The Columbus Dispatch

Now, let’s get busy fi xing the nation’s infrastruc­ture

- ANN MCFEATTERS Ann McFeatters is a columnist for Tribune News Service. amcfeatter­s@ nationalpr­ess.com

Suppose we all stood up at exactly the same minute, from Maine to Hawaii, and shouted at the top of our lungs: Infrastruc­ture!

Would it make any difference? Not likely.

You-know-who would probably be tweeting about how badly he is treated, and we’d all be ignored. Again.

As danger, misery and heartache in the form of Hurricane Harvey plague those we love in Texas and Louisiana, we hear again and again that if aging reservoirs, pot-holed roads, outmoded drains and weathered watertreat­ment plants had been in better shape, things might be a little better despite more than 51 inches of rain. The deja vu feelings, so long after Hurricane Katrina, are enough to make us despair.

All over this vast country, things are falling apart. Let alone disaster relief, this is affecting our daily commutes, business opportunit­ies and job availabili­ty, with American companies refusing to open new plants in America.

Modernizin­g our infrastruc­ture — roads, bridges, ports, waterworks, cybersyste­ms, et cetera — was supposed to be doable. Even with Republican­s and Democrats barely on speaking terms, fixing our broken infrastruc­ture was an agreed-upon goal.

We knew it would cost at least a trillion dollars and probably much more. But the prospect of modernizin­g this great country to face the future and compete more strongly with mighty China, for example, made even the cold hearts on Wall Street beat faster.

So is Congress considerin­g infrastruc­ture legislatio­n? Has the president proposed sweeping, detailed plans after promising he would do so? Is he using the bully pulpit to persuade Americans that this is the most important thing we as a nation can do for our children? Are legislator­s working hard behind the scenes trying to figure out a public-private partnershi­p?

You know the answers. No to all of the above.

But President Donald Trump did rush to Texas three days after the hurricane struck, somehow managing to not see a single raindrop, shake the hand of a single victim, or mention a single first responder by name — not even the one who died. Even as the rains came down and first responders went door to door rescuing stranded families, Trump was speculatin­g on when he and other politician­s would be able to congratula­te each other on a job well done.

And even earlier, days before Hurricane Harvey hit, Trump signed orders reversing federal regulation­s, ordered by former President Barack Obama, aimed at making infrastruc­ture more impervious to flooding. Could Trump give a good rationale for such a heartless, short-sighted action? No. Consequent­ly, many of the billions of dollars that will be spent on rebuilding after Hurricane Harvey and future disasters will be wasted and won’t protect against future weather emergencie­s or mitigate the damage they cause.

Despite all that, we are once again amazed, uplifted and heartened at how wonderfull­y kind, good-hearted and generous Americans are to each other in times of destitutio­n and desperatio­n. And the first responders — Wow! True heroes. Over and over, the victims try to stop feeling sorry for themselves by one observatio­n: So many people are worse off than they are.

But once the adrenaline stops pumping, the bleakness of thousands of people who have lost everything will become far more poignant and widespread. The knowledge that Trump has decreed that federal standards for rebuilding not take into account future disasters will be even more maddening.

Let’s hope the Republican­s who control Congress will find the backbones they mislaid after the election and undo what the feckless Trump has wrought.

Our rallying cry? Fix our infrastruc­ture and do it right!

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