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Atlanta highway bottlenecks among the worst in the nation

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The annual ranking of the top 100 worst bottlenecks for trucks in the country has hit the streets, and it will probably come as no surprise to Atlantans that the metro area has some of the worst congestion in the country.

In fact, the American Transportation Research Institute’s (ATRI) 2020 Top Truck Bottleneck List notes that three of the top 10 worst bottlenecks in the country are in the Atlanta metro area. Atlanta has a total of six in the list of 100.

According to ATRI, the second worst bottleneck in the country is in Atlanta at I-285 and I-85 (North). The average speed at that bottleneck is 34 mph, the average peak traffic speed is 22.4 mph and the average nonpeak is 40.2 mph.

That is the 8th slowest average peak speed for any bottleneck in the country, according to ATRI.

Atlanta also took the fifth and seventh spots for bottlenecks at I-75 at I-285 (North) and at I-20 at I-285 (West), respectively.

The remaining three bottlenecks in Atlanta that made the list include:
• 24th for I-20 at I-285
• 48th for I-20 at I-75/I-85
• 71st for I-75 at I-85

ATRI bases its analysis on GPS data collected from more than 1 million trucks, according to a press release. The study shows notes that “significant congestion” is defined by roadways where drivers experience daily speeds of 45 mph or less. Those roadways with significant congestion have nearly doubled (up 92 percent) in the last five years.

“ATA (American Trucking Association) has been beating the drum about the continued degradation of our infrastructure, and thanks to ATRI’s research we can see exactly how decades of ignoring the problem are impacting not just our industry but our economy and commuters everywhere,” American Trucking Association President and CEO Chris Spear said in the press release. “This report should sound the alarm for policymakers that the cost of doing nothing is too high and provide a roadmap of where to target investments to really solve our nation’s mounting infrastructure crisis.”

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