The Denver Post

U.S. giving boot to official foot measuremen­t

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON» Change is afoot for the official measuring stick used to size up big places in America.

The reason? There are actually two definition­s of the 12-inch measuremen­t known as a foot.

Some land surveyors use what’s known as the U.S. survey foot. Others use the definition that’s more accepted by the broader world: the internatio­nal foot.

The difference between them is so tiny, you can’t see it with the naked eye on a 12-inch ruler. But over big distances, it matters. So, to reduce the chance for errors and confusion, the federal government has announced that it’s finally giving the boot to the survey foot.

The internatio­nal foot is the smaller one — adding about an eighth of an inch of difference when measuring a mile.

That means the United States is 28.3 feet wider when measured using the internatio­nal foot instead of the survey foot.

The change started in 1959, when the federal government mandated that everyone use the internatio­nal foot but allowed surveyors to keep to the old U.S. survey foot for a while.

That temporary reprieve has lasted 60 years, but it will finally end in 2022, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and the National Institute of Standards and Technology announced in October.

Surveyors in 40 American states and territorie­s still use the larger U.S. foot. The rest use the smaller internatio­nal one.

“We have chaos,” said Michael Dennis, a project manager for the NOAA’S National Geodetic Survey. Geodetics is surveying that takes into account the curve of the Earth. “This is a mess,” he said.

The small difference may not seem like much, but it caused trouble in planning for high-speed rail in California, Dennis said.

It also created a mess for bridge work between Oregon, which uses the internatio­nal foot, and Washington, which uses the U.S. one, he said.

Dennis also relayed a horror story one surveyor sent him: A contractor from a state that uses the U.S. foot planned a building in the glide path of a major airport in a state that uses the internatio­nal foot.

The confusion over the two different feet caused delays, extra cost and redesign of the building to be one floor shorter. (Dennis wouldn’t identify the airport.)

“It’s embarrassi­ng that we even had this going on for 60 years,” Dennis said. “This whole thing is ridiculous.”

Dennis knows some will squawk.

The U.S. foot “sounds very patriotic, very American,” he said in a webinar. “Then there’s the word ‘internatio­nal foot,’ which sounds kind of new world order, U.n.-sanctioned, maybe with a whiff of socialism.”

But it makes sense to be using the same measuring stick as the rest of the world to save time and eliminate embarrassi­ng errors, he says.

Those who fear this is a slippery slope leading to the metric system are worrying a century too late, NIST metric coordinato­r Elizabeth Benham said. Since 1893, the official definition of a foot is based on the meter.

“We are metric,” Dennis said. “The foot is subservien­t to the meter. That’s the way it is.”

The issue is how the two different feet are defined.

In 1893, the U.S. government defined a foot as 1,200 meters divided by 3,937. Plug those numbers into a calculator, and you get 0.3048006 meters.

Those last three digits (and it goes on even longer, if you want to be technical) are important. Don’t forget them.

In 1933, the internatio­nal foot was invented.

It was simpler: 0.3048 meters, exactly. Those last three digits just get eliminated.

But those digits kept bedeviling engineers. So in 1959, the U.S. government started the internatio­nal switch, and it will finish the job in 2022.

When it finally happens, the U.S. foot will be relegated to history, the NIST’S Benham said, “just like a cubit.”

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