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28 percent of bridges can't withstand scrutiny

By Associated Press
© St. Petersburg Times
published July 8, 2003

WASHINGTON - More than a quarter of all U.S. highway bridges are considered deficient, a high number but a marked improvement after a decade of increased government spending.

The number of bridges considered deficient - they need repairs, cannot adequately handle traffic loads or do not meet safety standards - declined 18 percent from 1992 to 2002, from 199,090 to 163,010, according to an Associated Press computer analysis of Federal Highway Administration data. That new total still amounts to 28 percent of bridges.

In Florida, the number of deficient bridges dropped from 2,569 to 2,135.

Failure to make timely fixes to aging bridges can have deadly consequences. Three people died in November when a century-old bridge across the Chickasawhay River collapsed in Waynesboro, Miss. A replacement bridge was being built nearby at the time.

There can be other costs as well.

In Warren, Pa., the local hospital has stationed an ambulance crew on the other side of town to avoid a time-consuming three-mile detour around the Hickory Street Bridge. The 86-year-old concrete arch bridge had deteriorated so thoroughly that it was closed in March. A new $10-million span is more than a year away.

The drop in deficient bridges coincided with passage of two federal transportation bills that earmarked $36.5-billion for repairs beginning in 1992 - more than double the $15.3-billion allocated during the previous decade.

Congress is preparing to renew the legislation, which determines how much federal money flows to states to build and repair roads and bridges. The current expires Sept. 30.

While lawmakers debate how much to spend, some state governments, already facing budget shortfalls, are cutting back. Maryland and Kansas have diverted money from transportation projects for other government services, and Wisconsin is considering it.

The Bush administration has proposed increasing highway and transit funding by 13 percent, to $247-billion over the next six years. House Transportation Committee Chairman Don Young, R-Alaska, has said that's not enough and has discussed an increase in the gasoline tax to raise more money. Young wants to spend $375-billion over six years.

In New York, where 10 people died in 1987 in the collapse of an inadequately maintained state bridge, the number of deficient spans declined by 43 percent in the last decade, a higher percentage than any other state. The state had 6,501 deficient bridges at the end of 2002, down from 11,419 in 1992.

Other places have not fared so well. More than two-thirds of the bridges in the District of Columbia are deficient, the highest percentage in the nation. The list includes the Benning Road bridge across the Anacostia River, where 68,400 vehicles travel every day across a span rated in poor condition.

More than half the bridges in Massachusetts and Rhode Island also are deficient.

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