While I chose to respond by specifically clicking on the @aighes icon, this reply addresses more than simply one person’s comments here.

I remove tiger:reviewed=no when I’ve substantially improved either or both of naming or geometry of the way (road or rail, and I improve both). Other TIGER keys like :cfcc or :county I generally leave alone. And although it is true what @ElliottPlack says, digging through histories is fraught with more difficulty than it is to see the tag right here, right now. I don’t believe a consensus has emerged about :cfcc (which I have found to be useful in some quirky cases) and :county really can be useful (as @Carnildo said) “when zoomed at a particular level” (seems like a “weak” reason, but OK, I’m nodding my head).

Now, ZIP codes simply don’t belong in OSM at all, whether associated with a TIGER tag or not. ZIP codes are not even geographic areas (they don’t delineate these, which is why drawing their boundaries is so problematic). ZIP codes are more like a routing algorithm for efficient postal mail delivery. Their intersection with OSM should be zero.

I read @watmildon’s Diary as linked; good stuff there; thank you. And welcome to posting in Discourse.

15 years after TIGER, there still remains a LOT to clean up from this, and we are only a bit closer to consensus on what to do with the tags: it does seem to be more-universal to delete :reviewed when the way actually has become “reviewed,” rather than the “uh, some do this, some do that…” non-consensus we had five years ago. Maybe by about 2045 we’ll have cleaned up all aspects of TIGER. Maybe later.

Again, I really miss the old ITO World rendering that helped fix TIGER, that was great and highly effective. But we can continue to blue-sky good ideas here and in our wiki TIGER Edited Map - OpenStreetMap Wiki , where the ITO World rendering is the topmost example. For example, there are fairly nice OT queries (for local areas, a county-at-a-time query doesn’t cripple the servers too bad). I can continue TIGER cleanup in my county with these, but I feel OSM can do much better “visually” (as in ITO World-like renderings). We’ve had a few “stabs” at quicky renderers that attempt to do TIGER review, anybody feeling ambitious enough to whip up an ITO World-clone?

But we might decide on good strategies on “what to do with tiger: keys” as a continuing discussion here.

And as I don’t want to write seven more chapters to this book (here and now), I’ll stop.