Critics of the push to revamp highway funding say events such as the I-35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis in 2007 are isolated incidents that don't take into account data showing improvements in the nation's infrastructure. If you really call a D+ an improvement.

Critics of the push to revamp highway funding say events such as the I-35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis in 2007 are isolated incidents that don't take into account data showing improvements in the nation's infrastructure. If you really call a D+ an improvement.

In the debate over how to increase highway funding, the call is often made to raise fuel taxes or develop other funding mechanisms to fix our crumbling highways and bridges, a problem brought tragically to the forefront by the collapse of the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis in August 2007 that killed 13 people.

Now, clouding the debate in Washington is the claim that our infrastructure really isn't crumbling after all.

As Adam Snider writes in today's article in Politico.com:

"By some measures, the nation’s bridges and roads have improved in recent years, despite a still-teeming backlog of cracked asphalt, aging steel trusses and decades-old structures that don’t meet modern safety standards.

"Members of Congress are divided on whether we even face a major problem — at the same time that President Barack Obama is traveling the country to push more than $60 billion worth of initiatives to address the infrastructure crisis."

Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), who spent 10 years as the top GOP voice on the Environment and Public Works Committee, tells Politico that yes, it is crumbling, citing the death of an Oklahoma woman who was killed when a piece of the bridge she was walking under fell on her.

However, some critics say the threat is being overblown.

“You will always be able to find crumbling infrastructure even if you add $100 billion a year,” said Rep. James Lankford (R-Okla.), who left the Transportation Committee this year to join the GOP leadership team, in the Politico.com article. “You will still find some roads and some bridges because that’s the nature of the asset.”

Critics of the crumbling infrastructure story point to some facts that show improvement, Snider writes:

  • The country’s infrastructure recently got a D+ grade from a national association of civil engineers, the highest mark it has ever gotten from the group.
  • Government data show that 12% of U.S. bridges were rated “structurally deficient” in 2009, down from 14.2% just eight years earlier.
  • Major U.S. roads have also gotten better. Only 48% of the country’s interstate highways and other major routes were in “good” condition in 2000, a figure that climbed to 57% by 2008.

Seriously? You get a D+ and say we don't have a problem? Sorry, but if that were the case with my daughter and her school, I don't think I'd just sit back and say, "See, the problem's improving, we don't need to make more efforts to fix it."

There's also the question of congestion. Just this week, we told you about a new report that says gridlock is back. For instance, gridlock in Chicago increased over 20% in February from a year ago.

And last month, we reported that congestion in 2011 cost the country $121 billion, up $1 billion from the year before. Of that total, about $27 billion worth was wasted time and diesel fuel from trucks moving goods on the system.

C'mon, Capitol Hill. Don't let minor improvements blind you to the problems we face in paying for improving the nation's highway system.

Related recent HDT Editorials:

The Hard Road to Highway Funding, March 2013

A Trio of Trucking Resolutions, January 2013

About the author
Deborah Lockridge

Deborah Lockridge

Editor and Associate Publisher

Reporting on trucking since 1990, Deborah is known for her award-winning magazine editorials and in-depth features on diverse issues, from the driver shortage to maintenance to rapidly changing technology.

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