Crumbling bridges? Fret not America, it's
not that bad
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[January 31, 2018]
By Jason Lange and Katanga Johnson
WASHINGTON(Reuters) - In his State of the
Union address on Tuesday, President Donald Trump called out the nation's
crumbling infrastructure and called for more spending on bridges and
roads.
"Together, we can reclaim our great building heritage. We will build
gleaming new roads, bridges, highways, railways, and waterways all
across our land," Trump said, calling for public and private
infrastructure investments of at least $1.5 trillion over 10 years.
The details of Trump's plan are nebulous, so it is unclear how much will
go to what projects. But Trump, along with other politicians and
lobbyists, has frequently cited bridges as a danger to people and
commerce. Business groups as diverse as the National Stone and Gravel
Association and the American Beverage Association have called for more
spending.
However, a Reuters analysis of nationwide bridge data reveals the
fretting over the safety of bridges and other road infrastructure is
overblown and could distract from more serious problems elsewhere:
* About 9 percent of highway bridges were considered structurally
deficient in 2017. But only 4 percent of bridges carrying significant
traffic, at least 10,000 daily vehicle crossings, were deficient. That
does not mean an imminent danger of collapse, just that repairs are
needed.
* For those with more than 200,000 crossings, roughly the nation's 1,200
busiest bridges, that figure drops to under 2 percent, or fewer than 20
bridges.
* The share of all bridges deemed structurally deficient has been
falling for decades, down from 22 percent in 1992 and 12 percent in
2009.
Indeed, though an 2014 academic study of bridge failures found roughly
120 bridges collapse or partially collapse every year, most do so
because of floods, fires and collisions rather than structural decline.
And most failed bridges have fewer than 755 daily crossings, with only
about 4 percent involving fatalities. (Graphic:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2EmHQm5)
"We the public should feel safe," said Wesley Cook, a structural
engineer at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology who
authored the 2014 bridge failure study.
The Reuters analysis squares with independent assessments that U.S. road
infrastructure is still among the world's best.
America's road network, which includes its bridges, was ranked third
among the largest advanced economies by company executives, behind Japan
and France but superior to those of Germany, Britain, Canada and Italy,
according to the World Economic Forum's latest global competitiveness
report.
The United States comes only slightly behind Japan and France in
rankings of overall infrastructure quality.
Experts agree boosting public and private investment in infrastructure
by $1-2 trillion over the next decade might meet or come close to
meeting the growing economy's needs.
However, the distortion of the debate by Trump and other politicians
creates a danger that resources will be misdirected from more pressing
infrastructure needs, such as aged water pipes leaching lead and schools
- or from projects that will have a considerable regional economic
impact.
"Fixing bridges is fine until unmaintained pipes break and interrupt
your commute," said Shalini Vajjhala, founder of infrastructure design
firm re:focus partners.
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Emergency personnel stand on the remains of the collapsed I-35W
bridge that spans the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
U.S. August 2, 2007. REUTERS/Scott Cohen/File Photo
The American Society of Civil Engineers reckons U.S. mass transit is
in worse condition than any other infrastructure in terms of its
quality and funding. In a 2017 report, the lobbying group also
scored U.S. dams, levees and drinking water facilities as in worse
condition than bridges.
SHADOW OF FEE FEE CREEK
America was jolted by infrastructure concerns in 2007 when the
Interstate 35 bridge over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis
collapsed during rush hour. Thirteen people died, fueling calls for
more bridge investment and shaping any discussions of U.S.
infrastructure ever since. Federal investigators, however, blamed a
design flaw rather than deterioration for the collapse.
The reality of U.S. bridge problems is better reflected where
Interstate 270 crosses Fee Fee Creek outside St. Louis.
That bridge carries about 223,000 vehicles every day and is among
the busiest in America, according to the Department of
Transportation's 2017 National Bridge Inventory analyzed by Reuters.
The inventory catalogs America's 615,000 highway bridges longer than
20 feet.
The Missouri state government considers the Fee Fee Creek bridge
structurally deficient and has set aside $5 million for repairs. The
problem is deterioration in and around the structures supporting the
ends of the bridge, said Dennis Heckman, an engineer at Missouri's
transportation department. While bridges in need of repair stand a
higher risk of collapse they do not necessarily pose an imminent
danger.
The state had four bridges in the 2017 inventory rated as
structurally deficient with more than 200,000 daily crossings. "If
they were at a point of being dangerous, they would be closed," said
Heckman.
The fact is, state and local governments constantly repair highways
and bridges. Together with the federal government, they spent $16.4
billion fixing bridges in 2012, according to the Federal Highway
Administration's (FHWA) latest report detailing public sector
highway investments.
Public spending on transportation and water infrastructure rose
modestly in 2009 and 2010 as governments countered the Great
Recession, but outlays fell in the subsequent four years when taking
inflation into account, according a 2015 report by the Congressional
Budget Office.
For bridges, increasing spending modestly - just enough to keep up
with inflation - would cut the share of those needing repairs by
about two thirds by 2032, the FHWA said in the report, published in
2017. Governments need to boost spending by about $37 billion a year
to sufficiently maintain and expand roads and bridges, according to
the FHWA.
(Reporting by Jason Lange and Katanga Johnson; Editing by Damon
Darlin and Tomasz Janowski)
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