But funding is not the challenge. The main reason crumbling roads, decrepit bridges, antiquated power lines, leaky water mains and muddy harbors don't get fixed is interminable regulatory review.
Infrastructure approvals can take upward of a decade or longer, according to the Regional Plan Association. The environmental review statement for dredging the Savannah River took 14 years to complete. Even projects with little or no environmental impact can take years.
Raising the roadway of the Bayonne Bridge at the mouth of the Port of Newark, for example, requires no new foundations or right of way, and would not require approvals at all except that it spans navigable water. Raising the roadway would allow a new generation of efficient large ships into the port. But the project is now approaching its fifth year of legal process, bogged down in environmental litigation.
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Sunday, November 24, 2013
Main Reasons For Crumbling Infrastructure Are Delays From Environmental Reviews And Not Funding
Posted By Milton Recht
From The Wall Street Journal, "Why It Takes So Long to Build a Bridge in America: There's plenty of money. The problem is interminable environmental review." by Philip K Howard:
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