oh infrastructure report card

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October 9, 2009 Kevin P. Carpenter, P.E., P.S.

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Presentation made October 9, 2009 to the Clark County-Springfield Transportation Coordinating Committee regarding the ASCE Ohio Infrastructure Report Card

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: OH Infrastructure Report Card

October 9, 2009Kevin P. Carpenter, P.E., P.S.

Page 2: OH Infrastructure Report Card
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ASCE National Gina Beim, P.E. Carolyn Merry, PhD James Neuenschwander, P.E. Randall Over, P.E. Dean Ringle, P.E., P.S. Jennifer Webster, P.E.

Page 5: OH Infrastructure Report Card

American Society of Civil Engineers Association of State Dam Safety Officials Associations of American Railroads Congressional Budget Office County Engineers Association of Ohio Federal Aviation Administration Federal Highway Administration Federal Railroad Administration Ohio Department of Transportation Ohio Department of Natural Resources Ohio Environmental Protection Agency Ohio Public Works Commission Ohio School Facilities Commission Public Utilities Commission of Ohio U.S. Army Corps of Engineers U.S. Department of Education U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Page 6: OH Infrastructure Report Card

“. . . The greatest advances in improving human health were the development of clean drinking water and sewage systems. So, we owe our health as much to civil engineering as we do biology.”

- Lewis Thomas, Former head of Yale Medical School & Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center

Page 7: OH Infrastructure Report Card

National Council on Public Works Improvement’s 1988 “Report Card on the Nation’s Public Works”

Aviation B-Drinking Water B-Hazardous Waste DInland Waterways BRoads C+Solid Waste C-Transit C-Wastewater C

Average Grade C

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Page 11: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: C- Ohio ranks 3rd with 124 paved and lighted

airports Publicly owned airports generated $10.5B

$22 M in annual tax revenues FAA Goal: 94% rated “good” or “fair”

Good = 79%, Fair = 18%, Poor = 3% ODOT Goal: 85% runways, 80% taxiways, 75%

aprons shall have a “satisfactory” rating Runways = 58%, Taxiways = 57%, Aprons = 62%

ODOT estimates $9.8 M per year to maintain $117 M needed for identified improvements

Page 12: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: B- 2nd largest inventory of bridges (27,999)

ODOT Maintains: 14,001 (66% of deck area) Counties: 26,061 Municipalities: 2,375 Railroads: 714 Other agencies (e.g., Ohio Turnpike): 559

Inspections required Federal guidelines = every 2 years, Ohio = every year

Structurally Deficient or Functionally Obsolete 4,213 (9.5%) SD / 5,081 (11.5%) FO

Estimated $3.6 B to replace all SD and rehab 2/3 of FO

Page 13: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: C- 5,275 miles of rail in Ohio, 4th most in U.S.

36 rail companies (CSX and NS own more than 75%) 1/3 of nation’s freight passes through Ohio Demand forecast to increase by 2035

71% by tonnage, 85% by ton-miles Columbus is 2nd largest and Dayton 6th largest cities

in U.S. without passenger rail 16,000 crossings in OH

Since 1990 train/vehicle crashes down 66%, fatalities 77% Between 2005 and 2008, 482 crashes including 45 fatalities

ODOT Estimates $1.19 B to improve 30-most critical

Page 14: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: D More than 125,000 miles in OH, 7th in the U.S.

1,574 miles of Interstate (21 routes) – 5th in U.S. Roadway ratings:

22.5% excellent, 34.5% good, 29% fair, 11.3% poor 811 fatalities and 91,114 injuries in 6 cities in

‘05 Congestion increasing:

Columbus 41st in ‘02, 34th in ‘05 Cincinnati 40th & Cleveland 49th in ‘05

ODOT collected $2.5 B, spent $4.5 B in ’05 Estimate $3.3 B shortfall by 2014 Identified projects with no funding = $10.05 B

Page 15: OH Infrastructure Report Card

THE GRADES – TRANSIT (preliminary) GRADE: D

59 Public Transit systems in Ohio Only 12 have dedicated local funding

Average fleet vehicle age is 7.5 years (goal is 6)

Ridership increased 5% from 2007 to 2008 Amount of transit vehicles decreased 6% Amount of miles travelled fell 8%

Funding from the state has been reduced by 63% since 2000

Page 16: OH Infrastructure Report Card

OhioC-

B-C

D+C+

C-C-D

C

D+C-

D

Page 17: OH Infrastructure Report Card

Subject National Ohio

Aviation $40,700,000,000 $117,000,000

Bridges $549,500,000,000 $3,600,000,000

Dams $7,450,000,000 $300,000,000

Drinking Water $108,600,000,000 $9,680,000,000

Electricity $29,500,000,000 *

Parks & Recreation $47,170,000,000 $556,000,000

Rails $11,700,000,000 $1,190,000,000

Roads (included w/ Bridge) $10,050,000,000

Schools $35,000,000,000 $9,320,000,000

Transit $190,100,000,000 $1,350,000,000

Wastewater (included w/ Drinking Water)

$11,160,000,000

Total Shortfall $1,019,720,000,000 $47,323,000,000

Page 18: OH Infrastructure Report Card

1) Increase local, regional, state, and federal leadership to address the current and future conditions of each system

2) Promote sustainability and resilience in infrastructure to protect the natural environment and withstand natural and manmade hazards

Page 19: OH Infrastructure Report Card

3) Develop national, regional, state, and local infrastructure plans that complement a national vision and focus on system-wide results

4) Address life-cycle costs and on-going maintenance to meet the needs of current and future users

Page 20: OH Infrastructure Report Card

5) Increase and improve infrastructure investment from all stakeholders

Page 21: OH Infrastructure Report Card

Copies of the full

report or any

sections can be

downloaded at:

www.ohioasce.or

g

Page 22: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: C More than 2,600 dams in Ohio

68% privately owned, 23% local, 7% state, 2% fed

1,597 state-regulated dams 375 High Hazard Class I 543 Significant Hazard Class II 679 Low Hazard Class III

ODNR dam staff reduced 15% since 2007 Estimated need of $309 M for repair

Page 23: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: D+ More 6,000 public water systems in Ohio

90% of Ohioans receive water from public system

99% of funding from local sources ARRA will fund $58.5 M in water projects

1,400 requests for more than $3 B Estimated $9.68 B needed

Page 24: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: C+ Generation, transmission and distribution

satisfactory to meet current needs Most outages due to weather related issues

Usage level between 1995 and 2005 70% of generation by coal and nuclear, 29% by

natural gas & oil Usage:

29% commercial, 37% industrial, 34% residential 2008 – SB 221 mandates at least 12.5% energy

from alternative sources Coal provides 2/3 of Ohio’s electric generating

capacity No estimate provided due to unknown federal

regulations

Page 25: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: C- ODNR owns

74 parks, 20 forests, 132 preserves More than 714,000 acres

ODNR jurisdiction over 14 scenic rivers, 7,000 miles of streams More than 120,000 acres

State park system includes: 10,000 campsites in 57 campgrounds 80 beaches and 188 boat ramps 390 trails totaling more than 1,200 miles

Estimate $556 M to eliminate deferred CIP backlog

Page 26: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: C 1997 School funding found unconstitutional OSFC created to oversee public schools

Worked with 75% of local school districts Manage $5.92 B per year for last 10 years

481 renovated facilities, 141 under construction, 25 SD/year

All facility needs met in 123 SD thru 2007 Need has decreased from $20.9 B in 2001

to $9.32 B in 2008, still ranks 6th in U.S.

Page 27: OH Infrastructure Report Card

GRADE: D+ General lack of data As of June 2008 Ohio had 1,300 known CSO

in 86 communities Nationally, CSOs discharge 850 B gallons / year Overflows due to blocked or broken pipes = 10 B

Gal /yr Local governments provide more than 94%

of funds ASCE estimates $11.16 B needed