Interstate Bridge Collapses in Minn.

Posted:
in AppleOutsider edited January 2014
The I-35W bridge collapsed during rush hour today...no apparent cause. Terror has been ruled out. At least 6 dead...possibly 50 cars went into the water.



http://www.breitbart.com/article.php...show_article=1



This is awful. I can only imagine the lawsuits here...people suing the government, the government suing contractors, people suing contractors directly. And they should. One doesn't think a goddamned interstate bridge is going to up and collapse for no reason.

They believe it was just some sort of structural failure as the bridge was being repaved and having new guard rails put on.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 43
    msnlymsnly Posts: 378member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SDW2001 View Post


    I can only imagine the lawsuits here...people suing the government, the government suing contractors, people suing contractors directly.



    People suing Apple because they saw everyone on the bridge with iPhones maxing out the wieght load; you know lawyers they'll come up with just about anything.



    But seriously, bridges shouldn't just be up and falling down! Don'tcha think?
  • Reply 2 of 43
    sammi josammi jo Posts: 4,634member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by MsNly View Post


    People suing Apple because they saw everyone on the bridge with iPhones maxing out the wieght load; you know lawyers they'll come up with just about anything.



    But seriously, bridges shouldn't just be up and falling down! Don'tcha think?



    Exactly so. Modern structures shouldn't collapse like that without warning or reason...



    The nation's infrastructure is in bad shape.... especially the ageing stuff. New York had a major event only last week with the failure of a high pressure steam pipe. We're spending $120 billion a year to further antagonize the Iraqi people, but the essential stuff back home gets overlooked. Perhaps "fixing the infrastructure" is regarded as "Commie talk" in DC?



    Despite the "terror not suspected" statements, can we expect someone to blame Muslims for todays accident in the coming days ? Just one hint ... and Fox News and the rest of the gutterpress would be on it like maggots feasting on 4 week old dogmeat in 90ºF weather.



  • Reply 3 of 43
    splinemodelsplinemodel Posts: 7,311member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sammi jo View Post


    Despite the "terror not suspected" statements, can we expect someone to blame Muslims for todays accident in the coming days ? Just one hint ... and Fox News and the rest of the gutterpress would be on it like maggots feasting on 4 week old dogmeat in 90ºF weather.





    I haven't heard anything yet. But there's nothing wrong with investigating for terrorism; you make it sound like there is. why?
  • Reply 4 of 43
    spindriftspindrift Posts: 674member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sammi jo View Post


    Despite the "terror not suspected" statements, can we expect someone to blame Muslims for todays accident in the coming days ?



    I think we should blame them anyway!



    jk
  • Reply 5 of 43
    steste Posts: 119member
    When I first heard the words "bridge", "Mississippi River", and "collapse", I immediately thought of the Huey P. Long, just outside of New Orleans:







    Now THAT'S a disaster waiting to happen, right there. The lanes are so narrow it's scary just driving over it. But when a train comes overhead and the whole thing starts to shake ... oh, boy.
  • Reply 6 of 43
    msnlymsnly Posts: 378member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sammi jo View Post


    The nation's infrastructure is in bad shape.... especially the ageing stuff. New York had a major event only last week with the failure of a high pressure steam pipe. We're spending $120 billion a year to further antagonize the Iraqi people, but the essential stuff back home gets overlooked. Perhaps "fixing the infrastructure" is regarded as "Commie talk" in DC?



    Ok why don't we stop the war (like that will ever happen... but) and spend all that money on new bridges and saving the environment! (once agian like that will ever happen... but)
  • Reply 7 of 43
    flounderflounder Posts: 2,674member
    Awful. I've lived in the twin cities a couple different times. In June, a robbery/attempted murder/arson/rape/kidnapping happened in the apartment I used to live in just last November. I guess I am glad I moved



    P.S. could we please not make this thread about politics?
  • Reply 8 of 43
    @_@ artman@_@ artman Posts: 5,231member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SDW2001 View Post


    One doesn't think a goddamned interstate bridge is going to up and collapse for no reason.

    They believe it was just some sort of structural failure as the bridge was being repaved and having new guard rails put on.



    Think again.



    12% of MN Bridges Structurally Deficient or Functionally Obsolete, Some States have 50%.



    Actually, MN had an enviable rating there considering the number of bridges in that state - the land of 10,000 lakes and all. But yesterday's tragedy may have changed that.



    Minnesota's roads are wearing out



    Quote:

    "...highways are deteriorating faster than the state can maintain them."



    We have a crumbling infrastructure across the country. And quick fixes are just a feedback where high costs cause needed repairs to go undone which causes even higher costs in the future. This has been a problem a long time in the making. There isn't any quick fix, only a list of ever more progressively expensive fixes. A motor happy America will even destroy the very roads they so "dearly love".
  • Reply 9 of 43
    cosmonutcosmonut Posts: 4,872member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sammi jo View Post


    We're spending $120 billion a year to further antagonize the Iraqi people, but the essential stuff back home gets overlooked.



    I applaud your tenacity at trying desperately to bring EVERY subject back to the war.



    Try this one: Black lab puppies.
  • Reply 10 of 43
    @_@ artman@_@ artman Posts: 5,231member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by CosmoNut View Post


    I applaud your tenacity at trying desperately to bring EVERY subject back to the war.



    Try this one: Black lab puppies.



    Sammi jo is right though. I wholeheartedly agree. Our bridges are crumbling, our freeways are full of potholes, our schools are a mess, our health care system is a joke. Instead of spending 38 grand per second on our ability to kill people, how about we use a little of that money to fix our nation's aging infrastructure? The war was and is a gigantic mistake and a colossal waste of resources.
  • Reply 11 of 43
    frank777frank777 Posts: 5,839member
    As usual, Sammi's way off.



    Even without the war, there has been a problem with infrastructure spending in North America, particularly in areas that are primarily run by the government.



    The fact that that more and more of public dollars are being eaten up by "soft services", such as the bureaucracies built up to manage health care, education, welfare and other social services.



    As a result, less and less dollars are available to fund "hard services" such as the building of roads and bridges. We've also seen that our electricity grid has failed to keep up with technology, water and sewer services are degrading fast and generating energy (whether clean or dirty) is mismanaged at best.



    Unlike the war, nobody in the left or right was ever going to authorize the spending of trillions to fix all this. While I lean toward market-based competition solutions with government enforced oversight and compliance, it's hard to see how we take what we have now and get to the point where we have a thriving market-based solution for a lot of these needs.



    In the meantime, cities like Minneapolis will continue to bury the victims of this foolishness.
  • Reply 12 of 43
    msnlymsnly Posts: 378member
    I guess there's a plus to living in a small town in the middle of nowhere... But wait, we don't have an Apple store...
  • Reply 13 of 43
    @_@ artman@_@ artman Posts: 5,231member
    A Metallurgist's Insights Into the Minneapolis Bridge Disaster



    Quote:

    I can pretty much assure you that if there is a technically honest and complete investigation, the ultimate explanation of the Minneapolis bridge failure will be related to fatigue cracking in the metal structure.



    Already, news reports have revealed some prior observation of a fatigue problem with the bridge and that the bridge had a relatively low rating of four out of a possible nine, showing that it was structurally deficient.



    The game played by virtually all government agencies is to find excuses for delaying the most costly repair or replacement of bridges and other parts of the physical infrastructure.



    As another example, in most older urban areas there are constant repairs of busted underground water pipes. What is really needed, but avoided, is a total replacement of very old underground pipe systems – in many places 100 or more years old!



    Government inspection programs have been terribly compromised over many years. The incredible political pressures to minimize spending on infrastructure have filtered down to the people, procedures and technologies used to examine bridges and other things.



  • Reply 14 of 43
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sammi jo View Post


    Exactly so. Modern structures shouldn't collapse like that without warning or reason...



    The nation's infrastructure is in bad shape.... especially the ageing stuff. New York had a major event only last week with the failure of a high pressure steam pipe. We're spending $120 billion a year to further antagonize the Iraqi people, but the essential stuff back home gets overlooked. Perhaps "fixing the infrastructure" is regarded as "Commie talk" in DC?



    Despite the "terror not suspected" statements, can we expect someone to blame Muslims for todays accident in the coming days ? Just one hint ... and Fox News and the rest of the gutterpress would be on it like maggots feasting on 4 week old dogmeat in 90ºF weather.







    This is the first thing I thought of when I saw the bridge... America will soon be spending 1 trillion dollars on "protecting" oil interests and playing military whack-a-mole while the damned infrastructure of our country collapses.



    Someone needs to be run out of town on a rail!



    I hate to state the obvious (to me and Jubelum, anyway)...
  • Reply 15 of 43
    cosmonutcosmonut Posts: 4,872member
    Okay, to help this thread get back on track -- since I helped derail it -- anybody here from the Minneapolis area? What's it like around there?
  • Reply 16 of 43
    sdw2001sdw2001 Posts: 18,016member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by @_@ Artman View Post


    Sammi jo is right though. I wholeheartedly agree. Our bridges are crumbling, our freeways are full of potholes, our schools are a mess, our health care system is a joke. Instead of spending 38 grand per second on our ability to kill people, how about we use a little of that money to fix our nation's aging infrastructure? The war was and is a gigantic mistake and a colossal waste of resources.



    She's not right. Well, at least she's not right about it having to do with the war.



    The problem is government is trying to do everything it was NOT intended to do...like offer health insurance to all citizens, guaranteed retirement, spending on pork projects, etc...while ignoring what it should be doing: maintaining the infrastructure and providing conditions for basic law and order, defending national security, necessarily regulating, etc.



    And yes..I wholeheartedly agree...the infrastructure is crumbling. And no one...republicans or democrats...is talking about it.
  • Reply 17 of 43
    sdw2001sdw2001 Posts: 18,016member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Frank777 View Post


    As usual, Sammi's way off.



    Even without the war, there has been a problem with infrastructure spending in North America, particularly in areas that are primarily run by the government.



    The fact that that more and more of public dollars are being eaten up by "soft services", such as the bureaucracies built up to manage health care, education, welfare and other social services.



    As a result, less and less dollars are available to fund "hard services" such as the building of roads and bridges. We've also seen that our electricity grid has failed to keep up with technology, water and sewer services are degrading fast and generating energy (whether clean or dirty) is mismanaged at best.



    Unlike the war, nobody in the left or right was ever going to authorize the spending of trillions to fix all this. While I lean toward market-based competition solutions with government enforced oversight and compliance, it's hard to see how we take what we have now and get to the point where we have a thriving market-based solution for a lot of these needs.



    In the meantime, cities like Minneapolis will continue to bury the victims of this foolishness.



    A-fucking-men.
  • Reply 18 of 43
    @_@ artman@_@ artman Posts: 5,231member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SDW2001 View Post


    A-fucking-men.



    I think I know the reason this country is crumbling in so many ways. Frank777 and SDW's ignorance (cynicism?) .



    I leave the thread with these two things:



    My sympathies and strength to the victims of this tragedy.



    And...



    Nick Coleman: Public anger will follow our sorrow



    Quote:

    The cloud of dust above the Mississippi that rose after the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed Wednesday evening has dissipated. But there are other dark clouds still hanging over Minneapolis and Minnesota.



    By Nick Coleman, Star Tribune



    Last update: August 02, 2007 ? 1:06 PM

    The cloud of dust above the Mississippi that rose after the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed Wednesday evening has dissipated. But there are other dark clouds still hanging over Minneapolis and Minnesota.



    The fear of falling is a primal one, along with the fear of being trapped or of drowning.



    Minneapolis suffered a perfect storm of nightmares Wednesday evening, as anyone who couldn't sleep last night can tell you. Including the parents who clench their jaws and tighten their hands on the wheel every time they drive a carload of strapped-in kids across a steep chasm or a rushing river. Don't panic, you tell yourself. The people in charge of this know what they are doing. They make sure that the bridges stay standing. And if there were a problem, they would tell us. Wouldn't they?



    What if they didn't?



    The death bridge was "structurally deficient," we now learn, and had a rating of just 50 percent, the threshold for replacement. But no one appears to have erred on the side of public safety. The errors were all the other way.



    Would you drive your kids or let your spouse drive over a bridge that had a sign saying, "CAUTION: Fifty-Percent Bridge Ahead"?



    No, you wouldn't. But there wasn't any warning on the Half Chance Bridge. There was nothing that told you that you might be sitting in your over-heated car, bumper to bumper, on a hot summer day, thinking of dinner with your wife or of going to see the Twins game or taking your kids for a walk to Dairy Queen later when, in a rumble and a roar, the world you knew would pancake into the river.



    There isn't any bigger metaphor for a society in trouble than a bridge falling, its concrete lanes pointing brokenly at the sky, its crumpled cars pointing down at the deep waters where people disappeared.



    Only this isn't a metaphor.



    The focus at the moment is on the lives lost and injured and the heroic efforts of rescuers and first-responders - good Samaritans and uniformed public servants. Minnesotans can be proud of themselves, and of their emergency workers who answered the call. But when you have a tragedy on this scale, it isn't just concrete and steel that has failed us.



    So far, we are told that it wasn't terrorists or tornados that brought the bridge down. But those assurances are not reassuring.



    They are troubling.



    If it wasn't an act of God or the hand of hate, and it proves not to be just a lousy accident - a girder mistakenly cut, a train that hit a support - then we are left to conclude that it was worse than any of those things, because it was more mundane and more insidious: This death and destruction was the result of incompetence or indifference.



    In a word, it was avoidable.



    That means it should never have happened. And that means that public anger will follow our sorrow as sure as night descended on the missing.



    For half a dozen years, the motto of state government and particularly that of Gov. Tim Pawlenty has been No New Taxes. It's been popular with a lot of voters and it has mostly prevailed. So much so that Pawlenty vetoed a 5-cent gas tax increase - the first in 20 years - last spring and millions were lost that might have gone to road repair. And yes, it would have fallen even if the gas tax had gone through, because we are years behind a dangerous curve when it comes to the replacement of infrastructure that everyone but wingnuts in coonskin caps agree is one of the basic duties of government.



    I'm not just pointing fingers at Pawlenty. The outrage here is not partisan. It is general.



    Both political parties have tried to govern on the cheap, and both have dithered and dallied and spent public wealth on stadiums while scrimping on the basics.



    How ironic is it that tonight's scheduled groundbreaking for a new Twins ballpark has been postponed? Even the stadium barkers realize it is in poor taste to celebrate the spending of half a billion on ballparks when your bridges are falling down. Perhaps this is a sign of shame. If so, it is welcome. Shame is overdue.



    At the federal level, the parsimony is worse, and so is the negligence. A trillion spent in Iraq, while schools crumble, there aren't enough cops on the street and bridges decay while our leaders cross their fingers and ignore the rising chances of disaster.



    And now, one has fallen, to our great sorrow, and people died losing a gamble they didn't even know they had taken. They believed someone was guarding the bridge.



    We need a new slogan and we needed it yesterday:



    "No More Collapses."




  • Reply 19 of 43
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Ste View Post


    When I first heard the words "bridge", "Mississippi River", and "collapse", I immediately thought of the Huey P. Long, just outside of New Orleans:







    Now THAT'S a disaster waiting to happen, right there. The lanes are so narrow it's scary just driving over it. But when a train comes overhead and the whole thing starts to shake ... oh, boy.



    You've got to be kidding. No way would I put a train on that thing!
  • Reply 20 of 43
    splinemodelsplinemodel Posts: 7,311member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by @_@ Artman View Post


    Sammi jo is right though. I wholeheartedly agree. Our bridges are crumbling, our freeways are full of potholes, our schools are a mess, our health care system is a joke. Instead of spending 38 grand per second on our ability to kill people, how about we use a little of that money to fix our nation's aging infrastructure? The war was and is a gigantic mistake and a colossal waste of resources.



    The cost of the war is insignificant in comparison to the amounts that are inefficiently allocated to failing social programs, which can only be classified as more gigantic mistakes and more colossal wastes of resources. At least the war seems to be showing some glimmer of promise after a leadership change. our social security, welfare, and medicare programs continue to fail, and have done so for decades.
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