New England states are starting to come to grips with a federal mandate that they number their exits. But not without some resistance — in some cases, from powerful places.
www.bostonglobe.com
The "Good luck with that" is from the Governor of New Hampshire, soon to be the only state in the union with sequential exits. His defense?
“It’s how we identify,” he said. In his native town of Salem, “you were an Exit 1, 2, or 3 kid, and it kind of said where you were in the town.”
Given that exits and mileposts both go south to north, in all likelihood exits 1, 2, and 3 will remain exits 1, 2, and 3. New Hampshire is a long, thin state without many freeways, so I guess we could pour one out for those poor "Exit 41 kids" in Littleton who will need to get used to being "Exit 122 kids" in a decade. The horror!
His other arguments aren't much better. Businesses that market themselves by exit number can simply change the number (it's not like businesses in mile-marker states don't advertise that way), and GPS hasn't made exit numbers obsolete. Emergency services still apparently value the exit/mile-marker equivalency, for instance, and a casual driver should still value knowing at a glance how far they are from their destination.
In MA, the shift to mile-marker exits should have come with other changes in road numbering to make the exit numbers make logical sense. The Cape people are right - it's nonsensical to have a driver from Braintree count down to zero on Route 3 then suddenly cross a bridge and be at Exit 55. MassDOT should extend the MA-3 designation to Orleans, unsigned, and count the mile markers from there up to Braintree. Then, they can assign the I-293 designation to US-3 north of Boston, placing Exit 1 in Burlington where it should be. If NHDOT closes the gap of Interstate-standard highway on the FE Everett Turnpike, I-293 would run Burlington-Manchester. US-3 could be rerouted back onto its former roads that now carry the 3A number, which would be consistent with the types of roads that carry the designation into Boston.
Other states with newer road networks don't have these problems, because they didn't typically have to force numbers onto centuries-old road networks.