game, including the Washington Commanders vs. Philadelphia Eagles matchup on "Thursday Night Football".
nypost.com
NATO jets scrambled after Russian aircraft spotted
The Russian planes were "not adhering to international norms" when Italian and Norwegian NATO jets were mobilized.
cbsnews.com
Girls' high school volleyball: Regional playoff results and updated schedule
Girls' high school volleyball regional playoff scores from Wednesday, plus Thursday's schedule.
latimes.com
Feeling ranchy? Wrangle a wild west wedding
Hoping to put their own brand on a stable relationship, more and more brides are ranching out in cow country.
nypost.com
Megan Rapinoe 'overwhelmed’ by another Trump presidency, fearful for the transgender community
Megan Rapinoe shared her disappointment with Donald Trump's victory over Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election, adding that she is now fearful for the transgender community.
foxnews.com
It's Starbucks Red Cup Day. Here's what to know about the event.
Here's how to get a free holiday-themed reusable red cup and what else there is to know about the event.
cbsnews.com
Texas Salon Owner Jailed for COVID Lockdown Violation Wins Seat in Legislature
A former Dallas salon owner who was jailed for re-opening her salon during COVID-19 will now be the next state representative for Texas House District 62. Shelley Luther won the election with nearly 80 percent of the vote. The post Texas Salon Owner Jailed for COVID Lockdown Violation Wins Seat in Legislature appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Elon Musk Wants the Government to Stop Wasting Money on Wacky Science. That’s a Terrible Idea.
Science is inefficient. That’s a good thing.
slate.com
See which 17 brands made ‘Toxic Hall of Shame’ for using ‘dangerous’ chemicals — Chipotle, Trader Joe’s get Fs on report card
The nonprofit Toxic-Free Future graded brands including Apple, Sephora, Target, and Walmart.
nypost.com
The Myth of Woke Gen Z
The same young people once derided as liberal snowflakes are moving to the right.
theatlantic.com
Kelly Ripa And Mark Consuelos’ Son Dressed Like Don Johnson On ‘Miami Vice’ “For A Solid Year”: “Thought It Was The Coolest Ever”
"Our son, I used to show him Miami Vice, and he so took to it," Ripa told Johnson on Live with Kelly and Mark.
nypost.com
A comedy show that addresses politics head on, while also providing escape
“Dance Like There’s Black People Watching: A Black Excellence Revue” is the latest Second City collaboration with Woolly Mammoth.
washingtonpost.com
Nikki Haley claims she turned down ‘truce’ offer from Trump ally: ‘There’s nothing I want’
Former US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley claimed that she slapped down an overture from one of President-election Donald Trump's allies who suggested he could help her land a role in the new administration.
nypost.com
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ helps push Disney past Wall Street estimates: ‘Well positioned for growth’
"We've emerged from a period of considerable challenges and disruption," Iger told investors. "We're well positioned for growth."
nypost.com
Denzel Washington: My Gay Kiss was Axed from 'Gladiator II'
Actor Denzel Washington says he "kissed a guy full on the lips" in the 2024 movie "Gladiator II," but that the queer scene ended up being axed from the film. The post Denzel Washington: My Gay Kiss was Axed from ‘Gladiator II’ appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Biden admin bans employers from discussing unionization with 'captive audience' employees
The Biden administration's National Labor Relations Board issued an opinion on Wednesday that bars businesses from expressing their views on unionization to a "captive audience" of employees.
foxnews.com
High school flag football: City Section playoff results and updated pairings
High school flag football: City Section playoff results from Wednesday and updated pairings.
latimes.com
Consultant charged with murder of Cash App founder Bob Lee claims tech titan attacked him
Prosecutors say Momeni drove Lee to a secluded area and stabbed him three times, then fled.
nypost.com
Clay Aiken randomly questions Shawn Mendes’ sexuality during interview: ‘I shouldn’t out him’
"By the way, did Shawn Mendes come out today?" Clay Aiken asked in a new interview.
nypost.com
Biden to meet with China's Xi Jinping at APEC summit
President Biden is heading to South America Thursday with his first stop coming at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit where he'll meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. CBS News chief White House correspondent Nancy Cordes has more.
cbsnews.com
Pistons’ Isaiah Stewart uses ‘dangerous play’ to stop Giannis Antetokounmpo
No one could stop Giannis Antetokounmpo on Wednesday night — even as the Pistons tried reliving their "Bad Boys" past.
nypost.com
Sofia Richie’s 5-month-old daughter has a real phone — and she’s already texting ‘guncle’ Jake Shane
"Eloise has a little bit of an attitude!" the influencer quipped on his "Therapuss" podcast Wednesday.
nypost.com
Looking for Italian romance? Weddings in Tuscany are a dream come true
Couples are flocking to Tuscany for a dream wedding -- followed, naturally, by a bucolic honeymoon in the magical landscapes.
nypost.com
‘Gladiator II’ star Denzel Washington has awkward encounter with King Charles
Denzel Washington experienced an awkward encounter with King Charles III during the London premiere of "Gladiator II."
foxnews.com
Lindsey Vonn announces a comeback at 40, saying she's ready to race
The record-setting skier once notched speeds that would be illegal on most U.S. highways — until knee injuries slowed her down and she retired in 2019. Now Vonn says she's ready to return to racing.
npr.org
Is the ‘Red One’ Movie Streaming on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video?
The Rock is coming to save Christmas.
nypost.com
Halle Berry looks ageless as she rewears iconic Elie Saab Oscars dress 22 years after historic win
The A-lister closed out the 1001 Seasons of Elie Saab runway show, which celebrated the Lebanese designer's career, in the legendary gown.
nypost.com
Trump picking Gaetz for AG may be loyalty test for senators
President-elect Donald Trump's choice for attorney general, Matt Gaetz, is facing a tough Senate confirmation process for the job. CBS News political director Fin Gómez reports on some of the speculation about why Trump made such a controversial pick.
cbsnews.com
I dated a Mr. Big in NYC — if you want one, prepare for 4 a.m. exits and vasectomy bragging
It’s 4 a.m. and I’m being gently prodded awake by a very sexy man. Nope, not because he’s horny — although, trust me, we did manage to squeeze in a little action — but because my saucy love interest’s alarm just went off, and I’m being politely but firmly booted out. This was my first...
nypost.com
Do GOP Senators Have Any Backbone Left?
Trump’s ridiculous Cabinet nominations will provide senators with a new test.
theatlantic.com
Who are Trump's likely top contenders to lead comms team, interact with the media?
President-elect Trump is expected to announce his second administration's press secretary and communications team, as he speedily rolls out key Cabinet and staff positions.
foxnews.com
Exploring Trump-Musk bromance and how the two powerful personalities can last
What we know about Elon Musk’s ‘Department Of Government Efficiency’ and bromance with Donald Trump.
abcnews.go.com