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Re: From the Thom Hartmann blog...

By: clo in FFFT | Recommend this post (0)
Tue, 13 Sep 11 2:15 AM | 61 view(s)
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Msg. 33423 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 33413 by oldCADuser)

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Obama is going to Ohio with his Jobs Plan.
Chris Matthews said Bohner's state has 95 bridges in peril & Chris will scroll the names of them when he follows up Obama's visit.
Those 95 must be very bad, since this data shows 2,743 have structual problems. clo

Bridges here and across Ohio are deficient and need repairs, study says

Published: Thursday, March 31, 2011, 5:56 AM

By Tom Breckenridge, The Plain Dealer
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The Inner Belt Bridge is among a growing number of aging spans with structural deterioration, a new study finds.

CLEVELAND -- Nearly one of eight bridges in Cuyahoga County is structurally deficient, including -- not surprisingly -- the heavily traveled Inner Belt Bridge, a new report says.

That doesn't mean the bridges are in peril. But the aging, deteriorating condition of spans here and nationwide begs for more funding to fix the problems, the nonprofit Transportation for America said in a report released Tuesday.

Using federal data, the report found that one of nine bridges nationwide is structurally deficient and needs "significant maintenance, rehabilitation or replacement."

"Since the 2007 collapse of the ... bridge in Minneapolis, Americans have been acutely aware of the critical need to maintain our bridges," said James Corless, director of Transportation for America. "As Congress takes up the next transportation bill, it is imperative that we devote a larger share of funding to protecting our bridges."

The nonprofit, whose members include environmental, real estate and fair housing interests, advocates for a modernized, healthier transportation system.

Its report said that nearly 70,000 bridges nationally were rated structurally deficient in 2009, with 2,743 of them in Ohio, according to the report.

The Federal Highway Administration estimates the cost of repairing or replacing problem bridges at $70.9 billion. But the federal outlay for bridges is about $5 billion a year.

Ohio ranked 29th among states, with nearly 10 percent of its bridges deteriorating, the report said. Pennsylvania ranked first, with one of every four bridges rated as deficient. 

Bridges by the numbers

•42: Average age of an American bridge

•42.6: Average age of an Ohio bridge

•27,963: Ohio bridges in the National Bridge Inventory

•1 out of 10: Number of Ohio bridges that are structurally deficient

SOURCE: Transportation for America

Under federal guidelines, a bridge is considered structurally deficient if one of its main components -- including the deck and supporting structure -- is found to be in poor condition, the report said.

By law, bridges must be inspected at least once every two years.

for complete:
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2011/03/post_448.html




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The above is a reply to the following message:
From the Thom Hartmann blog...
By: oldCADuser
in FFFT
Tue, 13 Sep 11 2:01 AM
Msg. 33413 of 65535

America's infrastructure now ranks 16th in the world...

by Thom Hartmann

September 12, 2011

Our nation's infrastructure is crumbling. The Sherman Minton Bridge that spans the Ohio River in Louisville, Kentucky was shut down last Friday due to safety concerns after cracks were discovered in the bridge's load-bearing parts. The Sherman Minton Bridge is just one of several bridges in danger of collapsing -- As the American Society of Civil Engineers points out, 34% of all the bridges in Kentucky are considered "structurally deficient." Of course - Kentucky is the home state of Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell - who opposed increased infrastructure spending in the 2009 stimulus bill - opposed it again when Republicans blocked a jobs bill in 2010 - and threw cold water last week on President Obama's "American Jobs Act" that includes billions in transportation infrastructure products. According to a study by the Urban Land Institute - our nation's infrastructure needs $2 trillion worth of repairs.

And America's infrastructure now ranks 16th in the world according to the World Economic Forum. Yet another consequence of 30 years of Ronald Reagan's "starve the beast" economics.


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