Here is a great article from Bridge Magazine By Ted Roelofs:
There
is no shortage of fancy electronic charts, graphs and statistics to document
the crumbling state of Michigan’s streets and highways.
Grand
Rapids auto repair shop owner Jay Ziomkowski, though, charts it by the customers
who walk through his door.
He
recalled a recent winter, when “the roads were just horrific. Certain sections
were like a bomb went off. You would get bent rims, blown tires. The struts
would actually break off where they were mounted.”
Of
course, from his perspective, that might not be all bad.
“I
don’t mind. It brings work. We do a ton of wheel bearings and I think that’s
related to the condition of the roads.”
For
nearly everyone else, however, there is a price to pay for a state
transportation grid in decline. According
to a 2011 state report, 13.6 percent of 85,000 lane miles on roads eligible for
federal funding needed structural repair in 2004. By 2011, that figure had more
than doubled to 35.1 percent.
In
2004, nearly 88 percent of those roads were considered in good or fair shape,
according to the Michigan Transportation Asset Management Council. That
declined to 64.9 percent by 2011.
Michigan
has another 80,000 miles of roads not eligible for federal aid, mostly streets
and little-traveled rural roads. The news there is no better.
Of
some 10,000 miles of such roads that were rated, 44 percent were in poor
condition, 46 percent in fair and just 10 percent in good condition.
Michigan
annually pops up near the top of lists that only confirm what frustrated
drivers often say.
In
2010, Michigan’s roads were ranked second worst in the nation by trucking
publication Overdrive Magazine. In 2009, they rated third worst.
In
2009, the American Society of Civil Engineers in Michigan gave Michigan roads a
grade of “D” and state bridges a “C.” It also noted that some 10,000 miles of
primary roads slid from “good” to “fair” condition between 2004 and 2007.
According
to the Michigan Department of Transportation, the condition of the state’s
10,000 bridges showed slight improvement from 2004 to 2011.
But
it also noted that Michigan topped another dubious list, leading Great Lakes
states in 2012 in percentage of structurally deficient bridges on all roadways
with 11.8 percent.
At Capitol, calls for new funding
Gov.
Rick Snyder is calling for an extra $1.2 billion in annual transportation
funding. That could be could be raised through legislation to install a
wholesale gas tax and increase registration fees or a voter referendum to
increase the state sales tax by 2 cents. Both options would scrap the
19-cents-per-gallon tax paid at the pump.
Snyder
also has proposed a local option under which counties could approve additional
vehicle registration increases to fund local road improvements. Michigan has
about 120,000 miles of paved roadway, including nearly 10,000 miles of state
trunkline, 90,000 miles of county roads, and just over 20,000 miles of city and
village streets.
The
added funds are to compensate for a decade of declining revenue to fix roads
and bridges.Fuel efficiency disrupts repair system
As
cars get more fuel efficient, revenue from the gas tax – the primary funding
source for transportation infrastructure – declined from more than $940 million
in fiscal year 2002-2003 to $846 million in fiscal 2008-2009. According to the Michigan
Senate Fiscal Agency,
the amounts to a drop of 42 percent when adjusted for inflation. It calculated
that overall transporation transportation revenue, including vehicle license
and registration fees, the gas tax and 15-cent diesel fuel tax, declined by 39
percent allowing for inflation during that period.
At
the same time, the cost of everything from asphalt to paving trucks has only
gone up.“It’s
extremely frustrating,” said Jon Rice, managing director of the Kent County
Road Commission.“We’ve
got a huge investment (in roads and bridges) in Kent County and to see that
investment deteriorate and knowing that we can’t do what the public expects us
to do is very frustrating.”
Rice
said the county netted $29 million in state transportation fund revenues for
fiscal 2012 — same amount it received in 1999. Adjusting for inflation, that
represents a funding drop of $11 million. Rice estimated during that same
period that basic maintenance costs increased by at least 80 percent. The
cost to road quality has been considerable. In 2004, 18 percent of county roads
were rated in poor condition. That nearly doubled to 35 percent in 2010. “As
the years go on, the deterioration keeps getting ahead of us,” he said.
In
the long run, that means it will cost even more to upgrade roads to acceptable
standards. MDOT estimates the cost of returning a poor road to good condition
is four to five times greater than the cost of returning a fair road to good
condition.
And
the price paid by the motoring public is more than a bone-jarring ride.
Michigan transportation officials estimated in 2009 that bad roads cost state
motorists $370 a year in extra vehicle operating expenses. Business advocates
say it costs millions of dollars more in added expenses to the manufacturing
and agriculture sector while undermining growth in tourism.
State
officials say that if funding remains static, it will cost $25 billion in added
repair bills over 10 years for the state road system.
MDOT
Director Kirk Steudle compares road and bridge maintenance to the basic hygiene
needed to keep a set of teeth. Neglect either and the result is not pretty. “You are born with a nice set of teeth, but
if you don’t brush them and go to the dentist, when you get to about 40, you
can go get a new set of teeth.”
Ted Roelofs worked for the Grand Rapids Press for 30 yeas.
Rogers City need road repairs as well; however, we lack the funding to make a dent in this serious problem.
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