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LivingMemento t1_iwqcycf wrote

Years ago one of the local public radio stations had a story about it. Basically we pay the contractors to build and we pay them for any necessary repairs. It pays to build bad roads. In Europe they make the contractors fix bad roads within a reasonable number of years from initial completion.

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wurkbank t1_iwsjdge wrote

And the contractor charges them a lot more upfront.

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M80IW t1_iwro7a1 wrote

Why should the contractor be liable for building to the specs from your engineer?

You're pointing the finger at the wrong people.

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vtdadbod007 t1_iwtbykc wrote

Because the vast majority of these are design-build, where the contractor is the chief stakeholder

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Personal_Worth_9476 t1_iwque08 wrote

Being a fairly recent transplant here. The roads so many other places are so much worse.

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IntelligentCicada363 t1_iwqwhvr wrote

Today OP learns how expensive it is to maintain road infrastructure for cars and that money doesn't grow on trees!

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ultimate_bulter OP t1_iwsge0f wrote

I understand, but on a spare day, go on Needham St in Newton. AT least fix that place. They've been trying to fix it for the past 3 years. Also explains the US work rate.

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BonesIIX t1_iwvxs1f wrote

Needham St is pretty much fucked yearly with all the new construction and the weight of trucks used. Add in water main repairs, fire hydrant line repairs, you end up with the road being in bad shape pretty much yearly.

Until they're majorly done with large developments, Needham Street is gonna be a crappy road.

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Repulsive-Bend8283 t1_iwrd56r wrote

Part of it is Charlie Deferred Maintenance Baker, part of it is the state capture that results from effective single party rule allowing a small number of companies easy access to the people making the rules on bidding jobs and procurement, and part of it, perversely enough, is Prop 2½. Because municipalities maintain good bond ratings by borrowing money, and because every bureaucracy 's primary objective is to expand, the override rule incentivizes expanding every budget by 2.49% every year, so a lot of things that should get done only get done in small portions (one year we borrow the money to bury the fiber or whatever, and the next year we borrow to fix the road we destroyed the year before, and each project only gets done 130 feet at a time to maximize the number of joints in the road and splices in whatever utility they're running.

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yourm0m1 t1_iwqd02g wrote

Funny you post this today, there is an online article hitting the airwaves this week. According to "Google search statistics over the last year" Massachusetts ranks 12th for potholes and Boston 34th in cities.

https://quotewizard.com/news/pothole-damage-costs-us-drivers-3-billion-dollars-per-year

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Maxpowr9 t1_iwqmdzk wrote

12th is about where I expected us to be too. The freeze/thaw cycle in the northern states unsurprisingly makes most of them bad for potholes. It's the southern states with bad roads that have no excuses.

As for why Maine is so much lower than MA, Maine (~47k) has about 2/5th fewer road miles as MA (~78k).

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geffe71 t1_iwqords wrote

Also ME and NH are constantly redoing the roads even though they don’t need to be

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jambonejiggawat t1_iwt7mcj wrote

I believe NH spends more on their roads than they do on education. I’d look up a citation, but I’m going to bed.

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WinsingtonIII t1_iwsvrjz wrote

There are also large portions of Maine that are consistently stuck below freezing most of the winter. You don’t have constant freeze thaw cycles when it’s always 25 degrees or lower in the winter.

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a_swarm_of_nuns t1_iwqe56l wrote

Makes sense with the amount of cars and people commuting in on like major road systems. Roads will go to shit much quicker than others

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RailRoad_Candy t1_iwraiz5 wrote

The real and honest answer is because repairs are done cheaply. Asphalt taken up and replaced with 4" of new asphalt in this climate guarantees a relatively short lifespan. Thus, they really can't keep up with the repairs.

If you want to really improve things, you need to replace the road with 6-8" of asphalt. But you're significantly increasing the cost of road repairs and given that most of the budgets for this stuff is planned years and advance, those same budgets are eaten up by inflation (rising prices of equipment, consumables, etc.) and those accounts are dipped into for other things.

Want to truly fix it, increase taxes, increase thickness (THE THICKKKKNEESSSS!!), and get rid of the whole "Only police can flag wave" BS argument. Until then, put monies aside for new struts.

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Cowtipper1738 t1_iwr00fm wrote

Buddy wait till you see the conditions of other states. I moved to Texas a year ago and the roads here make Mass roads look perfect. I would love for Texas roads too be half as good as Mass

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threwawaywaywayway t1_iwrc3b0 wrote

Where exactly...I spent 18 years in the Texas panhandle and about 10 in south Texas before moving to Boston...Boston is way worse.

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M80IW t1_iwrpeep wrote

That put Texas in the worst fifth of the nation in terms of road quality, where 22% of roads are deemed “non-acceptable.”

https://spectrumlocalnews.com/tx/south-texas-el-paso/news/2021/11/29/study-shows-bad-roads-cost-texas-drivers--682-a-year

https://quotewizard.com/news/states-with-worst-infrastructure

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threwawaywaywayway t1_iwuyjjs wrote

So your second chart has MA with a higher percentage of unacceptable roads but a slightly lower cost per driver...but I think the methods here probably dont capture everything. I also suspect it's somewhat difficult to make direct comparisons for the simple fact that Texas is much much larger, with huge swaths of little to no population and a large network of dirt roads, that while crappy, are only being used by farmers. At any rate, I am aware I'm just offering an anecdote here, but I've driven a lot in all these places, as has my wife, and we are constantly in awe of the number of skull rattling pot holes and rusty, run down, crumbling bridges here.

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Cowtipper1738 t1_iws3ttk wrote

San Antonio area. Roads are shit. Holes, bumps, no markings whatsoever etc

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threwawaywaywayway t1_iwuz8a1 wrote

Hmm. Fair enough. I drive out of San Antonio up to hill country once or twice a year to visit family and haven't noticed issues on the highway that stand out but I've literally never gotten off the highway and driven around town. Up in the panhandle Oklahoma was what came up...as soon as you crossed the state line driving to OKC the highway was just like a rumble strip, but I've heard they have a new turnpike and the highways are nicer now...

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Cowtipper1738 t1_iwv6f5u wrote

Yeah they’ve been fixing all the highways in SA recently so they aren’t too bad. It’s all the other major roads that are brutal. For example Atone oak parkway is pretty much just off-roading with all the potholes and bumps. It’s like they didn’t flatten and just paved over small mounds

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boston_homo t1_iwqmgif wrote

The roads suck here and always will.

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potus1001 t1_iwrcpxa wrote

Because Prop 2 1/2 makes it really tough for municipalities to afford to fix roads.

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singalong37 t1_iwuokvz wrote

Mass spends less per capita on state and federal highways than most, def less than Me, NH, Vt and Ct. Mass doesn’t have county roads like some states—NJ and NY for example—so the comparable roads here are either state or local. Mass limits property tax revenue so the towns and cities can’t spend too much on roads or anything else. Other than the Big Dig Mass is pretty stingy with your tax revenue.

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Fake-Ginger-215 t1_iwsz8oj wrote

Lol. Go to Philadelphia and then come back to Boston and our luxurious, only kind of potholed roads.

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Naughty_Teacher t1_iwrlgb5 wrote

There is also a multi year infrastructure plan involving water pipes and gas pipes in a handful of towns. You see patch over patch because of it. A few towns have delayed repaving for years until the work is finished.

Looking at you Wakefield & Stoneham.

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ChubbsBry t1_iwt72zu wrote

They are fine. Stop whining like a bitch.

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Vivecs954 t1_iwuf391 wrote

It’s because asphalt and freezing/thawing don’t mix. Below freezing temperatures wreck asphalt.

In Florida asphalt lasts longer.

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