Add Your Photos and Video to This Story

Midwest floods spotlight decrepit infrastructure

by Maireid Sullivan | July 2, 2008 at 10:15 pm | 265 views | 5 comments

This report should be a real wake-up call. How can Americans allow their taxes to be squandered on supporting their ever expanding military industrial complex when they need to invest at lease a trillion dollars to upgrade "the decrepit state of U.S. infrastructure"  –

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The latest U.S. natural disaster is triggering fresh rounds of concern and debate about how to repair America's aging infrastructure.

The worst Midwest flooding since 1993 has generated images of swamped towns, cracked roads, washed-out bridges, overwhelmed dams, failed levees, broken sewage systems, stunted crops and water-logged refugees.

The losses are in the billions of dollars and still mounting, as the costs of crop losses alone send shocks through the inflation-wracked world food system and threaten insurers.


The disaster has reminded policymakers of the decrepit state of U.S. infrastructure, stirring concerns similar to those following the deadly Minneapolis bridge collapse in 2007 and the flooding of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Even before the latest flooding, a group representing engineers said the United States needed to spend about $1 trillion more than it does now to bring infrastructure up to par with modern needs and standards.

"The patch-and-pray approach simply won't succeed," said David Mongan, head of the American Society of Civil Engineers.

But the group also said its five-year cost estimate was outdated and does not count the price of new roads, rails, and sewers required by a growing population, nor the cost to repair damage inflicted by the recent Midwest floods.

President George W. Bush has asked Congress for $1.8 billion to boost funds for flood recovery but it is unclear how much of that money will end up in infrastructure repair.

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has proposed creating a $60 billion fund for infrastructure projects, funded by money saved by a promised withdrawal from the war in Iraq.

"This can be the moment when we make a generational commitment to rebuild our infrastructure," Obama told business executives in Pittsburgh last week.

EVERYWHERE YOU LOOK


ach need sounds dire: new wastewater treatment so sewage does not taint the same waterways that supply drinking water; repairs or replacements for thousands of corroded bridges; new and repaired dams and levees that will not fail; and upgrades to airports and air traffic control.

"We need profound changes," said engineer Kumares Sinha of Purdue University. "We can't live in a fool's paradise."

While rising economic powers China and India build highways and other large projects, U.S. infrastructure -- once the envy of the world -- has fallen into decline, Sinha said.

Read the entire article here

Add a comment Comments (5)

Rhonda J Mangus
good stuff:

Maireid Sullivan, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Maireid Sullivan

Thank you for the flag, Rhonda.

everchanging
good stuff:

Maireid Sullivan, I like this story. It's good stuff. So much needs to be fixed and with the rapid unemployment rate increasing. Maybe its time we combine these two to rebuild our nation infrastructure, while giving the unemployed and willing individuals a pay check in return. This was what our nation did in 1935 and was called (most commonly known as) the WPA (Work Projects Administration) by President Franklin Roosevelt. This program worked not only to build parts & portions of infrastructure we have today it also built our economy back up and started to bring the U.S out of the great depression before the start of WWII. Originally called the CWA (Civil Works Administration), then FERA (Federal Emergency Relief Administration). 

Just maybe we can get ahead of the bear market (Wall Street announced today) and start a new WPA again, before the soup lines really start showing up again.

Maireid Sullivan

Thank you for the flag, everchanging.

I saw the docu. "Life after People" recently. It features a wide variety of engineers and ecological scientists who give a fantastic insight into how man-made building materials decay when they are not constantly managed.

Yes, Roosevelt did a great job building American infrastructure. The huge interstate highways were built so that troops could move across the nation quickly.

Military infrastructure has always been No. 1 on the agenda.  So, does this mean that the necessary funding won't be provided unless there is a security aspect?

I notice that New Orleans hasn't been cleaned up yet....and didn't Haliburton 'win' the no-bid contract for that? I wonder where their priorities will be focused to deal with the growing real estate bubble bust. We will see a lot of "Land Banking" - holding land until it becomes profitible to build again, so I predict that it will be a long time before the USA sees infrastructure upgrades.

It breaks my heart to see a once glorious nation undermined like this.


everchanging

I hope you & I can look back someday and say we misunderstood America and our thoughts of these times with the issues that are present. I know i wish I was more half glass full and stop seeing the reality before my eyes lately. 

Haliburton did win the no bid contract, I wonder if they received the funding already, also? If they have we (as a nation) should requests the funds back with interests and put people in Orleans to work and do what was suppose to be done by now - REBUILD A NEW, NEW ORLEANS. Five years is a long time for nothing being done there :-(

Add a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

July 2, 2008 at 10:15 pm by Maireid Sullivan, 265 views, 5 comments

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from