Freight
train crash in Missouri triggers highway overpass collapse
Seven
injured as goods trains collide at rail intersection, resulting in
derailment and damage to overpass section
25
May, 2013
Two
freight trains collided at a rail intersection in rural southeastern
Missouri on Saturday, triggering the collapse of a highway overpass
when at least a dozen rail cars derailed and struck a support pillar,
authorities said.
None
of the seven people hurt in the fiery crash – two train workers and
five people who had been in the two cars on the overpass – suffered
life-threatening injuries, Scott County sheriff Rick Walter said in a
statement.
"One
train T-boned the other one and caused it to derail, and the derailed
train hit a pillar which caused the overpass to collapse,"
Sheriff's dispatcher Clay Slipis said of the pre-dawn crash near
Chaffee, about 15 miles southwest of Cape Girardeau, Missouri.
The
collision of the BNSF Railway Co and Union Pacific trains also
sparked a fire when diesel fuel leaked from one of the train engines,
Slipis said.
The
crash came just over a week after a commuter train derailed in
Connecticut, striking another train and injuring more than 70 people
during the evening rush hour.
Then
on Thursday, a truck crash triggered the collapse of a bridge in
Washington state, sending two cars plunging into the frigid Skagit
River and raising concerns about the nation's aging infrastructure.
Three people were rescued.
In
Missouri, Wayne Woods told a regional CBS affiliate that he had
rushed to the scene as soon as he heard the crash to try to halt
traffic as he called in the emergency.
"We
heard the crash and we stepped outside and my son said the overpass
was down. Then we heard a car's tires squealing like it was coming to
a stop and then a crash and a horn continuously blowing," he
told KFVS television.
"I
got over there, the train was on its side. They got the guys out and
lifted them down off the train and got them off the overpass. One was
kind of bloody and the other one looked like he was pretty shook up,"
he said.
The
National Transportation Safety Board said it had dispatched a team to
investigate the train crash.
Union
Pacific said its train had been primarily carrying auto parts from
Illinois to Texas when it struck the side of another train, and that
a Union Pacific engineer and conductor were lightly injured,
according to spokeswoman Calli Hite.
The
Union Pacific locomotive and about a dozen cars derailed in the
crash, she added.
BNSF
said that its train had been hauling scrap metal from salvage
facilities and was heading south along the Missouri River when it was
struck, and that none of the crew were injured. Authorities had
earlier said conductors for both trains had been hurt.
Thousands
Of Bridges Are One Freak Accident Away From Collapse
25
May, 2013
SEATTLE
(AP) — Thousands of bridges around the U.S. may be one freak
accident or mistake away from collapse, even if the spans are deemed
structurally sound.
The
crossings are kept standing by engineering design, not supported with
brute strength or redundant protections like their more modern
counterparts. Bridge regulators call the more risky spans "fracture
critical," meaning that if a single, vital component of the
bridge is compromised, it can crumple.
Those
vulnerable crossing carry millions of drivers every day. In Boston, a
six-lane highway 1A near Logan airport includes a "fracture
critical" bridge over Bennington Street. In northern Chicago, an
I-90 pass that goes over Ashland Avenue is in the same category. An
I-880 bridge over 5th Avenue in Oakland, Calif., is also on the list.
Also in
that category is the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River north
of Seattle, which collapsed into the water days ago after officials
say an oversized truck load clipped the steel truss.
Public
officials have focused in recent years on the desperate need for
money to repair thousands of bridges deemed structurally deficient,
which typically means a major portion of the bridge is in poor
condition or worse. But the bridge that collapsed Thursday is not in
that deficient category, highlighting another major problem with the
nation's infrastructure: Although it's rare, some bridges deemed to
be fine structurally can still be crippled if they are struck hard
enough in the wrong spot.
"It
probably is a bit of a fluke in that sense," said Charles
Roeder, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the
University of Washington.
While the
I-5 truck's cargo suffered only minimal damage, it left chaos in its
wake, with two vehicles catapulting off the edge of the broken bridge
into the river below. Three people involved escaped with non-life
threatening injuries.
The most
famous failure of a fracture critical bridge was the collapse of the
I-35W bridge in Minneapolis during rush hour on Aug. 1, 2007, killing
13 people and injuring more than 100 others. The National
Transportation Safety Board concluded that the cause of the collapse
was an error by the bridge's designers — a gusset plate, a key
component of the bridge, was too thin. The plate was only half of the
required one-inch thickness.
Because the
bridge's key structures lacked redundancy, where if one piece fails,
there is another piece to prevent the bridge from falling, when the
gusset plate broke, much of the bridge collapsed.
Mark
Rosenker, who was chairman of the NTSB during the I-35W bridge
investigation, said the board looked into whether other fracture
critical bridges were collapsing. They found a few cases, but not
many, he said.
"Today,
they're still building fracture critical bridges with the belief that
they're not going break," Rosenker said.
Fracture
critical bridges, like the I-5 span in Washington, are the result of
Congress trying to cut corners to save money rather than a lack of
engineering know-how, said Barry B. LePatner, a New York real estate
attorney and author of "Too Big to Fall: America's Failing
Infrastructure and the Way Forward."
About
18,000 fracture critical bridges were built from the mid-1950s
through the late 1970s in an effort to complete the nation's
interstate highway system, which was launched under President Dwight
Eisenhower, LePatner said in an interview. The fracture critical
bridge designs were cheaper than bridges designed with redundancy, he
said.
Thousands
of those bridges remain in use, according to an AP analysis.
"They
have been left hanging with little maintenance for four decades now,"
he said. "There is little political will and less political
leadership to commit the tens of billions of dollars needed" to
fix them.
There has
been little focus or urgency in specifically replacing the older
"fracture critical" crossings, in part because there is a
massive backlog of bridge repair work for thousands of bridges deemed
to be structurally problematic. Washington state Rep. Judy Clibborn,
a Democrat who leads the House transportation committee, has been
trying to build support for a tax package to pay for major
transportation projects in the state. But her plan wouldn't have done
anything to revamp the bridge that collapsed.
National
bridge records say the I-5 crossing over the Skagit River had a
sufficiency rating of 57.4 out of 100 — a score designed to gauge
the ability of the bridge to remain in service. To qualify for
federal replacement funds, a bridge must have a rating of 50 or
below. A bridge must have a sufficiency rating of 80 or below to
qualify for federal rehabilitation funding.
Hundreds of
bridges in Washington state have worse ratings than the one that
collapsed, and many around the country have single-digit ratings.
Clibborn
said the Skagit River crossing wasn't even on the radar of lawmakers
because state officials have to prioritize by focusing on bridges
with serious structural problems that are at higher risk of imminent
danger.
Along with
being at risk of a fatal impact, the I-5 bridge was deemed to be
"functionally obsolete," which essentially means it wasn't
built to today's standards. Its shoulders were narrow, and it had low
clearance.
There are
66,749 structurally deficient bridges and 84,748 functionally
obsolete bridges in the U.S., including Puerto Rico, according to the
Federal Highway Administration. That's about a quarter of the 607,000
total bridges nationally. States and cities have been whittling down
that backlog, but slowly. In 2002, about 30 percent of bridges fell
into one of those two categories.
Spending by
states and local government on bridge construction adjusted for
inflation has more than doubled since 1998, from $12.3 billion to
$28.5 billion last year, according to the American Road and
Transportation Builders Association.
That's an all-time high.
"The
needs are so great that even with the growth we've had in the
investment level, it's barely moving the needle in terms of moving
bridges off these lists," said Alison Premo Black, the
association's chief economist.
There is
wide recognition at all levels of government that the failure to
address aging infrastructure will likely undermine safety and hinder
economic growth. But there is no consensus on how to pay for
improvements. The federal Highway Trust Fund, which provides
construction aid to states, is forecast to go broke next year. The
fund gets its revenue primarily from federal gas and diesel taxes.
But revenues aren't keeping up because people are driving less and
there are more fuel-efficient cars on the road.
Neither
Congress nor the White House has shown any willingness to raise
federal gas taxes, which haven't been increased since 1993. Many
transportation thinkers believe a shift to taxes based on miles
traveled by a vehicle is inevitable, but there are privacy concerns
and other difficulties that would preclude widespread use of such a
system for at least a decade.
Transportation
spending got a temporary boost with the economic stimulus funds
approved by Congress after President Barack Obama was elected. Of the
$27 billion designated for highway projects under the stimulus
program, about $3 billion went to bridge projects, Black said.
States are
looking for other means to raise money for highway and bridge
improvements, including more road tolls, dedicating a portion of
sales taxes to transportation and raising state gas taxes. Clibborn,
the Washington state lawmaker, has proposed a 10-cent gas hike to
help pay for projects, though the effort has been held up by a
dispute over how to rebuild the Columbia River bridge connecting
Vancouver, Wash., and Portland, Ore.
"We
can't possibly do it all in the next 10 years," Clibborn said.
"But we're going to do the first bite of the apple."
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