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Aging
Infrastructure
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
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The recent
and tragic bridge collapse in Minnesota raises many questions in
Americans' minds about our aging infrastructure, and what is being
done to maintain it. Questions such as: "Was I-35 an isolated
accident or are we approaching days when crumbling bridges and bursting
pipes will be regular features on the evening news?"
The poor ratings
on the inspection report of that bridge, and similar deficiency
findings on as many as 25% of our bridges suggests the latter. Estimates
on what it will cost to bring deficiencies in our infrastructure
back up to par range from massive to astronomical.
Billions of
tax dollars at all levels of government are devoted to infrastructure,
but one problem is that politicians love to cut ribbons. Political
capital is gained not from maintaining or repairing our systems,
but from building new bridges, new stadiums, and new roads, often
of questionable real utility. Seldom is there a ceremony or photo
opportunity for repairing or maintaining something already in place.
As the so-called
Highway Trust Fund is set to go bankrupt as early as 2009, private
investment firms are gearing up for partnerships, which could be
a positive step, if handled sensibly. What we need to avoid are
items such as the Trans Texas Corridor (TTC), which is phase 1 of
the NAFTA Super Highway. The Spanish firm Cintra is set to take
over toll collections after the TTCs completion; however it
is unclear that theyll have any obligations for maintenance.
The cost is being socialized, while the profit is privatized, effectively
making the American people pay for it twice.
Infrastructure,
in a capitalist model, is an asset worthy of maintaining to ensure
continuity of revenue. In a government-controlled model infrastructure
is nothing but a cumbersome liability. This should be taken into
consideration when developing plans to keep our current infrastructure
safe. Privatization should be used to encourage maintenance and
safety, and where private companies truly invest and bear the upfront
costs in return for ability to collect tolls or usage fees in some
form. But public/private partnerships that look more like corporate
welfare must be avoided.
We
should re-examine how we handle the taxes we collect for infrastructure
and how we allocate that money. At the very least reins need to
be put on the Highway Trust Fund. Funds collected from the gas tax
should go into the Trust Fund period.
Even the most
ardent liberal and passionate conservative can agree that when they
pay gasoline taxes, the least they expect is a road and bridge system
that won't crumble beneath their feet. Before any subsidies or welfare
payments are paid out, before social security is handed out to illegal
immigrants, or health care is given to everyone, before bridges
to nowhere are built at home, or entire countries bombed and rebuilt
abroad, before any other myriad of exotic government projects are
even considered, infrastructure should be attended to and taken
seriously.
August
25, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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