I drove the Indian Nation Turnpike 25 years ago. Back then, the Turnpike Authority apparently bid out all the rest stops in the system on one contract, and every rest stop had to have a McDonalds. The one outside Hugo, which could only be reached by getting on the toll road, had to be the lowest grossing McDonalds ever. I was there at lunchtime on a Friday and was the only customer. I met 4 oncoming cars between Hugo and McAlester.
@thepuppiesinpink7 ай бұрын
I used to visit those McDonalds fairly frequently as a kid. My family was somehow never the only family meeting people there to hand off a kid. Either between divorced parents or grandparents taking the kid for a week. Even as a kid I thought it was weird that you’d just see other kids with suitcases getting in different cars and no one ever checked to make sure everything was like….good. 😂
@jamessummers-dm7me7 ай бұрын
The Mcdonalds in Vinita, on the Toll road is much nicer now. I think The one on the Indian Nations at Dustin may be closed.
@drtee517 ай бұрын
The Indian Nation itself is in poor shape. Nowhere near Interstate quality.
@SevargMT7 ай бұрын
@@drtee51 Evidently you haven't driven on I-40 then gotten onto the Indian Nation Turnpike lately. The turnpike is MUCH better than the interstate! Plus the speed limit is 80 MPH...
@drtee517 ай бұрын
@@SevargMT No I haven't. Thanks for the perspective.
@Txmaverick4137 ай бұрын
I live in Tyler Texas, and I used to work in Kansas City. So while your video makes the Indian nation turnpike look useless, it actually saves me a lot of time in getting across Oklahoma. I've probably driven the INT hundreds of times and it literally is the quickest way to go to get to Kansas from Tyler.
@tommarney15617 ай бұрын
It's also a key portion of the best routes from Tulsa to Beaumont and Lake Charles, and not too bad of an alternative route to Houston if you really, really want to avoid Dallas.
@davidschumann91827 ай бұрын
You have that 2 lane tollway that goes around Tyler that should be free I’ve been on that.
@Txmaverick4137 ай бұрын
@@davidschumann9182 You sir are right! Loop 49 in Tyler is a great idea, but making it a toll road was absolutely dumb!
@johngaither92637 ай бұрын
I bet you and the two other people who use it regularly appreciate it a great deal!
@andrewreynolds49497 ай бұрын
INT is also the best way to get from OKC and that area to Texarkana, southern Arkansas or northern Louisiana. I’ve used it several times now, it’s impressive how much time it cuts off certain journeys.
@banana77537 ай бұрын
I live in the OKC area. The amount of toll roads in the entire state is just absurd. I understand having a toll road here and there (many states have that). But, there shouldn’t be a need for 4 turnpikes around Tulsa (Turner, Will Rogers, Muskogee, Creek), for example. For those saying “you should see Texas, Illinois, New York, etc,” keep in mind, those states are WAY bigger than Oklahoma. They not only have way more people driving on their roads, but they have quite a bit more roads to manage (so more toll roads in those kinds of places might be more understandable). I think this whole issue with toll roads in Oklahoma is just OTA being greedy, and literally no one is questioning them and their practices.
@colormedubious47477 ай бұрын
Read "The Power Broker" by Robert Caro. You'll understand EVERYTHING.
@langhamp89127 ай бұрын
It's because there's a strong financial incentive to build roads but not to maintain them. A lot of the poorer states are heavily dependent upon Federal highway grants. The 1956 Federal Highway act provides 90% of the funding while the state and local government provides 10%. For some states such as Alabama's 108/126 exchange (which costs $400,000,000 dollars but only serves 120 families ie 3.3 million dollars per household), such boondoggles provide huge financial gains to local and state governments. Toll roads are slightly different but they also get huge amounts of Federal Funding. Texas, for instance, managed to divert nearly 90% of their alternative transportation to road widening. Basically, every state DOT's answer is to build more roads and widen existing roads using Federal grants. I don't think DOT's will sleep soundly until their states are covered with roads and parking lots.
@mosaloquendo7 ай бұрын
why would the state subsidize something that is not used by a lot of people?
@markrosenthal91087 ай бұрын
@@mosaloquendo Eisenhower thought the highway system would support military logistics if we were invaded by a traditional army.
@TruckerMan19797 ай бұрын
Something to keep in mind on the Indian Nation Trpk, that is an almost direct route from Tinker Airforce Base in OKC to the Red River Army Depot just west of Texarkana AR. I’m a truck driver and I’ve hauled several loads to and from these bases. Before anybody says that Army and Air Force are 2 different branches, there is a program called Army & Air Force Exchange Service, AAFES for short. They do alot of things in conjunction with each other.
@elijahgolson29377 ай бұрын
JUST THIS LAST WEEK The Kilpatrick turnpike will become I-344 and the Kickapoo Turnpike will be I-335....both still maintaining toll status..... (OKC metro area) Also beyond glad to see a video focused on my home state! Great video!
@MileageMike4857 ай бұрын
Good to know.
@the_next_197 ай бұрын
Why is it 335 if it connects 40 to 44?
@elijahgolson29377 ай бұрын
@@the_next_19 I asked myself the same question, but I guess because it runs north-south….only logical thing other than 335 made OKC sound bigger cause it’s another auxiliary interstate lol…
@elijahgolson29377 ай бұрын
Originally, it was planned for whole thing to become I240 loop, but I think access Oklahoma has the idea of extending the Kickapoo to I-35 near Purcell, perhaps that’s why they’ve gone with I-335?
@SnowmanTF27 ай бұрын
@@the_next_19 The 40-44 segment is the first phase, an expansion to I-35 south of Norman has already been approved.
@stopthetollok7 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing a video on this! We appreciate it so much when we see others actually paying attention to what is happening with the tollroads in our state. We (Oklahoman's for Responsible Transportation / aka Pike Off OTA) are working hard over here trying to correct our state laws that allow the OTA to continue racking up debt in our state at the cost of our citizens. We are a non-profit made up of hard working citizen advocates who volunteer our time to trying to make the state's transportation better for tomorrow. Many of us are victims of the Access Oklahoma program where it is currently estimated that over 500-600 homes will be lost to the East-West Connector and Southern Extension of the Access program. (Numbers based on aerial photos of the initial route which the OTA claimed was the lowest number of homes affected.) As to the video, the reason the turnpikes can continue to build unprofitable roads, even though the law says it must be economical, is because in 1954 just a couple years after the OTA was created they convinced voters (some may say tricked or lied to voters) to pass cross pledging. This allows them to say that the turnpike system as a whole is what must be economical, not just a single route. So they use the money from the profitable turnpikes (Turner & HE Bailey) and use them to pay for the non-profitable ones like the Kickapoo, Indian Nations, and Ada turnpikes. Then when money starts getting tight they start a new one to reissue bonds. The Access Oklahoma plan's E-W Connector was added to the enabling act for the turnpike in 1987... not to age myself too much but I was just a little kid back then. Part of the agreement with the E-W Connector (and the entire "Outer Loops") where that they were to be built under one bond. §69-1705 paragraph (f) This set the case for the Pike Off OTA lawsuit. The case was heard in the OK Supreme court where the majority opinion essentially stated that this is how we have always done it so we will just ignore that statement shortly after the same court "mysteriously" reversed their own decision on another case against the OTA. That case was an Open Meetings Act case won in summary judgement by Attorney Stan Ward. The judge ruled they blatantly violated the law. When Stan filed a Qui Tam lawsuit against them and the contractors to return the money spent to the state, the OK Supreme Court reversed their decision on the Open Meetings Act case and then ruled that the bonds were valid. The two cases set a precedence in Oklahoma law that allows for very vague agenda items for Open Meetings and that the OTA can build anywhere in the state so long as they connect it to another turnpike. Another thing about following the money... the OTA continually buys more land than needed and sells excess lands to sub division contractors who get the property taken using the eminent domain (or threat there of) at a cheaper price then having to buy it directly from the owner. They in turn, then build subdivisions and rental properties. Once those are built they start promoting turnpikes again to help take more homes and farms from the citizens of our state to build more pointless turnpikes. Our studies have shown that the OTA continually pays sub market values to people whose land they condemn. Estimates have been close to $100k less on average. One developer who tried to work with the OTA on one of his properties recently posted that he was offered half its value a $3 million dollar difference. Then Oklahoma tax payers are on the hook either way as money from our gas tax can be used by the OTA when their funds fall short. ODOT and OTA continue to neglect maintenance on turnpikes and the freeways while they push for new roads. Oklahoma is #1 in toll road miles per capita and will be #1 in miles flat out if Access Oklahoma continues. As to whether any will be paid off, not until we get some legislators and a governor with the courage to tell them no more. If we are ever successful in paying off a tollroad and return it to the state, then the state would be able to get federal money to help maintain it, but until then Oklahomans (and our visitors) will continue to foot the bill. Anyone can read more at pikeoffota.com and see a few of the stories at stopthetollok.com (though I have not had time to do any new videos on that site due to lack of time.). Thanks again for doing such a great job on the video. Please continue to spread the word.
@johnandrews237 ай бұрын
This reminds me of an old Mad Magazine cartoon. A guy pulls up to a tollgate and says "Officer, I happen to know that tolls have paid for this road many times over!" The tolltaker replies, "I know, now you're paying for the maintenance of these tollgates."
@langhamp89127 ай бұрын
As a person who used to work in state finance, I can tell you right now that no road has been or will ever be fully funded by toll roads AND taxes on drivers. The building and maintenance of roads is so expensive that extra money has to be raised via sales taxes, municipal bonds, and Federal improvement programs (ie handouts). Hawaii currently has the highest road taxes (taxes collectively levied against drivers) at about 85% of the cost of roads, while places like Alabama, Texas, and the southern coastal states have somewhere between 40 to 60% of their roads covered by drivers.
@markl29137 ай бұрын
That's BS
@markl29137 ай бұрын
I wish there was some way you could contact me mileage Mike. I have some information that I have gathered in Texas with your information. Maybe we could both go to Congress and kick their tails.
@KitchensbySavina7 ай бұрын
Thanks for the lesson Mike. I never knew this about Oklahoma.
@kennypalermo90717 ай бұрын
I-335 and I-344 are coming to Oklahoma City.
@shayne877 ай бұрын
Wow this was really in-depth. I feel lucky to live in NJ where a toll road is for crossing a bridge or tunnel or traveling far, fast. And most tolls here can be easily avoided albeit at the expense of time and sometimes not even that. In fact there are times i toggle the toll roads off on my GPS only to find that the free road is less than 3 minutes slower and sometimes more fuel efficient
@ReferMadness7 ай бұрын
Anyone who says I-35 is the preferable route through Austin has never driven I-35 through Austin lol
@williambrassfield41557 ай бұрын
Toll-lahoma. You hit the nail right on the head, Mike
@terrywall32877 ай бұрын
Texas gained a lot of toll roads while Perry was Gov. I will drive out of my way to avoid toll roads here in Texas. To add insult to it all, the state continues to have trouble with the revenue program that bills the drivers for the toll fees.
@isocarboxazid7 ай бұрын
Insult? Ain't nothing more capitalist than charging for a road you're using.
@apexone55027 ай бұрын
@@isocarboxazid or charging for roads that your taxes were supposed to pay for.
@yankeedude2527 ай бұрын
@@isocarboxazidThere would be nothing wrong with tolls if there wasn't already a fuel tax, which is notably *not* capitalist.
@brianjonker5107 ай бұрын
@@yankeedude252 You seem to know nothing about costs.
@yankeedude2527 ай бұрын
@@brianjonker510 I'm a business owner, try again.
@fldon23067 ай бұрын
Great vid Mike! I’ve done I-44, from MO to Wichita Falls, TX, the Muskogee Turnpike, and two months ago I drove the Indian Nations Turnpike from Hugo to McAllister, mostly cause I-49 isn’t built from Shreveport to Fort Smith. Yeah, was devoid of traffic! Best news, PikePass and Florida’s SunPass are accepted in both states now; no more ATM stops for cash-only OK tolls!
@lancehammons59187 ай бұрын
They're talking about possibly starting to accept ezpass here soon
@danieldaniels75717 ай бұрын
That toll road to McAlester is really nice.
@johnrickard85127 ай бұрын
@@lancehammons5918that would mean my KTAG will start working on the EZPass network... I like the sound of that
@504deadshot_reaper7 ай бұрын
There are no more toll booths. Either have some type of pikepass or toll tag that Oklahoma recognizes or the amount they'll charge you by mail would make the fuel usage for not using the turnpike cheaper
@tomasmowery1647 ай бұрын
I feel the same way as well about Tolls. I live in New Jersey near McGuire Airforce Base. I often go to Cabela's across the Delaware Memorial Bridge and I just take I-295 to get there. Still have to pay the toll for the bridge but save a lot of money since you don't have to pay a toll at all coming back unless you take the New Jersey Turnpike. I go to Tennessee multiple times a year and plan on going through there to go to Talladega Superspeedway in Alabama for the Nascar and World of Outlaws Late Models races. With the heavy tolling between Washington D.C and the Delaware Memorial Bridge I just go the Pennsylvania Turnpike to Carlisle and jump onto I-81 all the way down to Tennessee where I usually stay at a friend's house. This time I keep on going onto I-40, I-75, I-24, and I-59 because they're all toll free and only 10 minutes slower.
@tomasmowery1647 ай бұрын
The only Toll roads I use are the Pennsylvania Turnpike to get to I 81 to go to Tennessee since it's $45 there and back for cars. $80 with my camper I'm bringing to Talladega. The other one is Delaware State 1 to go to my Mom's. She lives in Virginia North of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel. The Delaware Memorial Bridge is between that and would cost $17 with Route 1 and the Bridge combined.
@SirFlamealot7 ай бұрын
There is no MN toll road
@reh3037 ай бұрын
I live in Ocean County so I don't take the NJ Turnpike often, but I'd rather use it than 295. If it was a daily commute I'd absolutely feel differently.
@kennypalermo90717 ай бұрын
@@reh303 The Garden State Parkway (GSP) used to be a toll road.
@reh3037 ай бұрын
@@kennypalermo9071 It still is.
@kennethwilliams-dl9gi7 ай бұрын
i sometimes read maps for fun or just to pass time or to improve knowledge and i did notice a lot of toll roads in Oklahoma, wondering why. thanks for explaining.
@jesscarey76667 ай бұрын
I enjoy these type of road video. Thanks!
@amouryf7 ай бұрын
For Toronto, the reason why the 407 is used is for people who don't want to sit in 401 traffic. The 401 is pretty busy, but soon the Highway 413 can be useful if you're heading west to north or north to west and don't want to sit in the traffic of the 401.
@DiscoDashco7 ай бұрын
Hey, just wanted to say hello, and mention how much I enjoyed this video. Your narration is quite pleasant to listen to with cleaning and housework too! Watching real people is more enjoyable than anything AI generated. All the best from Austin!
@8avexp7 ай бұрын
US 36 between Denver and Boulder was originally a toll highway. The bonds were retired in 1967 and it became a free highway, but locals still call it the Denver-Boulder Turnpike.
@drtee517 ай бұрын
That's right. Originially they weren't going to build it because they said it would never pay off. Then they paid the bonds off 10 years or so early. It cost a quarter back then to drive the whole route. Way less than any of the Colorado toll roads cost now!
@CraigFThompson7 ай бұрын
And now the damned thing is even MORE EXPENSIVE to the taxpayers thanks ever was before! There really NEVER is anything known as a "free" highway; EVERYONE, regardless of vehicle ownership or not, MUST pay heavily into the support of these "Hitler strips"....
@gbd-oq1rz5 ай бұрын
Yeah but now so many people use that road I know because I live and work in Boulder
@CraigFThompson5 ай бұрын
A "free" highway?! Ain't no such thing; they ALL cost sup'm.... If each and every centimeter of the interstate stuperhighways were toll highways, the country wouldn't be wasting more than $800 billion dollars annually....
@mabus425 ай бұрын
Mike, I really love your videos as a fellow road geek. Keep up the great work.
@paulbrower7 ай бұрын
1. Oklahoma started early, and the Turner and Will Rogers Turnpikes were successes. They were cheap to build due to low costs of acquiring land, no real mountains, and no big bodies of water to bridge. Oklahoma City and Tulsa are the two largest cities, so two lanes in both directions were enough to meet the needs of traffic.The toll segments were not built in the cities themselves, so that allowed well-separated interchanges. 2. Oklahoma's turnpikes are rural, and they have been built in anticipation of population growth. Oklahoma City and Tulsa have extensive freeway systems in the cities. Oklahoma has only three significant rural freeways: I-35 and I-40 crossing in Oklahma City, and the spotty US 69 between Durant and Muskogee. This is the opposite of Texas and Florida, whose freeways are the norm in rural areas and tollways are in metro areas (even if Tyler in Texas). (If I had my way as a transportation planner, I would build freeways in rural areas and slap heavy tolls on urban expressways so that middle-class people would consider using buses and keeping vehicle traffic light in cities. That's the opposite of what Oklahoma has done).
@leechjim80237 ай бұрын
California has done something like that with toll express lanes.
@longiusaescius25377 ай бұрын
Huh
@good4jg7 ай бұрын
1. I agree that the toll roads here work well, but think they're ripe for another lane in each direction. ODOT seems to agree, as that's been gradually happening between Tulsa and Oklahoma City. 2. The idea of adequate public transit is a good one, but in the vastness that is Oklahoma City, it is one that's been consistently rejected, probably because of the expense. What has a better chance of occurring is a transition to toll roads in the metro area without any of the revenue being used to support an expansion of public transit. I would include US 412 in your list, and call it spotty as well.
@djsdjsjdjshjwbdnskdk5 ай бұрын
Your first point doesn’t really address the video. Your second point was in part already addressed (population growth-where?!), then your idea of heavy fees and busses ignores reality. How often do YOU take mass transit, by the way, and does your area already have well-developed mass transit?
@paulbrower5 ай бұрын
@@djsdjsjdjshjwbdnskdk I live in a rural area.
@cougartonyusa7 ай бұрын
Great video. Are you ever going to do the nation's oldest and, now, most expensive toll road in the country? The PA Turnpike. Lots to cover, Mike, with the winding road out of Bedford, the Harrisburg area over the Susquehanna River, Revolutionary War towns of York and Lancaster, and of course the juncture with the NJ Turnpike. As you can tell, Mike, I'm a big fan of your work. Showing us your self while talking is a plus. Thanks.
@freeparking3017 ай бұрын
And of course the old way I 95 used to not have a ramp onto the turnpike to go into Jersey. I found that out the hard way 20 years ago as I travelled up I 95 went around Trenton and then all of a sudden I was heading back towards Philly south on I 295…that new ramp in Bucks County finally made I 95 continuous
@Zip2times7 ай бұрын
I will say the Indian Nation Turnpike makes driving through Oklahoma’s tough terrain. Most of the traffic comes from McAlester from the US69-75 Junction. US 75 takes you to Durant, Sherman, and Dallas directly from Tulsa. There’s a ton of tourist traffic that comes from Broken Bow/Hocahtown and using that turnpikes beats taking smaller roads. It’d be interesting to see how much that highway gets built IF the Kickapoo Turnpike extension is built.
@Senthiuz7 ай бұрын
Indian nation is great on the Dallas Tulsa route, but that's mostly because 75, which should be the obvious best route, is so horribly underdeveloped that not only is Indian Nation faster, but going through OKC is also faster.
@MyManEarl7 ай бұрын
Great video, love your content Mileage Mike. Good stuff, keep it coming!
@mikesherman48147 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I grew up in Tulsa in the 1950’s and am still waiting for the free roads that were promised.
@Senthiuz7 ай бұрын
Nope, more toll roads.
@Chris-nt1ns7 ай бұрын
Something to add to the discussion... US 412 is slated to become an interstate from I-35 to I-49 in NW Arkansas.
@davidtosh72006 ай бұрын
They have announced I-42 as future interstate along US-412 in both Arkansas and Oklahoma. We will have (2) of I-42, and the other one is in North Carolina. Why not be either I-46, I-48, or I-52 instead of I-42.
@JamesCovington-WX5JJC7 ай бұрын
Moved to southern Oklahoma from Indiana in 2017. No toll roads in my area, but I of course run into them when I travel much of anywhere.... especially Tulsa. I'd VERY much like to see the US-69 corridor upgraded as an extension of I-45... getting thru Muskogee is a real pain! But, I'd be less fond of the idea if it's going to be toll.
@MountainDewComacho4947 ай бұрын
Great report! I've always wondered about why we have so many toll roads. Now to answer some of the questions you asked about a couple of the roads to nowhere: I have gone between Tulsa and Witchita numerous times, but I think most of the traffic on the Cimarron turnpike gets you close to Stillwater and the surrounding area. The Indian Nation turnpike seems like a road to nowhere, but you have to partially travel on it on your way to Dallas from Tulsa.
@tomasmowery1647 ай бұрын
You should talk about the original Pennsylvania Turnpike. This is the highway that led to the current interstate highway system and was the very first superhighway as well as toll road in the country.
@MileageMike4857 ай бұрын
Definitely on the list
@mayavenuemisfit8147 ай бұрын
As well as today the most expensive toll road in the country.
@leechjim80237 ай бұрын
Connecticut's Merritt Parkway was the first toll superhighway to open.
@tomasmowery1647 ай бұрын
@@mayavenuemisfit814 My cousins came up to New Jersey from Tennessee and had to pay $90 to get from Washington D.C. to the Delaware Memorial Bridge. I only pay $44 to take the Pennsylvania Turnpike to I-81 in Carlisle. I used to camp in Fredericksburg and it cost $150 between D.C. and the Delaware Memorial Bridge. The Pennsylvania Turnpike would cost $75 to get to Carlisle.
@CraigFThompson7 ай бұрын
@@tomasmowery164In ALL actuality, the highway network that led to the stuperhighways we suffer with today were a NAZI GERMAN product, btw....
@SnowmanTF27 ай бұрын
From what I had heard, the Chickasaw turnpike was more due to keeping support in the Oklahoma Legislature, part of it never finishing the connection to I-35 and Ada was it's political backers losing their positions. While OTA may have business leanings, it basically tends to have the same executive as ODOT, and builds projects ODOT would if it either had the funds or could borrow to the same level. Even the last couple expansion waves get announced with geographic distribution that seem politically motivated, in similar to how ODOT seems to will often phase projects so is consistently doing projects all around the state, even when doing more focus in some areas might save money on major projects or have larger impact.
@Default783347 ай бұрын
The Chickasaw Turnpike is the remnants of a plan to bribe rural state legislators to approve roads that were actually useful by offering them a bypass around OKC between I-35 and I-40 while also connecting Ada to the Interstate system.
@paulbrower7 ай бұрын
Oklahoma does not "distribute" toll roads in the northwestern quadrant of the state. Population obviously thins out rapidly to the northwest of greater OKC.
@kiphenry46847 ай бұрын
There’s more to the Chickasaw Turnpike story. In the late 1980s, OTA announced a plan to build the Kilpatrick and Creek urban turnpikes in OKC and Tulsa. Rural legislators still dominated the OK legislature and wanted a pike to run from Sulphur to Ada and Henrietta, and passed a bill prohibiting the urban pikes from being built unless the Chickasaw turnpike was included in the package. The sitting governor, Henry Bellmon, thought the Chickasaw would be a money-loser (which it was and is), and so ordered OTA to build it as a two lane road. OTA didn’t want to build it, and has tried to sell it to ODOT, but they didn’t have the money. As with so many other government building projects, politics always interferes.
@kanealoha7 ай бұрын
Love your videos, Mike. Keep up the good work!
@MileageMike4857 ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@nlpnt7 ай бұрын
Bugs Bunny would just burrow to Oklahoma, and end up somewhere in Canada after a wrong turn at Albuquerque. Foil, Arms and Hog are still at the Tulsa airport arguing with Fuct Car Rental.
@johnrickard85127 ай бұрын
I 'new I shoulda taken 'dat left türn at Albequerque!
@woodencoasterfan7 ай бұрын
The 407 ETR in the Toronto area is insanely expensive route and even more so for tractor trailers.
@justbe44817 ай бұрын
The only thing I a Oklahoman like about the tolls are the speed limit is 80 and everyone goes ten mph over that so we do get around the state very quickly 😂
@vanology36067 ай бұрын
They really should be 100MPH
@good4jg7 ай бұрын
@@vanology3606That's usually where I am...
@ProwlXV7 ай бұрын
Every time I go down the Turner people are doing like 100
@justbe44817 ай бұрын
@@ProwlXV it's getting a up grade to three lanes that should be a Missy slower drive for the next two or three years .
@ProwlXV7 ай бұрын
@@justbe4481 I am aware. It is not a drive I do often but I am excited for it to be 3 lanes instead of 2.
@davidgarrett97117 ай бұрын
I love watching all your great videos. I will put on one of your shows and listen to my other bloggers. Also I you take me to places I doubt I'll ever see. Thanks again.
@davidtosh72005 ай бұрын
There will be several of auxiliary routes throughout Oklahoma, and they are: I-144 (Gilcrease Turnpike) in Tulsa Oklahoma, I-335 (Kickapoo Turnpike) east of Oklahoma City, and I-344 (Fitzpatrick Turnpike) as of western loop of Oklahoma City are added for the newest interstate toll roads.
@NintendoGamer26004 ай бұрын
Since when was the Gilcrease designated I-144? It is currently designated OK-344. Also, not to be mean, but it is the Kilpatrick Turnpike, not Fitzpatrick.
@parsleylady62365 ай бұрын
You can take US Hwy 66 from OKC to Tulsa just plan on adding an extra hour to your time to get there. The Tuner turnpike makes it easy. Thank you for the informative information. My least favorite toll road is the Indian Nation Turnpike, that road is so rough and in bad shape for how expensive it is.
@ToddHa7 ай бұрын
I take one of either two routes to get from STL to DFW: I-44 West to I-49 South, then I-40 West to US Hwy 69/75. Toll Free til I arrive in DFW. Or, the other way: I-44 West to US Hwy 69/75 at Big Cabin. Just a small portion of Toll I-44, between Joplin & Big Cabin. My return trips to STL are via I-30/US Hwy 67/I-55. I like alittle variety on my trips. Different scenery.
@AllAmericanGuyExpert7 ай бұрын
That new-ish I-49 is great. It just reeks of taxpayer money though, lol. I am not sure of the I-55/I-555 yet ... some of it is so new that there are no services in the area. I think I prefer the I-49 route.
@good4jg7 ай бұрын
Clever!
@Sir_Austin_T_Gee7 ай бұрын
I go to STL from Lubbock, Texas a few times a year and I just take 44 from Wichita Falls all the way in to Kingshighway and I take the same way back. I hate the tolls but I hate driving 14+ hours even more. Like I just made this trip and got back to Lubbock about 12 hours before posting this comment. Left STL at 830 AM and made it to LBK at 1030pm. Of course I stop on the way to fuel and eat but I have to run a consistent 85 just to make it in 14 hours 😂😂 shit sucks.
@DanH-u3f7 ай бұрын
Toll roads will work great to reduce congestion in large urban areas during rush hour.
@deborahmartin39202 ай бұрын
Not in Oklahoma, everyone avoids them.
@kevinw-fishwhisperer7 ай бұрын
that was one of your best I've seen.💯
@MA-Route287 ай бұрын
You’re so right about the Boston -> Worcester, US-20 & MA-9 go directly from one another but so painful. Adds on milage too ofc but I’m a fan of route 2 westbound out to Leominster then 190 south to Worcester for the scenery
@tyfrank34277 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. There's only 2 instances of tolls being removed that I know of, both being in British Columbia. One is the Coquihalla Highway, the other is the Port Mann bridge. The reason the Coquihalla worked well is it was built as a bypass to the Fraser and Thompson Canyon route where twinning the old road would be virtually impossible, and it cut travel time by 2 hours. The Pennsylvania Turnpike was one of the first controlled access divided highways (it and the QEW in Ontario are thought to be the first 2 in the Western Hemisphere) and is still tolled to this day. Although the promise has been that once the highway is paid for, it will become free is usually a farce, and except for BC, to my knowledge it's never happened in North America.
@fredmckinney89337 ай бұрын
There are actually 2 states here in the US that had toll roads at one time but don't anymore, and for different reasons. Connecticut had toll roads from 1938 to 1988. But in 1983, a truck driver fell asleep behind the wheel on the Connecticut Turnpike, and crashed into a car stopped at a tollbooth carrying a family on vacation from out of state. That accident killed the truck driver, that entire family, and two tollboth workers. 2 years later, the state ordered all tolls removed on the Connecticut Turnpike, followed by orders to remove tolls on the state's other two toll roads in 1988, on the Merritt Parkway and the Wilbur Cross Parkway. Kentucky, OTOH, has a state law ordering that toll collection cease when the bonds for the toll roads are paid off. From 1955 to 1975, Kentucky built a series of parkways that charged tolls. But that law first kicked in when the Kentucky Turnpike (I-65) was paid off in 1976. Since that time, tolls have disappeared on its other parkways one by one, until November of 2006, when Kentucky's last two toll roads were paid off. As a result, Kentucky has not had any toll roads at all since that time.
@jimmyaber59207 ай бұрын
The section of I30 from Ft Worth to Dallas was toll and its bonds were paid off and it quit being a toll road in 1978.
@metarus2087 ай бұрын
Great job Mike. If you can do more videos about Austin and California, that would be great!
@franksantore28107 ай бұрын
Mike, as a part time resident, soon to be full time resident, of OK. the beautiful thing is that there is ALWAYS an alternative to the toll roads. In OKC, I always take the surface streets and ignore the Kilpatrick and Kickapoo Turnpikes. Going to Tulsa, I plan my trip to give me enough time to take US 66 instead of the Turner
@pl7477 ай бұрын
The good thing is they have Oklahoma Highway Patrols dedicated to the turnpikes to try to catch you speeding so they can add your ticket to the state coffers. They even have their own club house at McAlester. And, it seems the tolls go up about every year lately.
@drewmitchell95547 ай бұрын
Cool to see you cover this topic. I've lived on and off in Tulsa since 2008 but you missed an opportunity to cover the political history around the later toll expansions. OK is a strange critter of a state; rural legislators have outsize political heft, like many states, but that's also exacerbated here by the cities voting more conservative than their density should correlate with, and the state having two large population centers splitting the urban needs instead of one matters also (think MSP and MN, or ORD and IL). The most egregious rural turnpike routings are the result of urban-rural compromises that had to be hammered out in the 1980s-90s to get needed urban bypass and ring road turnpikes through at all. I couldn't quote scripture and verse of the authority mechanism at you but the legislature has significant control over what gets built even if OTA is nominally independent. Sure enough, the albatross rural turnpikes have been money losers. OTA has tried to hand parts of them over to ODOT over the years.
@drewmitchell95547 ай бұрын
PS as a pikepass frequent flyer (again, i live in Tulsa), i feel like Oklahoma's reliance on toll roads is a happy historical accident. Road users should pay for roads.
@TheToxicTing7 ай бұрын
In October 23 I was driving around the Chicago area from Ohio, about a month later i received a Toll road Bill from Illinois.
@NinjaoftheNorth7 ай бұрын
Thank you for pronouncing Worcester correctly!!
@adawg20157 ай бұрын
I think you forgot Will Rogers Turnpike overlapping I-44 from Tulsa to Joplin.
@Weebaha6 ай бұрын
Coming down from Des Moines, this is actually the faster route to Dallas (and the eastern DFW suburbs) than just taking 35 the whole way. I did find it weird that when we exit at US-69 to head south, they actually give you a since I guess you pay for a certain distance when you first cross into Oklahoma?
@805NAVE7 ай бұрын
What a coincidence that you upload this video now haha. Just last week I drove these toll roads from Tulsa to OKC, and paid cash at their toll both. Being a California , living in San Diego, for my ENTIRE life still living in California, these toll roads are nuts! We have open freeways non tolled from ALL major cities , LA - LV, LA - SD, LA - SF , SF - Sac etc. what’s the deal
@AllAmericanGuyExpert7 ай бұрын
My son just drove some of these stupid toll roads because he had to go to OKC for the first time. He is young and unfamiliar with cash toll booths, and accidentally went through two toll tag lanes ... oops! In his world, he had only seen the pay-by-plate kind, and it really confused him.
@royaviles50047 ай бұрын
I go out of my way to avoid the toll roads here in OK as much as possible. OTA is corrupt and needs to go. When a toll road is paid off, it should become free, not continued to be tolled to subsidize more unused toll roads. The cycle will never end
@fredmckinney89337 ай бұрын
Kentucky has a state law -- and they, believe it or not, enforce it -- that says toll roads must cease toll collection when the bonds for construction are paid off. While Kentucky was building its parkways from the mid-50's to the mid-70's, Kentucky hasn't had any toll roads at all since November of 2006. If Kentucky can do that, why can't Oklahoma?
@ThraxMan847 ай бұрын
It’s mind boggling having toll roads that go from nowhere to nowhere. We don’t have toll roads in Michigan (aside from border crossings into Canada and a few bridges), but is being discussed as a way to raise revenue for our crumbling roads and bridges. Nobody wants more gas taxes. Michigan applies the state sales tax to gasoline but that doesn’t go towards roads but goes towards education and other public programs. In my opinion, any taxes paid at the pump should be dedicated towards roads. Other ideas being floated here are mileage based fees and increases to car registrations. I think limited tolling would be viable here.
@Oklahoman-in6ph7 ай бұрын
I learned a lot Mike, thanks for the Info. Newest Subscriber! See you on the next one Mike.
@MileageMike4857 ай бұрын
Thanks for the sub!
@wavetro7 ай бұрын
loving the new camera
@ryanf44977 ай бұрын
I live in the Tulsa area and I just wanted to say that the map at the 9:18 timestamp has portions of highways incorrectly shown as toll roads. The portion of I-44 near Catoosa before it heads northeast to Joplin is not a toll road. Also, part of I-44 near Oakhurst is not a toll road either.
@sylkwoods85323 ай бұрын
Great video. With profits to be made during the introduction of toll roads; Was the bidding for suitors opened to Foreign bidders as well??
@rlg1976x7 ай бұрын
This makes me appreciate Kentucky since I believe they're the only state that got rid of all of its toll roads.
@truckercowboyed26387 ай бұрын
And yet those sections are still well maintained and some of the smoothest roads .....proof that a continuous toll isn't needed to maintain a good road.....
@haroldhechinger58507 ай бұрын
That would be a good episode for him to do -- where the tolls actually got removed!
@asamyers45727 ай бұрын
Connecticut too. We had tolls on quite a few roads and bridges, but they were removed back in the 80’s. It’s actually funny to see how we’re the only state on the eastern seaboard to not have tolls
@chrism37847 ай бұрын
there's a toll on the bridge to Indiana on I-65, don't know who's side it is but is only toll I see going from alabama to michigan. I avoid it by taking us-31 at the cost of maybe 5-10 minutes
@davestewart20677 ай бұрын
There was a fiery gruesome pileup at a Connecticut toll barrier in the mid eighties. That was apparently why the turnpike in that state was decommissioned.
@lancehammons59187 ай бұрын
Indian national does have a purpose of being useful Lot of trucks going towards Texarkana from okc, Wichita, and Tulsa Cimarron and Chickasaw have there use as a shortcut between Wichita and nw Arkansas Muskogee and Cimarron are a good shortcut from Memphis and little Rock to points west or vise versa
@metarus2087 ай бұрын
thanks for this Michael
@ronansanjuan7 ай бұрын
About the 407 Toronto bypass - It MIGHT be a quicker way to bypass Toronto if you're going from points farther west to farther east of Toronto, say from Detroit to Montreal, if and only if the traffic on the more direct 401 is slow - like if there's a major accident or something. Luckily, there are many other 400 highways that connect to both so if a section of 401 is slow, you can take the 407 for that particular section, but yes, 407 is expensive!!
@thomasofnowhere7 ай бұрын
I'm from Oklahoma. I expect any day for someone to put a toll box on my porch before I'm allowed to walk to my driveway.
@yrt.037 ай бұрын
11:31 Shoutout to Tullahoma, TN!
@EthanCowlbeck7 ай бұрын
I drove the Indian Nation Turnpike to get to Paris last year. Wouldn’t do it again, but don’t regret it. It was actually a gorgeous drive
@andrewevans4947Ай бұрын
The INT was the quickest way for me to get to my family farms and grandparents in Joplin, Mo from East Texas. Otherwise I’m driving 2 hours west from Longview to DFW then up US75/US69… it was worth it to me lol
@bobbun96303 ай бұрын
I live in neighboring Northwest Arkansas. There are a lot of reasons to do business locally rather than visiting Tulsa. The Cherokee Turnpike is another item on the list, even though it's probably a decent example of a turnpike in Oklahoma that meets the success criteria.
@davidmblabla7 ай бұрын
Actually the Indian Nation turnpike was geared towards the trucking industry. As a truck driver I had to take this route quite a bit to get to Tulsa from TexASS. There is a lot of industry in East Texas that goes to the Tulsa and Kansas City Joplin etc. for some reason the company sponsored routing always took me up that damn Indian turnpike 7:28
@REAL-UNKNOWN-SHINOBI7 ай бұрын
At this point I'm anticipating I-35 turning into a toll road because why the hell not, we already turned half of the major highway stretches in Oklahoma into toll roads anyways.
@fredmckinney89337 ай бұрын
Won't happen due to federal law prohibiting tolls on any highways built with any any amount of federal funding.
@tommc37647 ай бұрын
Toll 130 in Austin TX is a less direct, but it avoids crushing rush hour traffic through the center of Austin.
@dancarlton79737 ай бұрын
PA, FL also have many toll roads. In PA I once avoided toll I-76 by driving on nearby US 30.
@jonkeau51557 ай бұрын
Stillwater has one of the largest colleges in the state, that turnpike is packed during football season and every Friday/Monday. Ponca City further down that road is a huge oil town.
@williamchristian83897 ай бұрын
Thanks so much Mike. Wonderful!!!!
@albertsancho59097 ай бұрын
All that toll revenue Oklahoma collects and still can't increase the funding for schools healthcare and infrastructure.
@billdang39537 ай бұрын
One has to wonder if at least some of the tool revenue is going onto somebody's retirement fund.
@Default783347 ай бұрын
I suspect most of the traffic on the Indian Nation Turnpike is travelers between Dallas and Tulsa taking that segment from McAlester to Henryetta.
@Ch1naVirus7 ай бұрын
Cool seeing you pass thru Sapulpa via 44 and the Gilcrease. That was just built in 2021. The OTA is corrupt.
@shootinputin63327 ай бұрын
Aussie here. Paris, Texas is one place I have heard of in that region due to one of the movie greats: Paris, Texas (1984)
@dwightanderson83317 ай бұрын
I live north of okc. The Kilpatrick turnpike has transformed north and northwest okc. It caused a boom in housing, jobs, and retail. It also provides a short cut from i 35 to i 40 on the Westside of the city to avoid going through the main part of town especially for teuckers. Its been extended from i 40 south to Tuttle/ Newcastle and H. E . Bailey turnpike going to Lawton and ft sill. It can save as much as an hour driving time or more. While I agree with some talking points turnpikes in Oklahoma can't be compared to Boston because of the size of each state and distance from here to there. Oklahoma also has free roads. In either case the turnpike systems are optional. Biggest winners are truckers and businessman that can ger to places faster because the route is short and has higher speed limit.
@ronaldsmith6817 ай бұрын
Great video, Mike. I agree that the Turnpike system in Oklahoma seems self-perpetuating, because each next generation of political leaders will prefer to bill the direct users of the turnpikes rather than the general public thru gasoline and other taxes. However, I will say that I'm a person that finds the Indian Nation Turnpike very helpful. I've lived in East Texas for 42 years, but my family remains in Kansas City, and the turnpike means my 13-hour drive from Nacogdoches, TX to KC involves only 1 hour of 2-lane roads. (US 259, TX 135, US 271, Indian Nation, US 69, I-44 (Will Rogers Turnpike), and finally I-49 or US 69). The Indian Nation provides the most direct access from Tulsa to both Dallas and Houston. And I notice there is a noticeable difference in road quality on Oklahoma's turnpikes (good) in comparison to US highways (poor) in the state. Oklahoma's non-turnpikes have to substantially deteriorate before the ODOT spends money to rehab and repair. I thought it was the colder winters compared to Texas, but Kansas and Missouri roads seem to get rehabbed and repaired long before Oklahoma's roads. Travel on US 69 inevitably involves a long bone-crunching stretch somewhere in Oklahoma.
@jakkuhl62237 ай бұрын
0:52 I have to go off topic amd share a story this bit about Oklahoma being "Southern" reminded me of. In the army, just got to Sill. Some guy from Northeast said this and all of us from the South and the few guys native to Oklahoma got up and told him as one that Oklahoma is not the South.
@rednekokie7 ай бұрын
I was in junior high school when the first turnpike, Turner Turnpike, was built, connecting Oklahoma City and Tulsa with a fast (70 mph) highway, bypassing the very slow two lane roads (65 mph, if you could get that fast). It was considered a marvel, and those of us who wanted to travel northeast toward St. Louis were also pleased with the extension of the Turner turnpike to Missouri. Since then, the OTA has become quite power hungry, designing, building, and paying for new, smaller, go - nowhere pikes all over the state in order to continue their hold on power. Many of us feel that if they could make I35 and I40 into turnpikes as well, they would certainly do it. They are simply following the Oklahoma habit of far too much government for far too few people. I hold a pike pass, and have for many years. It is free -- you just pay for the miles, and they are discounted -- and the amount you pay stays in your account until you use them, so there is actually a reduction in usage fees if you have one. While the short pikes which go nowhere are a nuisance, they don't take away from the usefulness of the longer pikes -- the Turner, especially, and the OKC-Lawton- Wichita Falls pike, are particularly useful, and I use them whenever I need travel across the state SW to NE and points in between. But the article is correct in assuming that the pitiful short runs are overly expensive, grossly underused, and mostly unnecessary. Thank you for bringing this subject up and exposing the stupid Oklahoma mentality in putting up with this nonsense.
@casey10277 ай бұрын
I would like to use my Pikepass less.... Two turnpikes you did not mention in this video are about to join the Interstate Highway system as The Kilpatrick Turnpike becomes Interstate 344 and the Kickapoo Turnpike becomes Intersate 335... of course both of them will remain Toll Roads.
@bambambundy67 ай бұрын
I've had a Pike Pass in Oklahoma for years and really only good thing is it works on many other state toll roads.
@MartinMazur7 ай бұрын
I tried the Cimarron Turnpike from Stillwater Tulsa, to get to Springfield, Mo, vs the state route, what time I saved was lost trying to navigate all the interchanges in Tulsa.
@eliteman76857 ай бұрын
Chicago I80, I want my toll fees back plus a new wheel alignment on my truck. HORRIBLE stretch of roads. Back around 2004, I went to Niagara Falls, Canada. Traveled from Massachusetts across New York. The tolls were not cheap, but I will say at that time New York’s tolls road were like glass smooth and some of the cleanest rest/service islands.
@SaintSteven677 ай бұрын
I live in Tulsa and have been here most of my life. I admit the toll roads are typically better maintained, but there are so many it has become a huge burden. Moreover, they are always working on it. Traveling from Tulsa to St. Louis is very interesting - because I make that trip quite a bit because of my St. Louis Cardinals fandom. I can only think of one time in which I made that trip and there was no construction going on within Oklahoma. Ironically, Missouri started using a newer type of pavement in the late 1990s that is far more durable than what the Oklahoma Turnpikes use. Also, the Interstates and state highways in Missouri seem to have less maintenance going on - without tolls. Also, I recently took a trip to OKC last December, and it was the first time in ages when no construction was going on.
@johngaither92637 ай бұрын
The Turner Turnpike bonds were paid for 25 years ago. The collected tolls are now used to pay for the other toll roads in the state which will never be paid off.
@ericg11495 ай бұрын
Ive been stationed at FT. SIll for almost 4 years and probably paid over $500 bucks in tolls, freaking crazy 🤪
@Bill.G7 ай бұрын
The Indian Nation turnpike is used by travelers from Tulsa to Dallas between Henryetta and US 69 near McAlester. I agree it would have been better to use the turnpike system to improve the route to Dallas south from there. The issue goes back to not extending I-45 north of Dallas to Tulsa and on to Kansas City. I agree that the routing of the Indian Nation turnpike south of that point makes no sense.
@kingpeachcolt7 ай бұрын
I went on the Indian Nation Turnpike a couple of years ago from OKC to Georgia. Not the ideal route, but considering it was snowing in Arkansas and Memphis, it did its job by keeping me away from snow driving and away from the mayhem known as Dallas drivers. (and another note: I’m pretty convinced that all of the tolls on this road go to keeping other roads in good shape…)
@street_ruffian7 ай бұрын
@6:04 one would probably take state route 9 between Boston and Worcester as opposed to US route 20. Rt 9 is actually still referred to as a turnpike is some areas although it is not tolled. But the fastest way, as you showed, is not on this road either. You can see this route if you select avoid highways.
@ace200167 ай бұрын
And here I thought Florida was the only southern state that had a lot of toll roads. At least the toll roads in Florida aren’t just connecting tiny population centers to tiny population centers. And the interstate highways here aren’t tolled. -Lifelong Cocoa, FL resident
@apexone55027 ай бұрын
You just reminded me of my visit to Orlando. While there, we decided to make a visit to Cocoa Beach. There were way too many toll stations on the way there.
@ace200167 ай бұрын
@@apexone5502 1)Yeah FL 528 is a toll road from its western terminus at I-4 to exit 31. All the limited access highways except I-4 in the Orlando Metropolitan Area are toll roads. 2)You can get to Cocoa Beach from Orlando while avoiding tolls. It involves taking the arterial roads from where you are staying at to get to FL 50. Then taking FL 50 east to FL 520. Then taking FL 520 directly to Cocoa Beach. But taking FL 50 to FL 520 to Cocoa Beach takes a LONG time compare to taking FL 528 to the beachside.
@apexone55027 ай бұрын
@@ace20016 yeah, I saw the alternate route on Google Maps and saw that it was a distance. I probably would've gone that way if I didn't have the wife and kids with me. I didn't feel like making them deal with having to ride much longer than necessary.
@realimbored6687 ай бұрын
Mike is a stud change my mind
@morgandouglas59557 ай бұрын
The 407 in Toronto acts like a bypass for long distance truckers, as the 401 gets VERY busy during rush hours
@time2fly21247 ай бұрын
i drive to toronto occasionally, and i some how managed to not divert around it when my GPS told me to take it, and got a nice $14 bill for using it for 1 exit i think. QEW traffic can be a pain, but its not worth that much to take 407.
@gittar7 ай бұрын
I head to OKC through Tulsa at least a couple of times a year. Where I get confused is exiting and re-entering the toll road... where and when and how to pay. Resolution... got the pass, pay as you go, keep 25/30 bucks a year on it and, otherwise don't worry about it.
@angeloreynasosa6 ай бұрын
I love your videos! But during the map of turnpikes in Tulsa @ 9:17 there were many things wrong with it!! Firstly, there is no toll on the I-44 from the southern/eastern termination of the Gilcrease turnpike to the interchange of the Creek turnpike and the I-44. Secondly, The Muskogee turnpike turns into the BA express (not a turnpike) at the interchange of SH-351 (Muskogee turnpike) and SH-51 (BA expressway); the map has the toll extended pass where it really ends. Lastly, there is no toll on the I-44/US-422 between the eastern terminus of the I-244 to the interchange of the northern/eastern terminus of Creek turnpike and the I-44/US-412.
@donaldpetersen23827 ай бұрын
I was listening to the song "I left My Wallet In El Segundo" here on KZbin. KZbin picked up on the lyric about paying a tole (probably in Oklahoma) and recommended me this video based on that. Now I'm asking myself how did he get back through the same toll when he returned to get his wallet without having his wallet yet.
@MikeV8652Ай бұрын
I live in SW Texas and drive to Kansas City and back periodically. Considering how far superior the OTA toll roads are to the free highways of Oklahoma, how unbelievably quickly I can cross the state, and that my NTTA toll tag works there, I don't really mind the Oklahoma toll roads. My typical route is the Turner Turnpike from Texas to Oklahoma City, then free I 35 to the Kansas Turnpike (which has much cheaper tolls).
@iceresistance7 ай бұрын
I-44 is a major trucker's route, there are a lot of trucks on I-44 in MO and OK
@rancherlee5 ай бұрын
Minnesota to Dallas and back, I use to just follow I-35 and pay the tolls. Decided to flip the no-toll switch on Maps and was surprised that the US69 non-toll route only takes 15-30 minutes longer. Needless to say, I'm done with tolls in OK. I save on tolls AND save on gas since the route is shorter and lower speed limits and 15-30 minutes extra on a 18 hour trip is nothing.
@just_another_Joe7 ай бұрын
I’ve ridden the Indian Nation Turnpike once (this last April), when my wife and I were on our way from Colorado to Key West on the motorcycle, via the Gulf Coast. I remember wondering why there was a toll-road seemingly out in the middle of nowhere. Barely any traffic on it at all. We took that route to bypass the Dallas Metro area, but I’m guessing we could have taken another route to do basically the same thing.