CHARLOTTE — Charlotte drivers spend more than a full work week each year stuck in traffic, and the combined costs of congestion and poorly maintained roads add up to nearly $2,000 per year for the average motorist here — by far the highest amounts in North Carolina.
Local drivers lose an average of 47 hours annually because of traffic, costing them $1,342 each in lost time and fuel. In addition, Charlotte drivers endure traveling on the worst roads in North Carolina, with 44% of area roads deemed to be in poor or mediocre condition, compared with 33% statewide.
[ ALSO READ: Sen. Thom Tillis announces $4.4 million grant to improve intersections in Charlotte ]
Additional fuel, repairs, maintenance and tire wear caused by the poorly maintained roads cost each driver an average of $559 per year. The state average is $484.
Those are among the findings in a new statewide report by TRIP, a Washington, D.C.-based transportation research nonprofit. TRIP assesses roads, bridges, and travel conditions for 10 to 15 states annually.
Keep reading here.
(WATCH BELOW: New traffic signal coming to intersection where SC woman was killed in 2021)
This browser does not support the video element.