When Trish Brown first moved to Pooler 10 years ago, she said it was for some key quality-of-life reasons: so her husband could be closer to his job, so they would be closer to their kids and their school, and so they could escape from the traffic that Savannah was experiencing at the time.
The traffic, though, seems to have followed them, along with congestion and accidents .
To Pooler residents, living in the city feels like a constant cycle of being stuck in your car while looking out the windows at shovels in the ground for new projects, from apartments to single-family residential homes, to gas stations and more…