Report Rates 21% of New Mexico Roads As Poor, Mediocre
A national highway research group says a fifth of New Mexico’s roads need upgrading because they are in poor or mediocre condition.
In a report issued Tuesday, the Washington, D.C-based group called TRIP said New Mexico’s economy would receive a boost if roads and bridges were improved.
The organization is partly sponsored by the highway construction industry.
The group rates 67 percent of New Mexico roads in good or excellent condition and 12 percent in fair condition.
The report said 44 percent of the major roads in the Albuquerque area are in poor or mediocre condition, and a third of Santa Fe’s main roads had similar ratings.
The Legislative Finance Committee has proposed $25 million for road improvements next year from taxes on motor vehicle sales.
- Ex-Shield AI Worker Sues Over ‘Profane, Egregious’ Acts by Senior Official
- Car Owners Shocked by $200 Gas Bills Finally Embrace Used EVs
- The Field Inspection Gap: A Growing Structural Risk in Claims Handling
- US, Mexico, Canada to Miss July USMCA Date, Ramping Up Trade Tension
- ‘Big Tobacco’ Moment for Cannabis: What Insurers Need to Know About Murray v. Cresco
- CommScope Sued by Lenders for at Least $150 Million Over Alleged Breach
- Why Toyota RAV4s Are Suddenly the Most Coveted Used Cars in America
- Insurance Attorneys Flip $1M Hail Claim into Nearly $2M Suit for Contractor Interference