This
week marks the 30th anniversary of the Mianus River Bridge collapse, which killed three people. That accident on I-95 in Greenwich was
attributed to years of neglected inspections and maintenance, the inevitable
result of penny-pinching in Hartford.
Will
the recent Metro-North crash (which injured 76 passengers) also be tied to
long-postponed repairs?
Last
week, the CDOT’s Commissioner testified before US Senator Blumenthal that Connecticut has spent $3.2
billion in the last decade on the New Haven rail line, while Amtrak spent just
$64 million. And all that spending still
couldn’t prevent the May 17 derailment.
But
Commissioner James Redeker also said there’s another $4.5 billion needed to
bring the line into a “state of good repair” in the short term. That includes work on the catenary and
replacement of four movable bridges, some of them 100+ years old.
Layer on top of this $130 million to meet the federal mandate for PTC (Positive Train Control), and you can
see the problem.
Where’s
the money to come from?
Well,
it will come from you and me. On July 1st
we will all start paying an additional 4 cents per gallon for gasoline, tax money that will go into the Special
Transportation Fund (STF), supposedly to be spent on rails and roads.
But
remember that it was Governor Malloy who (again) balanced this year’s state
budget by raiding $110 million from that STF, something that, as a
candidate, he swore he would never do. Voters
will decide if that makes Malloy a hypocrite… or just a pragmatist. Either way, future Governors won’t be able to
do it again as the legislature has voted to put the STF into an untouchable “lock box” starting in 2015, after the next
election.
Over
the past decade various lawmakers and Governors have stolen a billion dollars
from the STF. So not only are we about
$4.5 billion short on needed funds for rail repairs, but the STF has been
treated like a petty cash box and drained it at will.
How
sad it is when we have to balance our state’s budget by taking money targeted
for keeping our rails and highways safe… not to mention starting a state-wide
Keno game, basically a “tax” on those ignorant enough to play it (with odds of
about 9 million to one of winning the jackpot).
Kudos
to Senator Blumenthal for pushing safety as a top priority. Maybe he can also get Amtrak to start paying
its fair share for running trains over our (state-owned and maintained) tracks.
But
it’s not just our rails that are in bad shape.
This week the group Transportation for America released its annual report on the deterioration
of US highway bridges: one in nine of
those bridges is structurally deficient and in need of repair or replacement. In Connecticut, that number has grown, not declined, since last year.
Yet,
our DOT is still moving forward with a half-billion dollar rebuild of the
structurally sound Waterbury “mix-master” where Route 8 crosses I-84. Why?
So,
next time you’re filling your tank with the priciest gasoline in the Northeast,
pick-up a Keno ticket. You might have a
better chance of winning there than ever seeing your taxes spent on improving
transportation safety.