Kentucky highway user survey 2000

Langley, R. E. · 2001 · ROSA P / Kentucky. Transportation Cabinet

archive: archived pipeline: cataloged verified

Get this paper ↗ (full text — opens at the source; we link to it, we don't host it)

Summary

This study assessed public satisfaction with the Kentucky highway system and driver licensing processes through a statewide telephone survey of 791 licensed adults. The research compared current opinions to data from 1997 to 1999 and to national benchmarks to evaluate trends in infrastructure quality and service delivery. Results indicated that overall satisfaction with state highways remained stable at 53%, though it was lower than the national average of 65%. Satisfaction with specific attributes like pavement conditions and safety showed slight declines, while support for extending the driver's license renewal period from four to six years was high at 70%. The findings suggest that while general satisfaction is consistent, specific areas such as toll booth delays and pavement durability require attention.

Key finding

Overall satisfaction with Kentucky's highway system remained stable at 53% in 2000, which was substantially lower than the national satisfaction rate of 65%.

Methodology

survey

Sample size: 791

Provenance

The full processing record for this entry. Every stage of this paper's journey through the pipeline is logged — what ran, with which tool and model, how many attempts it took, and when it last completed. Discovered via bulk_ingest_rosap on 2026-05-23 (7 acquisition events logged).

StageOutcomeToolModelPromptAttemptsCompleted
discover success rosap 2 2026-05-23
archive success 1 2026-05-23
extract skipped empty 4 2026-06-10
clean success 1 2026-06-01
chunk success 1 2026-06-01
embed success 1 2026-06-02
enrich success 1 2026-05-23
promote success 1 2026-05-23
summarize success llm qwen3.6-27b 3 2026-06-01
tag success vector_similarity 24 2026-06-11
verify success 1 2026-06-03

Summary generated by qwen3.6-27b-prismaquant on 2026-06-01; verification: verified.

Topics

Ranked by relevance to this paper. Hover a topic for its definition.

Information type

What kind of knowledge this paper contributes, grouped by family — independent of topic (what it is about) and method (how it was studied).