Startling Report Finds the U.S. Has Over 47,000 Bridges That Are “Structurally Deficient”

Rebuilding our nation’s infrastructure has been a big talking point among politicians over the past several years, but it doesn’t seem like any real action is ever taken.

And the news isn’t getting any better. A new report from the American Road and Transportation Builders Association revealed that more than 47,000 bridges in the U.S. are in bad condition and need urgent repairs. The organization estimates that it would take 80 years to repair all the bridges in the U.S. that are deficient.

Stillwater Bridge, MN
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The term “structurally deficient” doesn’t necessarily mean that a bridge is in danger of collapsing, but it does mean that a bridge needs repairs and renovations. Clearly that’s not a good thing.

Alison Black, the chief economist for the American Road and Transportation Builders Association, said, “In addition to those bridges that are structurally deficient, about 4 out of 10 bridges across the country need some sort of major rehabilitation work. So unfortunately, it’s not just these 47,000 structures that need to be fixed.”

Arlington Memorial Bridge, VA
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The report says that the deficient bridges in the U.S. are crossed 178 million times each day. Many notable bridges are on the “structurally deficient” list, including the Brooklyn Bridge, the Arlington Memorial Bridge that connects Washington, D.C. and Arlington, Virginia, and the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge that stretches across the San Francisco Bay.

San Mateo Bridge, CA
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

To add insult to injury, 2018 saw the slowest rate of repairs in five years. According to Black, “There’s not a lot of new money. It really is just keeping pace with project costs and inflation. I think if we saw a significant increase in the federal funding side of this that would really go a long way to help states that are trying to provide some of these repairs and fix these bridges.”

Let’s all hope that our local, state, and national politicians can work together to repair our infrastructure and ensure the safety of the millions of Americans who drive across these bridges each and every day.

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Here are the Largest Religious Groups Across Every County in the America

Do you ever wonder what exactly is the breakdown of religious groups where you live? As I drive around town, I see churches, mosques, and temples, and I ask myself that question all the time.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

The Washington Post gathered data from the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies to put together the following map, which will answer all of those questions for you. As you can see, certain regions of the country are strongly dominated by one religion, especially the South and the Northeast.

Photo Credit: Mental Floss

Here’s a larger version of the key so you can get a good idea of what’s going on in your community.

Photo Credit: Mental Floss

Here’s what their map of the second-most practiced religions in each state (besides Christianity) looks like.

Photo Credit: U.S. Religion Census

And here’s the county-level map of second-largest religions after Christianity.

Photo Credit: U.S. Religion Census

Pretty interesting, right?

(h/t: Mental Floss)

We know you can choose a lot of sites to read, but we want you to know that we’re thankful you chose Did You Know.

You rock! Thanks for reading!

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These 10 Cities are the Hardest-Working Spots in America

Americans pride themselves in being hardworking people. We work hard, we play hard. But which American cities stand a cut above the rest in rolling up their sleeves and getting the job done?

The finance website Wallethub calculated the work ethic of American cities by looking at a bunch of data, including employment rate, length of the average workweek, unused vacation days, and how many people work multiple jobs.

Wallethub rated cities on a 100-point scale, and the highest-ranking city (which you’ll see at the bottom) scored a 79.

Explore this interactive map and see the 116 cities ranked in order by clicking this link to see how your city sizes up.

10. Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

9. Cheyenne, Wyoming

Photo Credit: Flickr,Michel Rathwell

8. Austin, Texas

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

7. Aurora, Colorado

Photo Credit: Flickr,Ken Lund

6. Denver, Colorado

Photo Credit: Max Pixel

5. Plano, Texas

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

4. Virginia Beach, Virginia

Photo Credit: Flickr,Jason Pratt

3. Irving, Texas

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

2. San Francisco, California

Photo Credit: Pixabay

1. Anchorage, Alaska

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Did any of these findings surprise you?

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These 19 Photos Are Proof That Americans Do the Weirdest Things with Food

Having lived in America for well over a decade now, I admit there are a lot of things on this list that don’t seem as weird to me anymore. That said, when I first got here, there were definitely plenty of foods that had me confused AF. At the very least, I will say that Americans are… unrestrictedly creative with the things they do to food.

1. This is actually a great idea that doesn’t belong here. I just wanted you to see it.

Photo Credit: Imgur

2. That is deep fried butter, and I am amused.

Photo Credit: Instagram

3. That is deep fried sugar, and I am horrified.

Photo Credit: Twitter

4. This is bad enough without the chocolate chips.

Photo Credit: Twitter

5. WAT WHY

Photo Credit: Twitter

6. Like this. Wtf is THIS?

Photo Credit: Imgur

7. These are pickles brined in Kool Aid. Just stop it.

Photo Credit: Buzzfeed

That’s right. They’re called Koolickles.

Photo Credit: Instagram

8. Listen, I’ll eat it, but we can’t be calling it ‘cheddar cheese’, people.

Photo Credit:

9. Why do people pay for snow cones?? It’s just ice! IT’S A CUP OF ICE CAROL

Photo Credit: Instagram

10. A donut bun cheeseburger is one of the more ‘American’ things I’ve seen…

Photo Credit: Twitter

11. Ok but why tho

Photo Credit: Twitter

12. I have questions…

Photo Credit: Twitter

13. Oh, so we’re flavoring condiments with other condiments now? Cool.

Photo Credit: Twitter

14. I am going to give this points for creativity, and you can’t stop me.

Photo Credit: Twitter

15. Have you ever really thought about what jerky is? Cuz I guarantee your teeth and cholesterol have.

Photo Credit: Flickr, andreelau

16. Explain how this applies to chips, please.

Photo Credit: Twitter

17. We’re deep frying bubble gum now? WHAT FOR

Photo Credit: Twitter

18. “Excuse me, ma’am, is that a brick of fries O_O”

Photo Credit: Buzzfeed

19. Oooo. “Natural butter flavor with other natural flavors contains no butter” is one of my all-time favorites.

Photo Credit: Twitter

We should all be ashamed about that last one. Truly.

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Check Out the the Weirdest Town Names from Every State in America

I love a good weird name. Back when I was on the road a lot, I once passed a town called “Natchitoches,” and I’ve always regretted not going.

I also once wanted to start a band called “The World” just so we could have a tour that ended in Hell, Michigan – naturally, the tour would have been called “The World’s Goin’ to Hell!”

The folks at Estately put together a great infographic that shows the weirdest town names in each state in the U.S., and there are some absolute doozies on there!

Photo Credit: Estately

Alabama: Scratch Ankle

Alaska: Chicken

Arizona: Catfish Paradise

Arkansas: Toad Suck

Photo Credit: Flickr,Ken Lund

California: Mormon Bar

Colorado: Parachute

Connecticut: Moosup

Delaware: Flea Hill

Florida: Spuds

Georgia: Flippen

Hawaii: Volcano

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Idaho: Beer Bottle Crossing

Illinois: Chicken Bristle

Indiana: Santa Claus

Iowa: What Cheer

Kansas: Skiddy

Kentucky: Pig

Louisiana: Water Proof

Maine: Bald Head

Maryland: Accident

Massachusetts: Satan’s Kingdom (pictured below)

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Michigan: Free Soil

Minnesota: Little Canada

Mississippi: Possumneck

Missouri: Frankenstein

Montana: Big Sag

Nebraska: Worms

Nevada: Jackpot

New Hampshire: Dummer

New Jersey: Foul Rift

New Mexico: Pie Town

New York: Handsome Eddy

North Carolina: Why Not

North Dakota: Zap

Photo Credit: Flickr,Andrew Filer

Ohio: Dull

Oklahoma: Okay

Oregon: Boring

Pennsylvania: Coupon

Rhode Island: Woonsocket

South Carolina: Coward

South Dakota: Plenty Bears

Tennessee: Smartt

Texas: Ding Dong (pictured below)

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Utah: Nibley

Vermont: Mosquitoville

Virginia: Fries

Washington: Big Bottom

West Virginia: Booger Hole

Wisconsin: Chili

Wyoming: Chugwater

Do you agree with the selection for your state?

By the way, I’m moving to Satan’s Kingdom, Massachusetts.

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This Chart Shows the Fastest Growing Jobs in Every State

A friendly word of advice: if you live in California or Hawaii, you may want to consider a career in installing solar panels. Alternatively, if your home state is Colorado, Texas, Nebraska, or Iowa, a job servicing wind turbines might be your best bet.

Yahoo! Finance put together this handy infographic, using statistics compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, to show what is the fastest growing job in each state in the country.

Photo Credit: Yahoo Finance

The results are pretty interesting and represent a shift in how many Americans work. As mentioned earlier, solar panel installer jobs are the fastest growing in California and Hawaii, but that’s also the case in several other states in different parts of the country, including Florida, North Carolina, New Jersey, and Minnesota. Here is how the western United States and Alaska and Hawaii shapes up.

Photo Credit: Yahoo Finance

Another rising occupation is statistician. The median annual salary for a statistician in the U.S. is $84,060 and these number crunchers are the fastest growing occupation in Michigan, Illinois, Kentucky, and Connecticut.

As we move east through the Midwest and towards the Atlantic, here are the fastest growing occupations.

Photo Credit: Yahoo Finance

The East Coast is a unique mix of positions, including the aforementioned solar panel installer in two states, biomedical engineer in Maine, costume attendant in Georgia (because of the thriving film/TV industry), and  gambling industry worker in New York.

Photo Credit: Yahoo Finance

Let’s hope the economy keeps on revving along and people in all industries in America continue to move up the ladder.

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20 Photos That Prove Just How Doomed the American Education System Is

Reader beware: these posts by our fellow Americans are so cringeworthy they might well make you cry. Seriously, they are painful.

You’ve been warned.

1. Called out by Mother

Photo Credit: Facebook

2. What does it all mean?

Photo Credit: Facebook

3. Yeah, I don’t think this happened

Photo Credit: Reddit

4. Let it sink in

Photo Credit: Facebook

5. Not sure what that means

Photo Credit: Facebook

6. We have a scientist here

Photo Credit: Facebook

7. Hmmm

Photo Credit: Reddit

8. Prove me wrong!

Photo Credit: Reddit

9. Overdoing it

Photo Credit: Reddit

10. Nice try

Photo Credit: Reddit

11. Wrong year, too

Photo Credit: Facebook

12. SMH

Photo Credit: Facebook

13. That damn flue

Photo Credit: Facebook

14. OMG

Photo Credit: Facebook

15. Celebrity shocker!

Photo Credit: Facebook

16. This is incredible

Photo Credit: Twitter

17. You spent all day on this?

Photo Credit: Facebook

18. FACT

Photo Credit: Reddit

19. Nope

Photo Credit: Reddit

20. Evolution

Photo Credit: Facebook

We live in frightening times, friends…

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This Irish Traveler Shares the 15 Things That Surprised Her About America

We read a lot about Americans traveling the world – sometimes their experiences are great, and sometimes they’re amazed at how disliked we can be in other cultures. It’s rarer to read what travelers from other countries might think about us…and Irish writer/traveler Benny Lewis doesn’t pull any punches!

Caveat: This person spent a good amount of time (nearly a year total) in various cities, but almost all of them were a) large urban areas and b) on one coast or another. So, I guess if you live in flyover country, you can assume this might not apply.

#15. Why is tipping a thing?

Photo Credit: Pixabay

“Instead of getting tipped they earn a wage like everyone else — and do their job, and if they do it bad enough, they’ll get fired. But apparently not pestering you every minute and not smiling like you are in a Ms. World competition means you are “rude.”

#14. Wasteful consumerism

Photo Credit: Pixabay

“What makes it worse is that these people sometimes claim to not have much money, and Apple products are added to their “necessities” list. The person I bought my iPad from sighed when I told him what I do, and he said he wished he had the money to travel. I wish he had the common sense to realize that if he stopped wasting his money, he’d have plenty left over.”

#13. You want to see my what?

Photo Credit: Pixabay

“I’ve even seen 60-year-olds get ID’d. Nowhere else in the world do they ID me now that I’m clearly in my 30s. A few times I haven’t had my passport (the most important document I own that I really don’t want to get beer spilled over) in my jeans pocket and have simply been refused entry.”

#12. The rat race

Photo Credit: Pixabay

“Despite all the false positivity, I find Americans to be generally the most stressed and unhappiest people on the planet. Despite all the resources, and all the money they have, they are sadder than people I know who can barely make ends meet in other countries but still know how to live in the moment.

This rush to the finish line or to have a million dollars in your bank account or to get that promotion, and to have that consume your life, is something I find really sad.”

#11. Assuming America is the best

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

“America is indeed a better place with a higher standard of living than most of the world, but free speech and tolerance for all is the norm in the Western world as a rule, not just in America.

There is no best country.

I think patriotism is an excellent quality to have, and we should all be proud of where we were born. But nationalism (believing other countries are inferior) is a terrible quality.”

#10. The word ‘awesome’

Photo Credit: Workopolis

“I really hate the word awesome. It used to mean “that which inspires awe,” but in the states it means nothing! It doesn’t even mean good — it’s just a word — a filler, like “um” or “y’know.”

#9. Tax not included

Photo Credit: Compliance Signs

“I don’t give a flying toss how much YOU get — I want to know how much I have to pay! How much money … do you want me … to hand to you? Do I really have to spell this out?”

#8. Stereotypes are not cool

Photo Credit: Rappler

“A few others I’ve gotten include:

How was the boat ride over here? (Surprised that we have airports in Ireland — I must have arrived in rags in New York’s harbor of course.)
Too many people insisting Ireland was part of the UK. They actually argued it with me!
Did I have to check my car for IRA bombs when I was growing up? (Uuuugh … so many things wrong with this!)
Surprised I knew more about technology than they did. Aren’t we all potato farmers in Ireland?”

#7. The Jesus thing

Photo Credit: The Eggplant

“Even if I’m not religious, it’s up to everyone to decide what to believe. I find religious people in Europe to be NORMAL — it’s a spiritual thing, or something they tend to keep to themselves and are very modern people with a great balance of religion and modernism.

But I can’t stand certain Christian affiliations of religious Americans. It’s Jesus this and Jesus that all the bloody time. You really can’t have a normal conversation with them. It’s in-your-facereligion.”

#6. Mo’ money, mo’ problems

Photo Credit: Pixabay

“I met far too many people who were more interested in their bank balance than in their quality of life. People richer than I can possibly imagine who are depressed. More money seems to be the only way they understand how to solve problems. They don’t travel because they think they need tens of thousands of dollars (which is just simply not true, as you can read it in this post here), and they don’t enjoy their day because they may miss out on a business opportunity.”

#5. What does a smile mean, actually?

Photo Credit: Pixabay

“When you smile all the time in public it means nothing. Apparently a smile releases endorphins, but if your face is stuck that way, I’m sure your dreams of a natural high will fade soon. I’d rather focus on trying to make my life better and have reasons to smile than lie to myself and the world.”

#4. Dear God, the advertising

Photo Credit: Topanga Chamber

“I feel like scraping out my eyes with toothpicks when I’m forced to endure advertising in America. Make it stop.”

#3. The obsession with ancestry

Photo Credit: Smarter Hobby

“Every American you meet is not actually American. They are a fourth Polish, three-seventeenths Italian, 10 other random countries, and then of course half Irish. Since Ireland is more homogeneous, it’s hard for me to appreciate this, so honestly I don’t really care if your great grandfather’s dog walker’s best friend’s roommate was Irish. I really don’t.”

#2. No pedestrian crossing

Photo Credit: Smithsonian Mag

“You can’t do anything without a car in most cases. With rare exceptions (like San Francisco or New York), all shops, affordable restaurants, supermarkets, electronics, etc. are miles away.”

#1. Crazy portion sizes

Photo Credit: Business Insider UK

Any time I ordered even a small portion I’d be totally full. Small means something different to me than it does to Americans. If you sit down in most places and order anything but an appetizer or a salad, you will eat more than you should.”

h/t: Business Insider

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