Yes,
It's the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Apparently all state "departments"
are officially called "cabinets." Took me at least 2 years to get used to KYTC
instead of KYDOT.
Kerry
-Original Message-
From: OSM Volunteer stevea
Sent: Friday, October 26, 2018 7:01 PM
To: Kerry I
Sorry, I should use the abbreviation of KYTC as Kerry does, not KDOT.
SteveA
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"Having little confidence that KDOT got it right, either" is exactly why I
didn't change the names: let the locals (cities, counties, local
residents/citizens) hash this out as well as KDOT, if KDOT wants to get
involved. For whatever reason, I've only seen these serious differences of
this m
We had the same experience in creating a RideWithGPS map and route log for USBR
21 in KY. There are even places where a given road has two different
spellings; you can tell it's the same road but the name spelling apparently is
not agreed by the locals. You learn to live with it. While you wo
I have completed a first draft of USBR 21 in Kentucky. This was actually quite
difficult as the TIGER name tags frequently do not match what highway names on
the application from Kentucky's DOT says. I did not change these, I'll leave
that for "locals," but there is a great deal of work to do
Kentucky USBR 23 is done.
https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/8843677#map=10/37.4960/-85.4712
On Wed, Oct 24, 2018 at 12:30 PM OSM Volunteer stevea <
stevea...@softworkers.com> wrote:
> AASHTO has completed it's "Autumn 2018 round" of national route numbering
> approvals (almost) and there ar
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