TomTom, a provider of navigation solutions and digital maps, recently released its “Speed Profiles” report based on data it collects — anonymously — from drivers on urban and rural interstates.
“Although the average speed on some U.S. roads slightly exceeded the speed limit, data from GPS users show that, overall, drivers tend to stay within speed limit range on most major U.S. highways,” the company noted in a statement.
KEY FINDINGS
• Mississippi has the fastest roads, with average speeds of just over 70 MPH and posted speed limits ranging from 65-70 MPH. New Mexico (70 MPH actual average, 70-75 MPH posted speed limits), Idaho (70 MPH actual average, 65-75 MPH posted speed limits), Utah (70 MPH actual average, 65-75 MPH posted speed limits) and Alabama (70 MPH actual average, 60-70 MPH posted speed limits), round out the top five states with the fastest interstates in the country,
• The nation’s fastest area is in the middle part of the country. Seven of the top 15 states with the fastest highways are in that area. The average speeds on roads in Mississippi, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Idaho, Alabama and Missouri exceed 67 MPH; the average posted speed limits in those states is 70 MPH.
• Speeds on single interstate highways that span a number of states, such as the I-95 route running from Northern Maine to Southern Florida, differ dramatically depending on where you are. Along that highway, the fastest section is in South Carolina; the slowest sections are in Virginia, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
• Washington D.C. has the slowest average MPH on its interstate highways, at 46 MPH. After Washington D.C., the states with the slowest interstate average MPH are Hawaii (53 MPH), Delaware (61 MPH), Rhode Island (63 MPH), and Oregon (63 MPH).
Economic development for the River Valley Region is important and the competition for new job creation is not just with the states which border
Transition: the period of time during which something changes from one state or stage to another.
November election campaigns are now in the "home stretch".
So, locally do we want more of the same?
At the state level do we want to rock the boat?
At the national level do we want to give back the Congress to the Republicans just because the Democrats haven't fixed in 2 years what the Bush/Cheney Republicans took 8 years to
break?
My last blog got hijacked by this question and the answer was never revealed.
Is George Catsavis a restaurant owner? If yes, which? If no, lets stop calling him that.
Responses?
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