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Bridge Collapse: Whose Roads Are They Anyway?
Not that long ago, I rode my bike to work along Minneapolis' West River Parkway—underneath the I-35W bridge—every day, so it was particularly heartbreaking to watch CNN last night, with all that footage of twisted steel and crumpled concrete, the exhausted and frightened voices on cell phones. (And there's still more Minnesota in me than I knew—my first thought was, "Thank God it's not January.")
This morning, my inbox was full of messages from friends and relatives, assuring everyone that they are okay, noting how "every day we have is a gift." But some of my friends were also angry, and one raised a point that hasn't been picked up in the national press. She wrote,
Earlier this year, in February, the state legislature wrote a bill that would have raised the gas tax by five cents per gallon. [Congressman James Oberstar (D-Minn.), chair of the ultra-powerful Transportation Committee] had gone to the statehouse and told legislators that if they passed the bill, he'd match it with fed funds—for a total of up to $1 billion. The bill passed the House and Senate by large majorities, but Pawlenty vetoed it, citing his longstanding, budget-devastating promise of no new taxes. Instead, the governor floated a plan to pay for improvements with bonds, otherwise known as loans.
Of course, this money wouldn't have come through in time to fix 35W, and if it had there's no saying it would have been spent on improving an old freeway bridge in the city rather than build a new interchange in the suburbs. But the point is, there are only three ways of dealing with roads, bridges, and public transit (remember transit?): Decide, as a society, that we need them and will pay for them; let them fall apart; or turn them over to the private sector. The first is what we did in the great public-works era from the late 1800s to the 1970s; the second is what we've done since; and the third is what we seem about to do, as Dan Schulman and James Ridgeway documented in Mother Jones a few months ago.
Privatization sounds sweet: Companies will take these old roads off our hands, and pay us for them!. And that would be great if it worked. But to make roads profitable you have to charge tolls, and to throw off enough profit for private investors, you have to charge tolls a lot higher than the state would. So privatization means new and higher tolls; upgrades only for roads in profitable places; and, overall, more money for less service. There is a lot more collapsing in the nation's highway system than a single bridge.
Comments
I just want to caution you that we don't yet know the cause, and it might not have been lack of maintenance for lack of state funds. I share that suspicion, and I've gone after Pawlenty in my own blog for blowing the improvement of the Crosstown Commons and Hwy 53, but I don't want to let my predisposition to believe it was taxophobia lead me to believe it ahead of investigations. If we charge that refusing to spend money on transportation was the problem here, and it turns out not to be the case, it undermines our case, even with people sitting in traffic jams and dodging potholes as the economy suffers.
If companies like Halliburton and Lockheed, fixed infrastructure through some newly created subsidiaries, we'd find that our nation's bridges and tunnels were properly maintained, at least at first.
Then in the near future, these great corporations could get out of the war business, could still make money, and maybe peace would breakout everywhere.
Gotta go, santa claus is on the phone...
Posted by: slanted tom on 08/02/07 at 2:24 PM Respond
They look new to me, and are their old bridges with that many lanes? Maby we can'nt build bridges, or toasters that work.
Posted by: Rob on 08/03/07 at 12:52 PM Respond
Why not allow these wonderful 'no-new-tax' officials to sell all our burdensome tax-payer built infrastructure to corporations, or to them thar' pesky foreigners, as has already quietly been done across "our" nation?
After all, I'm sure we can trust corporations to ignore the bottom-line and spend all they 'must' to maintain roads and bridges that exist only to wear-out. So what if we have pay tolls or answer the troll's riddles.
I trust big business to make all things right. What's good for General Bullmoose is good for the USA.
Posted by: D. S. Troyer on 08/03/07 at 2:24 PM Respond
You socialists need to be careful what you are wishing for. The highway lobby – which owns Democratic and Republican politicians – will use this bridge to expand HIWAY funds. There will be no increase of happy socialist peasants living in “transit oriented communities” on eco-friendly light-rail-cars when you spend more on HIWAYS! The purchased political slime will say: “Well, as long as we’re expanding HIWAY funds we might as well REALLY expand it. We can create ‘jobs’ by WIDENING the HIWAYS. Yup, and we really need MORE HIWAYS too. We need to ‘increase the mobility of the American PEOPLE’, which will ‘decrease pollution’ and ‘fight terrorism’ and help ‘spread freedom’”. The “Patriotic Bridge Reconstruction and Freedom and Democracy Act, of 2007”. Big government will LOVE to build ya-all some more HIWAYS.
Posted by: John on 08/03/07 at 4:05 PM Respond
thank you
Posted by: sohbet on 09/14/08 at 12:05 PM Respond
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Posted by: Eric Ferguson on 08/02/07 at 2:00 PM Respond