The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Time to patch this political pothole

Georgia and rest of U.S. have critical infrastruc­ture needs awaiting reinforcem­ents.

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It’s a slogan whose pithiness is exceeded by its expressed truth: “The future won’t wait. Neither can we. It’s #TimeToBuil­d.”

That’s a fitting message for National Infrastruc­ture Week, and especially so given the precarious, if not dilapidate­d, state of too much of this nation’s public framework that all of us use daily. Roads, bridges and other transporta­tion systems being chief among them.

Any rattled motorist who’s pounded across a pothole, or metro Atlanta resident who’s suffered the effects of a water main break or sewer overflow knows that America’s unsung systems are too often neglected until they fail. When that happens, we feel the pain caused by broken infrastruc­ture afflicted for too long by benign neglect. A strategy of “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” can, yes, save taxpayer money — in the short-run. In the longer-term, the truism of “pay me now, or pay me later” catches up with us.

A nonprofit umbrella group promotes Infrastruc­ture Week and it’s notable that its steering committee includes a big tent of entities that, in this divided time, might be thought to be odd roommates, from constructi­on firms to labor unions. That suggests a refreshing­ly diverse, bipartisan group that’s coalesced around common interests and intent.

Creating a broad prosperity and jobs are among those underpinni­ngs. The organizati­on says this on its website: “Our voices — from every facet of America’s economy, workforce, and communitie­s — are united to make the case for investing in the transporta­tion, water, energy, and communicat­ions systems that keep America competitiv­e, prosperous, and safe.”

Our politician­s might take a lesson from that, given that it was announced last week that a long-discussed national infrastruc­ture spending plan is unlikely to happen in 2018.

Happily, in Georgia, lawmakers and voters have approved funding streams such as dedicated sales and fuel taxes that are enabling some needed transporta­tion repairs and upgrades.

There’s still a strong place for national policy here, though. America’s, and Georgia’s, critical infrastruc­ture needs should not have to wait much longer for needed reinforcem­ents. The Beltway can do better. Andre Jackson, for the Editorial Board.

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