County roads in Florida

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In the U.S. state of Florida, county roads are controlled and maintained by the respective counties in which they reside. The county road system was created in 1977 as a result of the Florida Department of Transportation changing the division of roads from secondary state roads, which were at one time primary state roads, to county roads. Most secondary roads and some primary roads were given to the counties, and occasionally a new state road was taken over; some main roads in incorporated areas were given to the localities.

The secondary signs had the S changed to C (for county) and a small “COUNTY” sticker added to the bottom. As signs grew old, they were replaced with the standard MUTCD county road pentagon. While this occurred throughout the State of Florida, the part of the state south of State Road 70 was hit particularly hard by the transition from state to county control and maintenance.

As a result of how the county road system was created, county roads generally follow the same numbering grid pattern as the state roads.

[edit] References

Florida Department of Transportation. FDOT GIS data. Retrieved on June 25, 2007.