By ROBERT TANNER, STEVE KARNOWSKI and FRANK BASS, Associated Press WritersWed Jul 30, 7:20 PM ET
A year after the worst
An Associated Press review of repairs on each state's 20 most-traveled bridges with structural deficiencies found just 12 percent have been fixed. In most states, the most common approach was to plan for repairs later rather than fix problems now.
The bridges reviewed by the AP 1,020 in all are not in imminent danger of collapse, state engineers and highway officials say. But the officials acknowledge the structures need improvement, many sooner rather than later.
The collapse of the eight-lane Interstate 35W bridge into the Mississippi River on Aug. 1, 2007, killed 13 people and brought immediate calls for repairs to bridges across the nation.
The failure to follow through was not because of lack of effort, officials said. Soaring construction costs, budget shortages, election-year politics, a backlog of bridge projects, competing highway repairs and bureaucracy often held bridge work to only incremental progress.
The AP gathered information on
repair status from 48 states and
The AP findings:
_Sixty-four percent of the bridges received no work beyond regular maintenance, though most were targeted for some kind of future work.
_Twelve percent had their structural defects fixed usually through a major rehabilitation or outright replacement.
_An additional 24 percent have seen a partial improvement, either through a short-term repair to temporarily address the defect or an ongoing project that is not yet complete.
The worst were
"At some point, relying on
miracles is not going to be the best way to manage our system,"
said Pete Rahn, the transportation commissioner of
Adds Pennsylvania Gov. Ed
Rendell: "The
"There's plenty of blame to go around," said Rendell, who has joined a national campaign to demand more federal investment in infrastructure. He argues the federal government bears a larger share than states, which are struggling to make do with limited help.
Rahn, one of many state transportation officials interviewed who said it is long past time for Congress and the states to invest in bridges and roads, blames the federal government most of all.
But as Congress debates highway spending, some members criticize states for not devoting enough highway money to bridges. Also, the Bush administration has promised to veto the latest $1 billion proposed increase, itself a fraction of the estimated $140 billion needed for repairs on bridges alone.
"Thirteen people were killed and not much happened," said engineer William Schutt, a critic of the status quo of bridge assessment and repair. "Who's to blame? Congress, the American people for putting up with it."
Bridges deemed structurally deficient have elements that need monitoring and parts that need to be scheduled for repair or replacement. The designation does not necessarily mean a bridge is unsafe, although it is one of the factors used to determine when a bridge is at risk, and which ones quality for federal money.
"Structural deficiency
ultimately determines whether a bridge will stand or fall,"
said Kris Kolluri,
"If you look at the full picture of bridges and the task that transportation professionals have," Kolluri said, "it's an overwhelming task."
The
Investigators have yet to issue
their final determination on the cause of the
The disaster has generated a rush of emergency bridge inspections, an extra $1 billion from Congress for bridge repairs so far and vows from leaders to tackle the problems spotlighted by the tragedy.
In all, 17 states proposed
ambitious bridge and road spending totaling $13.7 billion. To
date, $8.3 billion has won approval in six states, including $160
million in
But in 33 states and
The AP started its review by identifying the 20 most heavily trafficked structurally deficient bridges in each state, using a Federal Highway Administration inventory of data submitted by states.
But the inventory, which includes about 70,000 structurally deficient bridges nationwide, doesn't reflect the latest work most of that information from the states was gathered before the collapse.
So the AP asked state transportation departments to explain the current status of repairs on each of those bridges and disclose future plans and whether officials had identified any new heavily trafficked, structurally deficient bridges since the last update to the federal government.
Some states wound up with more than 20 structurally deficient bridges in the AP analysis because they had additional, newly categorized, busy bridges that were structurally deficient.
Understandably,
The Democratic-controlled Legislature, with some Republican help, overrode GOP Gov. Tim Pawlenty's veto of the $6.6 billion transportation spending plan, which raised the gas tax, local sales taxes and vehicle registration fees. The Senate then sacked his transportation commissioner, who had resisted the increased spending and higher taxes.
In June, a new commissioner outlined a $2.5 billion draft bridge improvement plan that would replace 11 major spans over the next decade using the new money. By 2018, 120 bridges that lack structural redundancies like the doomed I-35W bridge or that rank poorly on the structural sufficiency scale would be repaired, replaced or under construction.
Contractors aim to complete work by Sept. 15 100 days ahead of the deadline.
Lawmakers agreed on a measure to award a single 30-year contract to fix and maintain 802 of the state's worst bridges, despite a price tag of $600 million that analysts say could easily double over the contract's lifetime.
Politics dashed ambitious plans
in
Despite initial support from
the governor, months of study and accusations that opponents were
playing "structurally deficient bridge roulette,"
In
The debate echoes from
statehouses to
Last week, the U.S. House overwhelmingly approved another $1 billion for bridge work, though the White House has opposed the increase and has promised a veto.
The nation's bridges depend significantly on the federal government. In 2004, $10.5 billion was invested across the country on bridge improvements, according to the FHWA. The federal Highway Bridge Program provided $5.1 billion, with another $1.5 billion coming from other federal aid; states and local government paid $3.9 billion.
Much of the federal support comes out of the Highway Trust Fund, which is financed largely through fuel taxes a potential problem because high pump prices have led people to drive less.
"The federal government has basically ignored infrastructure at every level," said Rendell, who, with California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, has launched a group called Building America's Future to demand infrastructure investment. "They've just literally abdicated their responsibility."
According to the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, a projected $14 billion shortfall means only about $27 billion in federal money will be available next year to states and local governments for new highway and bridge investments a 34 percent reduction even though the current federal highway act calls for spending $41 billion a year.
The risks of another Minneapolis-style collapse aren't getting smaller as bridges age and traffic and weather take their toll.
Even annual inspections twice as often as the standard federal requirement don't guarantee a bridge is safe.
On Saturday afternoon, 1,200
pounds of concrete chunks fell from the underside of a 50-year-old
bridge in
Two cars were damaged but nobody was injured. The bridge was inspected last August; since it is structurally deficient, it was due for another inspection soon.
The bridge is safe to carry
traffic, said Dan Dorgan,
"It is not acceptable for us to have concrete falling off a bridge," he said.
___
Associated Press Writer Steve
Karnowski reported from