In reply to Snowdoggie (Forum Supporter) :
Mitch McConnell is already taking credit for the projects in his state, he actually voted for the bill and Kentucky needed it. Strange bedfellows indeed.
There are plenty of studies out there regarding infrastructure repairs that are way overdue including bridges that should have already collapsed. We also have water works in Michigan that are unusable because of lead poisoning. We have been ignoring our infrastructure for years. Some of it is more important that building yet another luxury apartment complex in Dallas or Phoenix.
https://www.fitchratings.com/research/us-public-finance/infrastructure-bill-could-spur-overdue-road-bridge-repairs-09-11-2021
https://kxel.com/2021/11/10/benton-harbor-michigan-lead-pipe-removal-is-finally-underway/
Here is the issue. It's in the title if your first link...
"Infrastructure Bill Could Spur Overdue Road Bridge Repairs."
If you want to win me over with why this bill was necessary, the word "could" doesn't inspire much confidence. There are a lot of assumptions going on here...
1) The problem with the roads and bridges is lack of money, not improper engineering/construction/inspections/repair.
2) There is currently a lack of money to address the above.
3) More money will solve the problems.
On the face of it, it sounds reasonable that if there problems, more money can solve them. Unfortunately, time and time again that has proven to be inaccurate. I'll give you some examples local to me.
For decades, there were promises and tax hikes to improve an interchange that was a real bottleneck. Every couple years, suckers, err, voters, approved a ballot measures and tax hikes to "fix" it. We got studies. We got bike lanes. We got more buses. To be fair, if you read the fine print, you would know that you were not getting what they were selling. Most voters did not read the fine print. It was many, many years (and tax hikes) before it was improved.
We built a new Bay Bridge. Many times over the original budget- the "temporary" toll increases have not only become permanent, there have been increases on the increases. To build a flawed bridge that needed millions to fix after construction.
Not too long ago there was a ballot measure to raise gas taxes- already the highest in the nation- to fix the roads. It leaked out that Cal Trans had been instructed to slow and stop already budgeted and scheduled maintenance in the months before the election. They figured if the roads got worse, more people would vote for the tax hike to fix the roads- despite funding already being in place.
The same Cal Trans got caught storing dozens (hundreds?) of new vehicles under a raised freeway in Sacramento. They were buying unneeded vehicles- everything from Priuses to dump trucks- to use up their budgets. Some were a couple years old and never tagged and put into service- they were bought to use up previous years budgets. They did this while saying they needed more money to do their job.
If you read the article you linked, they mention much of the money going to a few states that have the most deferred maintenance. The also mention many of those states have already taken it upon themselves to generate revenue to address the issues, like gas taxes to repair bridges. If I live in a state that has high gas taxes and tolls to pay for my state's infrastructure, why should I also have to pay for those that don't?
Now, I'm not against updating our infrastructure, I just wish we would do it more wisely. If you have a leaky bucket, patch the bucket before you refill it. I'm also not a fan of doing it bass- ackwards. Committing to the spending, then finding something to spend it on. As others have mentioned, the timing is bad too, during shortages and supply chain disruptions. But also as others have mentioned, these things move slowly, hopefully we will be past all of this before any shovels hit the dirt.