The incredible collapse of the
Minneapolis bridge will send a message to the nation that has been repeatedly
sent for decades, but to which our political system has refused to effectively
respond. America�s physical, engineered infrastructure has been in desperate
need for massive spending to repair and replace, but the multi-trillion-dollar
cost has been rejected by local, state and federal politicians.
First, understand that I have a
professional background in this area. My career started as a metallurgist, than
I obtained a Ph.D. in Materials Engineering and became a full professor of
metallurgical engineering at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where I
taught about mechanical metallurgy and failure analysis, and in my consulting
practice regularly worked on explaining actual failures of products and
systems.
Many academic and professional
groups have for many years produced countless reports on mounting unpaid public
costs for updating our crucial physical infrastructure, including bridges, but
going way beyond those to, for example, roads, water and sewer systems, tunnels
and much more. Make no mistake: The deeply researched and totally supported
case for a massive national infrastructure spending program could not have been
clearer.
But spending on infrastructure is
not sexy and politicians at all levels of government have found countless
excuses for not facing the totality of the problem. Instead, public spending is
dribbled out, dealing with the most urgent problems or, worse yet, the ones
that are the most visible to the public. But unaddressed are massive numbers of
problems, such as the Minneapolis bridge and thousands more bridges, that our
bureaucratic system has learned to game, postpone, rationalize and, therefore,
put the public safety at considerable risk.
As a metallurgist I can pretty
much assure you that if there is a technically honest and complete investigation,
the ultimate explanation of the Minneapolis bridge failure will be related to
fatigue cracking in the metal structure. Already, news reports have revealed
some prior observation of a fatigue problem with the bridge and that the bridge
had a relatively low rating of four out of a possible nine, showing that it was
structurally deficient.
The game played by virtually all
government agencies is to find excuses for delaying the most costly repair or
replacement of bridges and other parts of our physical infrastructure. As just
another example, in most older urban areas there are constant repairs of broken
underground water pipes. What is really needed, but avoided, is a total
replacement of very old underground pipe systems -- in many places, 100 or more
years old!
Government inspection programs
have been terribly compromised over many years. The incredible political
pressures to minimize spending on infrastructure have filtered down to the
people, procedures and technologies used to examine bridges and other things.
When it comes to bridges it is also important to admit that many aspects of our
automobile addiction have raised risks, including enormously greater numbers of
vehicles creating heavy traffic during much of the day in urban regions. Add to
this the massive increase in vehicle weight resulting from the incredible
increase in monster SUVs, as well as huge increases in large truck traffic.
The Minneapolis bridge collapse
happened during evening rush hour because that was a period of maximum stress,
and that would be the trigger for expanding existing fatigue cracks. Once
fatigue cracks get to critical sizes they grow and propagate very rapidly,
producing powerful loads and stresses on remaining steel components and
creating what appears to be a virtually instantaneous bridge collapse.
The remaining public policy
question is clear: Will the nation spend what is necessary? Seven other major
bridge collapses in the last 40 years have not done the trick. Inadequate
bridge inspection has been a frequent documented problem, as well as some
design defects. Many people have already died from bridge failures. But still
the nation�s elected officials have not bitten the bullet and agreed to spend
trillions of dollars over several decades to bring America�s physical
infrastructure up to the most modern standards.
Think about all this the next time
you go over a bridge.
Joel
S. Hirschhorn is the author of "Delusional
Democracy -- Fixing the Republic Without Overthrowing the Government" and
a founder of Friends of the Article V
Convention. He can be reached through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.