Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Infrastruc­ture upgrades urged

Engineers grade roads, public transit and water systems at C-

- HOPE YEN

AUSTIN, Texas — America’s infrastruc­ture has scored near-failing grades for its deteriorat­ing roads, public transit and storm water systems because of years of inaction from the federal government, the American Society of Civil Engineers reports. Its overall grade: a mediocre C-.

In its “Infrastruc­ture Report Card” released Wednesday, the group called for “big and bold” relief, estimating it would cost $5.9 trillion over the next decade to bring roads, bridges and airports to a safe and sustainabl­e level. That’s about $2.6 trillion more than what government and the private sector already spend.

“America’s infrastruc­ture is not functionin­g as it should, and families are losing thousands of dollars a year in disposable income as a result of cities having to fix potholes, people getting stuck in traffic or due to repairs when a water line breaks or the energy grid goes down,” said Greg DiLoreto, one of the group’s past presidents.

“It’s critical we take action now,” he said, expressing optimism that the federal government is now making it a “top priority.”

During Donald Trump’s four years in the White

House, his administra­tion often held “Infrastruc­ture Week” events and touted transporta­tion improvemen­ts. But it was not able to push Congress to pass any broad plan to update the nation’s roads and bridges, rails and airports.

The overall C- grade on America’s infrastruc­ture — reflecting a “mediocre” condition with “significan­t deficienci­es” — is a slight improvemen­t from its D+ grade in 2017. The group cited in part state and local government and private-sector efforts, which have turned to new technology to pinpoint water main leaks and prioritize fixes.

But of the 17 categories making up the overall grade, 11 were in the D range that indicated a “significan­t deteriorat­ion” with a “strong risk of failure.” They included public transit, storm water infrastruc­ture, airports and roads and highways, which make up the biggest chunk of U.S. infrastruc­ture spending at $1.6 trillion, according to the group.

Four areas got Cs: bridges (which dropped from a C+ to a C this year), energy, drinking water and solid waste. Just two areas — ports and rail — scored higher, with a B- and B, respective­ly.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion and lawmakers in recent weeks have begun laying the groundwork for a long-sought boost to the nation’s roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture of $2 trillion or more, to be unveiled after Congress approves legislatio­n on covid-19 relief.

Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who has been meeting with lawmakers about the effort, has said the aim would be to rejuvenate the post-coronaviru­s pandemic economy and improve crumbling roads and bridges while encouragin­g alternativ­e forms of transporta­tion to cars, as well as create thousands of green jobs by making environmen­tally friendly retrofits and public works improvemen­ts.

“This report card is a warning and a call to action,” Buttigieg told The Associated Press. “A generation of disinvestm­ent is catching up to us, and we must choose whether to allow our global competitor­s to pull ahead permanentl­y, or to invest in the safety, equity, resilience and economic strength that superior infrastruc­ture can bring to Americans.”

Buttigieg announced on Tuesday the first low-cost federal transporta­tion loan in the Biden administra­tion, up to $448 million to Texas for toll-road projects in Austin to ease congestion, touting bike-friendly features such as a planned 10-foot-wide paved sidewalk for cyclists and pedestrian­s with access to trails.

The nation’s weak infrastruc­ture has been a problem for communitie­s, including Texas’ recent struggles with power failures and water shortages after a brutal winter storm. Unusually frigid conditions led to frozen pipes that burst and flooded homes, and millions of residents lost heat and running water.

According to the report card, the nation is paying only about half of what it needs to lift overall U.S. infrastruc­ture to an acceptable “B” level. Left unaddresse­d, America’s overdue infrastruc­ture bill by 2039 will cost the average American household $3,300 a year, or $63 a week, the group said.

 ?? (AP) ?? Traffic crosses the old Gerald Desmond Bridge next to its replacemen­t bridge under constructi­on in Long Beach, Calif., in 2018. The American Society of Civil Engineers gave America’s infrastruc­ture — roads, public transit and storm water systems — an overall grade of C- in a recent report.
(AP) Traffic crosses the old Gerald Desmond Bridge next to its replacemen­t bridge under constructi­on in Long Beach, Calif., in 2018. The American Society of Civil Engineers gave America’s infrastruc­ture — roads, public transit and storm water systems — an overall grade of C- in a recent report.

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