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View Full Version : Wacth out a Quarter of U.S. bridges unsafe



Sgt Sostand
07-07-03, 08:50 PM
WASHINGTON, July 7 — 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.
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.

BAD BRIDGES MEAN DETOURS
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 at the end of 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

http://stacks.msnbc.com/news/913110.asp