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From Governings
October 2007 issue
POTOMAC CHRONICLE
DONALD F. KETTL
Build, Crumble and Build More
Why dont we fix old roads and bridges? Because its more fun to make new ones.
When reporters asked President Bush about how to pay for bridge repairs across the country, he couldnt resist taking a jab at congressional pork. Both Republicans and Democrats on the House Transportation Committee had suggested increasing the federal gas tax. But Bush charged that would lead to even more wasteful earmarking, as each member on that committee gets to set his or her own priority first. The federal government shouldnt raise taxes, Bush said, until Congress got its own priorities straight. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid shot back that Democrats had worked to fund our nations most critical priorities but that Bush had neglected those needs. Reid said Bush had no place lecturing Congress about priorities.
Wherever the fault may lie, theres little dispute that the country has a problem. The U.S. Department of Transportation counts 72,264 bridges as structurally deficient, meaning they are in the same category as the one that collapsed into the Mississippi River in Minneapolis this summer.
Three years ago, this magazines report card on government performance pointed to deferred maintenance of roads and bridges as one of the biggest challenges facing the states. Minnesotas respectable grade of B in the infrastructure category, and its significant number of bridge repairs over the past 15 years, make the national situation look even more dire. At least half the states are in worse shape on infrastructure than Minnesota.
Weve long known this crisis was creeping up on us. We havent addressed it. The best weve been able to do is measure it. The federal Department of Transportation has its own report cards on bridges going back decades. Some states, such as Pennsylvania, possess superb information about the condition of their infrastructure but they still have billions of dollars in maintenance backlogs.
Some states actually underfund maintenance by as much as half. Why? Thats not too hard a question to answer. State legislators love building new roads far more than repairing old ones. As one Wisconsin transportation official put it a few years ago, Our agency believes in maintaining first and then building new. But thats not shared in the capitol. Meanwhile, members of Congress continue to earmark money for their favorite projects, such as Alaskas infamous bridge to nowhere.
These twin political pressures add up to a neat explanation of the crisis, but its a shade too neat. Much of the problem also comes from the way weve paid for repairs. The money in the federal highway trust fund is supposed to be available for maintenance work, but many states have taken advantage of loopholes to sidestep fix it first guidelines. Because so much of the fund has gone into new projects, the trust fund is going broke, and the Congressional Budget Office estimates it will be drained dry in 2009. The federal gas tax, which provides the bulk of highway money, hasnt been raised since 1993. So Congress not only has to help states fund essential bridge repairs, fix deteriorating highways across the country, and deal with the demand for new construction it needs a way to put the highway trust fund back into the black.
Weve been sliding into this problem since the 1950s, when the interstate highway system was created. The program offered an irresistible discount states could not resist the federal governments offer to pay 90 percent of the cost of new roads, financed through a flat-rate tax on each gallon of gas, instead of a tax based on the cost per gallon. So the fund couldnt fill back up as gas prices rose.
The result? Over the past generation, weve created an unquenchable appetite for building new roads while weve drained the federal fund meant to repair them. Weve created a terrific information system that tells us in exquisite detail just how deep a hole weve dug for ourselves.
The I-35 bridge was 40 years old when it fell into the Mississippi. We know we need to fix thousands of other deteriorating bridges around the country. But figuring out how to pay the bill and, more fundamentally, how to restrain our taste for new steel and concrete, will require setting new political rules before more bridges come falling down.
© 2007, Congressional Quarterly, Inc. Reproduction in any form without the written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Governing, City & State and Governing.com are registered trademarks of Congressional Quarterly, Inc.
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