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Dozens missing, four confirmed dead in Minnesota bridge collapse
By Joe Kay
2 August 2007
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A major highway bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota collapsed
during the evening rush hour on Wednesday, sending dozens of cars
and trucks plunging into the Mississippi River.
As of Thursday afternoon four people were confirmed dead, but
this number is certain to rise as recovery efforts proceed. Minneapolis
Police Chief Tim Dolan said Thursday that several more people
had already been found dead, trapped in their automobiles beneath
the rubble or submerged in water.
Estimates of the number of people missing range from 20 to
65. At least 79 were injured in the collapse, many seriously.
Some 50 cars fell more than 60 feet when the bridge gave way.
Other vehicles toward the edge of the bridge fell a shorter distance,
including a school bus carrying 59 people on board, mostly children.
All of those on the bus survived.
On Thursday morning officials announced that the rescue effort
had been called off and they were shifting to the recovery stage.
This means no more survivors are expected. It is estimated that
the recovery effort will take at least three days to complete
because workers confront dangerous conditions.
Family members on Thursday waited anxiously for news of relatives
and loved ones, hoping that somehow additional survivors would
be found.
The suddenness with which an ordinary rush hour commute turned
into a deadly tragedy and the terrible death suffered by those
who were trapped underwater in their cars contributed to widespread
shock and horror over the disaster. So did the sense that something
similar could happen almost anywhere in America, where bridges,
roads, levees and other elements of the physical infrastructure
have long been neglected.
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported one eyewitness
account: Brandon Andreen, 20, of Blaine, was driving down
University Avenue when he saw a huge cloud of dust and smoke,
and people running.... Cars were crushed, sunken, floating and
hanging from the bridge. A car exploded in front of him. Screams
echoed down the river. It was the worst thing Ive
seen in my entire life, Andreen said. You couldnt
breathe, there was so much smoke.
The bridge, which runs near the main campus of the University
of Minnesota, is the main north-south highway in the area of downtown
Minneapolis and carries an estimated 141,000 cars and trucks every
day.
The Bush administration, somewhat the wiserfrom a public
relations standpointafter its open demonstration of indifference
to the fate of the victims of Hurricane Katrina two years ago,
made a show of concern over the bridge collapse. Bush announced
on Thursday that the federal government would provide robust
support, but he gave no details. Later it was announced that the
federal government would provide $5 million to help rebuild the
bridgein itself, a mere drop in the bucket. White House
Press Secretary Tony Snow insisted that it was the job of local
and state governments to repair any deficiencies in the nations
roads and bridges.
It is impossible to say for certain at this point what caused
the collapse of the bridge, and investigations have just begun.
Possible factors that have been suggested include vibrations,
perhaps from construction work or a passing train, combined with
the heavy load from rush hour traffic.
Whatever the immediate cause, there are indications that the
bridge was not structurally sound and was in need of repair or
replacement. The bridge, which takes Interstate 35W across the
Mississippi, was built in 1967, before more recent standards for
bridges were enacted. In particular, it is a non-redundant
structurethat is, it lacks a backup support system
that could localize any failures.
Unlike other bridges in the same area, there are no piers supporting
its mid-section. This design, intended to allow freer transportation
on the river, is now considered archaic. There are only four structural
supports, two on each of the riverbanks. One of these apparently
failed on Wednesday, bringing the whole bridge down with it.
The I-35W bridge has been inspected on several occasions over
the past six years, and has consistently received poor marks.
A 2005 report by the US Department of Transportation found that
it was structurally deficient and gave the bridge
a score of 50. Generally, a score of 50 or below means a bridge
may need to be replaced. This particular bridge has been categorized
as structurally deficient since 1990.
Other reports found similar problems. A 2001 report by the
University of Minnesota Department of Civil Engineering found
that there were many poor fatigue details that could
cause serious problems in the future. However, it concluded that
there was no need for immediate action and that replacement
of this bridge, and the associated very high cost, may be deferred.
Governor Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota, a Republican, has resisted
calls within the state legislature for more spending on infrastructure.
On Thursday, he sought to avoid any responsibility by pointing
out that the previous reports did not recommend immediate action.
The Minneapolis bridge is hardly unique in its structural problems.
The American Society for Civil Engineers (ASCE) has for years
sought to call attention to the decaying national infrastructure.
Its infrastructure report card for 2005 concluded: As of
2003, 27.1 percent of the nations bridges (160,570) were
structurally deficient or functionally obsolete...
Structurally deficient means that significant bridge elements
have deteriorated, resulting in reduced load-carrying capacity.
Tens of thousands of bridges have the same or worse rating as
the one that collapsed on Wednesday.
The report card gave an overall grade of D to public
infrastructure, and concluded that $1.6 trillion is needed over
a five-year period to address problems with roads, bridges and
other systems.
A report card issued by the ASCE in 2003 cited roads, mass
transit and bridges as the top three infrastructural concerns
for Minnesota. It found that 16 percent of bridges in the state
were structurally deficient or functionally obsolete, a figure
that decreased to 13 percent in 2005. Other states were even worseparticularly
states with more heavily populated urban areas, where bridges
tend to be in poorer shape.
In New York, the ASCE determined in 2005 that 38 percent of
bridges were structurally deficient or functionally obsolete,
and in Washington DC, 64.8 percent were given this designation.
Officials said on Thursday that the collapse of the bridge
was not related to terrorism, and there was no earthquake or accident
that triggered the event. Nick Coleman, writing in the Minneapolis
Star Tribune, commented that this made the disaster worse
than any of those things, because it was more mundane and more
insidious: the death and destruction was the result of incompetence
and indifference. In a word, it was avoidable.
Such official incompetence and indifference occur within a
definite context. For decades, social infrastructure in the US
has been starved of resources, even as trillions of dollars have
been funneled into the pockets of a small layer of the population.
Hundreds of billions are spent every year on the US military,
but when it comes to the physical infrastructure and basic social
services, adequate funds are never available.
Minnesota was not so long ago considered one of the more socially
progressive states in the country. Its politics were dominated
by the Democratic Farmer-Labor Party, the states branch
of the Democratic Party. The twin cities of Minneapolis and St.
Paul were often cited for maintaining a superiorby American
standardssocial network, as well as a better-than-average
physical infrastructure. In recent years, the remnants of past
reform policies have been abandoned in favor of the free
market and fiscal austerity dogmas that dominate both the
Democratic and Republican parties.
An integral part of the economic and social policies that have
effectively redistributed the national wealth from the bottom
to the top, vastly enriching the uppermost social layers at the
expense of the working class and to the detriment of the material
foundations of modern societyroads, bridges, levees, water,
electricityis the removal of virtually all legal restrictions
and regulations on the profit-making activities of big business.
This includes the enforcing of basic safety standards and the
monitoring of companies that repair bridges.
In the United States, there is no erring on the side
of safety. Infrastructure is allowed to decay until it must
be replaced, an accident occurs, or there is some business interest
involved. This can lead to tragic results. Just last month an
underground steam pipe exploded in midtown Manhattan, killing
one person and injuring dozens. In 2003, as a result of an overburdened
and under-maintained transmission grid, a major blackout cut off
power to large sections of the Midwest and Northeast United States,
as well as parts of Canada.
The same tendencies were also present two years ago in the
virtual destruction of a major American city, New Orleans, in
Hurricane Katrina. For all the official talk about securing
the homeland, the American people are more threatened by
the neglect and incompetence of the government and the subordination
of all social questions to the enrichment of a financial oligarchy
than they are by terrorism.
See Also:
New York City: steam pipe
blast kills 1, injures dozens
[20 July 2007]
Hurricane Katrina
disaster shows failure of the profit system
[6 September 2005]
Hurricane Katrinas
aftermath: from natural disaster to national humiliation
[2 September 2005]
The North American
blackout: deregulation, profit and the decay of the social infrastructure
[23 August 2003]
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