It’s a miracle that more people weren’t killed and injured in the two instances — or that a major part of America hasn’t experienced an electrical blackout, that two planes haven’t collided in crowded skies or that levees haven’t crumbled as in New Orleans.
Urgent attention will be paid for a few weeks to America’s highway bridges — 15 percent to 25 percent of which are believed to be structurally deficient — because of the collapse in Minneapolis.
But attention ought to be paid in a bigger way to the deficiencies in America’s highways, its electric grid, railways, airports, waterways and urban utilities. They all are clogged, inefficient, a sap on the nation’s productivity and competitiveness — and, in some cases, dangerous.
What’s needed is bipartisan action. Republicans, starting with President Bush, have to agree to spend more money and increase taxes, especially the gasoline tax. Democrats need to convince environmentalists to stop blocking needed projects and agree to let the private sector have a greater role in building public infrastructure.
As part of the New America Foundation’s compelling report “Ten Big Ideas for a New America,” NAF fellow Sherle Schwenninger noted that from 1950 to 1970, the United States devoted 3 percent of its gross domestic product to infrastructure, but since 1980 has spent less than 2 percent.
A percent of GDP amounts to about $140 billion a year in current dollars that the U.S. is not spending to keep its economy growing. The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) estimates national infrastructure needs double that — $1.6 trillion over a five-year period.
Schwenninger proposed that the U.S. government needs a capital budget to fund infrastructure rather than relying on separate trust funds and appropriations to pay for various projects.
Meanwhile, Transportation Secretary Mary Peters told me in an interview that only 60 percent of federal highway funds actually are spent on “core” needs — highways and bridges — while 40 percent is devoted to projects such as historic bridges, bike paths and anti-obesity programs to encourage children to walk to school.
In 2005, the ASCE issued a report card on infrastructure that actually gave bridges a C grade, higher than other categories, because from 2000 to 2003, the percentage of the nation’s 590,750 bridges rated structurally deficient or functionally obsolete decreased slightly, from 28.5 percent to 27.1 percent.
However, the report said it would cost $9.4 billion a year for 20 years to eliminate all bridge deficiencies.
Roads received a D grade. “Americans spend 3.5 billion hours a year stuck in traffic, at a cost of $63.2 billion a year to the economy,” while total investment in road construction of $60 billion “is well below the $94 billion needed annually to improve transportation infrastructure conditions nationally.”
The aviation situation got a D-plus because the ASCE judged that “gridlock on America’s runways eased from crisis levels earlier in the decade due to reduced demand and recent modest funding increases.” But tell that to travelers stranded in airports this summer: The worst yet for delays and canceled flights.
The report gave a D grade to energy investment, declaring that “the U.S. power transmission system is in urgent need of modernization. Growth in electricity demand and investment in new power plants has not been matched by investment in new transportation facilities.”
The freight railway industry, the ASCE said, needs to spend nearly $200 billion over the next 20 years to maintain existing infrastructure and expand for freight growth, and intercity passenger rail upgrades should be $60 billion.
Peters made a special appeal for public-private partnerships — opposed by Democrats on ideological grounds — to allow states to contract with private companies to build roads and charge tolls to pay for them. She said it’s “a good way to increase efficiency and bring sorely needed capital to the table to meet transportation demand.”
The Minneapolis bridge collapse should produce not only a bipartisan agreement to provide emergency aid to rebuild that structure but also an overall reconsideration of transportation funding and deficiencies in all the nation’s infrastructure.
It should not take a catastrophe — Katrina-style flooding, a regional blackout or a tunnel collapse — to convince Republicans to spend and tax as needed and Democrats to say yes to development and open up to free enterprise.
Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.
Home
Commentary


SEE THE LATEST ON THIS STORY
Comments
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate
Vote on this comment: agree or disagree | Report as inappropriate