Skip to main content

US: Missouri state bridge repairs run out of gas

The US state of Missouri said it is fighting a losing battle to maintain its 641 bridges that are listed in critical condition - one-step away from being closed to traffic. Engineers in the southern state’s department of transportation said around US$820 million is needed to repair or replace the 641 bridges, three of which were closed to traffic last year. The critical list has expanded with the addition of 50 more bridges since last year. And the critical list is expected to grow to around 1,500 bri
September 11, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The US state of Missouri said it is fighting a losing battle to maintain its 641 bridges that are listed in critical condition - one-step away from being closed to traffic.

Engineers in the southern state’s department of transportation said around US$820 million is needed to repair or replace the 641 bridges, three of which were closed to traffic last year.

The critical list has expanded with the addition of 50 more bridges since last year. And the critical list is expected to grow to around 1,500 bridges – around 10% of the state’s total bridges - within a decade, according to a report by the St Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper.

The newspaper quotes state bridge engineer Dennis Heckman saying that his department should replace more than 100 bridges a year instead of the 30 for which it has plans. “In general, it’s not realistic that we’ll ever get it to zero,” he said.

The funding problem, however, could have been at least partly solved if state residents had voted ‘yes’ last year to increasing the Missouri sales tax. This could have generated about $5.4 billion over a decade for roads and bridges as well as ports, railways and public transit.

Also turned down, this time by members of the state legislator, was a proposal to raise the state’s tax on petrol, the Post-Dispatch reported.

For a two-minute television report on Missouri’s deteriorating bridge situation, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal click here Visit Missouri’s deteriorating bridge situation page false http://www.ky3.com/news/local/list-of-missouri-deteriorating-bridges-keeps-growing/21048998_35070588 false false%>.

Related Content

  • VIDEO: Car owner’s manual – chapter one, snake removal
    October 26, 2016
    Snakes can get into the darnedest places, such as your car. The issue then becomes how to get it out. The answer is, with a lot of work and care as well as an equal amount of patience, such as possessed by the man in this video shot somewhere possibly in Southeast Asia Getting a small snake out of a car is tough. Getting a large one out is practically impossible - at least extracting the reptile in one piece and alive is.
  • VIDEO: People see red over white elephant of a blue bike lane
    November 1, 2016
    The Scottish roads authority has backpedalled on its recently improved cycle lane along a major route on the south-west coast, close to the city of Ayr.

    Amid local authority concerns over traffic congestion and one man’s media-grabbing protest, the cycle lane will now be ripped out – after being installed this summer.

    As the video shows, it is a protected wide lane, often painted blue. Cars appear to travel freely beside it.
  • Turkmenistan starts construction of Ashgabat-Turkmenbashi road
    May 8, 2015
    Turkmenistan has started construction of the 544km Ashgabat-Turkmenbashi highway under a public-private partnership contract. The deal is expected to cost between US$800-900 million for every 2km or so of road construction from Ashgabat in central Turkmenistan to Turkmenbashi, a city of around 90,000 on the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea. For a YouTube video graphic representation of the highway, click here. To see World Highways report onTurkmenistan’s highways projects in 2011, click here. Türkmenb
  • TomTom survey shows congestion worsening in 200 global cities
    April 10, 2015
    A survey of more than 200 major global cities shows that commuters in Istanbul experience the worst overall traffic congestion. The average 30-minute drive in Istanbul takes more than an hour during evening rush hour, leading to an extra 125 hours wasted stuck in traffic every year, according to the latest Traffic Index Survey from Tom Tom. However, in Los Angeles, a 30 minute commute in the evening rush hour will take 54 minutes, adding an extra 92 hours annually.