The Morning Call (Sunday)

Lawmaker pushes for bridge database

State Sen. James Brewster wants PennDOT and local government­s to put together accessible informatio­n about safety of structures

- By Sean D. Hamill

PITTSBURGH — Months after Pennsylvan­ia officials stripped crucial informatio­n about poorly rated bridges from public view, a veteran state lawmaker is pushing for databases that will alert people to the condition of thousands of spans statewide.

Concerned that the collapse of the Fern Hollow Bridge in Pittsburgh and other bridge failures are not getting the attention they deserve, Sen. James Brewster, D-McKeesport, wants the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion to create a searchable website that contains informatio­n about every bridge. It would also include quarterly updates on their conditions and ratings by whatever local government — county or city — owns the spans.

Under the plan, every local government would also be required to maintain its own separate public database with the same informatio­n in a show of transparen­cy that could help the public better track potential problems.

The proposal comes after a Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

investigat­ion in April revealed the state concealed key informatio­n about the bridges — including inspection notes about the spans — in the wake of the disastrous failure of Fern Hollow in January, when nine people were injured and six vehicles fell into the ravine below.

The Post-Gazette found the state was displaying detailed inspection notes about bridges on its website, as well as the names of the inspectors. But the state removed the notes and inspectors’ names after the newspaper began asking questions about the informatio­n.

Though the informatio­n is now off-limits, the Post-Gazette obtained the data from the state’s website and made it available in one of the first searchable databases of its kind.

Under Brewster’s proposal, the state would be compelled to display the notes, which are included in every inspection report, so the public has a better glimpse of any concerns raised about the bridges, including deteriorat­ion or other breakdowns that are found during the visits. In addition, the names of the inspectors and the firms they work for would be public.

“We do need to know if a bridge is bad, why is that? If you rated it poor, why did you do that?” said Brewster, a member of the Senate Transporta­tion Committee. “We don’t need the full, 100-page engineerin­g report and recommenda­tions for repair in the database.”

In light of the state’s efforts to withhold the records, Melissa Melewsky, media law counsel for the PA NewsMedia Associatio­n, applauded the plan, saying it was a helpful step toward better transparen­cy on bridge records.

“Any time we have a law that’s written to affirmativ­ely provide public access and proactivel­y provide public access to necessary informatio­n, that’s a good thing,” she said.

Brewster first outlined creating the database after the Post-Gazette published a story in March that found that many local officials were baffled by a state funding process that directs state and federal funds to bridges that are in fair or good condition, while leaving locally owned bridges in poor condition to flounder.

He said he hoped to create an “audit” that would require all the participan­ts in bridge maintenanc­e and funding to sign off annually on their ongoing work. Its goals would be to secure funding to fix deteriorat­ing bridges faster and prevent another collapse, and to avoid the shutdown of bridges like the one that took place in McKeesport a week after Fern Hollow fell.

“My goal is three years from now, you can go onto any website — Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Commission, Allegheny County, McKeesport, PennDOT — and see the status of all the bridges and whether they’re going to be repaired and when,” he said.

The Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Commission is an agency that represents 10 counties in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, including Allegheny County. It shepherds funding to communitie­s from road and bridge funds provided by the state and federal government­s.

Brewster did not include funding agencies like SPC in his original proposal because he was still researchin­g the plan, he said. But now he will include a provision in a bill he plans to introduce to also require regional funding agencies such as the SPC to create a database of bridges in their regions.

In his proposed bill — which was included in a memo posted to the state Senate website — Brewster would require PennDOT to maintain its own searchable database of every bridge in the state, including quarterly updates on the bridges’ status from local government­s if they own the bridges.

PennDOT already has a database, part of its OneMap system, that contains some of the informatio­n Brewster wants, such as the bridge’s location and current condition rating. But his bill would expand that data to include such things as informatio­n on pending bridge maintenanc­e or reconstruc­tion and an estimate of those costs, if known.

To highlight the informatio­n further, Brewster would also require counties, boroughs, cities and townships to maintain their own databases with the same informatio­n and to send that data to the state as well.

In his position as a member of the Senate’s transporta­tion committee, Brewster now will seek co-sponsors for the legislatio­n and introduce the bill formally.

He said he is optimistic that he will gain support from both parties.

Legislatio­n related to transparen­cy for bridges “is hot right now,” he said. “We’ll get bipartisan support. We should be able to get this moving.”

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? A crane is in place as part of cleanup efforts at the Fern Hollow Bridge in Pittsburgh that collapsed Jan. 28.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP A crane is in place as part of cleanup efforts at the Fern Hollow Bridge in Pittsburgh that collapsed Jan. 28.

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