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AnotherMcIntosh

(11,064 posts)
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 05:30 PM Jun 2013

State of Conn disagrees that 406 of its bridges are structurally deficient; says it's only 331.



"Department of Transportation spokesman Kevin Nursick has responded by saying that a structurally deficient bridge is not an unsafe bridge.
...
"Overall, Connecticut ranks 27th worst in the nation for the condition of bridges, according to (a report from Transportation For America). This year, 9.7% of all state bridges were deficient, a rate that is 4.1% worse from that of 2011.

http://connecticut.cbslocal.com/2013/06/20/report-identifies-structurally-deficient-state-bridges/

Is there any good reason why some of the NSA spy-upon-all-Americans-money can't otherwise be put to good use by rebuilding America's infrastructure?
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State of Conn disagrees that 406 of its bridges are structurally deficient; says it's only 331. (Original Post) AnotherMcIntosh Jun 2013 OP
Not particularly... Chan790 Jun 2013 #1
 

Chan790

(20,176 posts)
1. Not particularly...
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 07:44 PM
Jun 2013

but the NSA spy-upon-all-Americans budget is not a large as people think it is either.

It comes nowhere close to being enough to fix the infrastructure problems of the US. Intel gathering is cheap; the largest portion of the invisible money goes to USDoD and the Armed Services not the alphabet-soup intelligence agencies. Where we need to start taking money for infrastructure and transit funding is energy-subsidies as they've been shown to not actually lower the consumer-price of energy even one cent. Why give Exxon and BP free money when they gouge consumers every chance they get and charge the maximum price they can?

Also, I have a slight problem with the way information was presented in that article...I guess 27th-worst sounds more dramatic than 23rd-best. CT is in the top-50% and they still choose to present the information from the bottom-up.

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