rom one end of the Mississippi
to the other---from the washing away of the levees in New
Orleans to the collapse of I-35 in Minneapolis--the results of starving the
public sector's vital functions are becoming apparent.
First, governments have been deprived of the revenues that
they need to conduct critical work like maintaining bridges, roads, and parks. (In Milwaukee, the decline of the once-prized park system --the legacy of our early Socialist mayors' commitment to public green space for all citizens--is shameful, as ballparks are becoming overgrown (with some implanted with toxic fertilizer), water fountains removed, bathrooms are closed, and supervisory staff, vtial to preventing the parks from becoming overrun by gangs and driving out families, are eliminated. Yet County Executive Scott Walker remains intransigent about opposing a tiny 1% sales tax.)
More and more of the remaining resources go to the war in Iraq
and the prison-industrial complex. The American Society of Civil Engineers
estimates that it will take $9.4 billion a year over the next 20 years--a
sizable sum-- to restore our bridges to stable and safe condition. But meanwhile,
the US occupation of Iraq is
consuming at least $8 billion each month.
Further, at both the state and federal levels, corporations
and the wealthy have jettisoned their share of the tax burden. In Wisconsin, for example,
62% of corporations with more than $100 million in revenues pay zero in state
income taxes--including such giants as Johnson Controls, Kohl's Department
Stores, and SC Johnson. Bush tax cuts for those earning $1 million or more have
enjoyed tax breaks of about $93,000 a year, while major corporations like the
drug companies continue to shield their huge profits from taxes by stashing
them in offshore tax havens.
Second, the horrific tragedy in Minneapolis, like the aftermath of Katrina,
has triggered a round of deceptive statements by public officials denying any
neglect of vital infrastructure.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty has been maintaining that his administration
did the equivalent of a "heckuva job" in monitoring the state's
bridges:
Pawlenty insisted
that inspections in 2005 and 2006 had found no structural problems with the
bridge. But the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported that
the bridge "was rated as 'structurally deficient' two years ago and
possibly in need of replacement." The bridge was borderline -- with a 50
sufficiency rating; if a bridge scores less than 50, it needs to be replaced.
According
to the Pioneer
Press, the bridge's suspension system was supposed to receive extra attention with inspections
every two years, but the last one had
been performed in 2003. The governor had every
reason to obfuscate; in 2005, he vetoed
a bipartisan transportation package
that would have "put more than $8 billion into highways, city and county roads, and transit over the next decade."
At the time, he was applauded by many
Republicans for his staunch fiscal "conservatism."
( from "Are the Dead From the Minneapolis Bridge Collapse Victims of Conservative Ideology?"By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. posted August 3, 2007)
http://www.alternet.org/story/58716/
But Minnesota
has not been alone in its systematic unwillingness to confront the need to
protect the infrastructure. The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
estimated in 2005 that 160,570 bridges,
or just over one-quarter of the nation's 590,750 bridge inventory, were rated "structurally
deficient" or "functionally obsolete."
However, the ruling ideology of this age among political elites is still the
philosopy articulated by conservative strategist (and the convicted Jack
Abramoff's close pal) Grover Norquist: “My goal is to cut government in half in twenty-five
years to get it down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub."
Of course, before government is
completely drowned, Norquist and his allies in the corporate world are spewing
anti-government rhetoric while simultananeously soaking the taxpayer for huge subsidies, tax
breaks, low-cost mineral rights, and a host of other government-provided
goodies.
That leaves very little money left over for building levees that will resist
hurricanes, staffing a competent and professional FEMA, or re-constructing our
sagging bridges.
But the situation will not change until Democrats
re-frame the debate and insist that government can competently and
compassionately help ordinary Americans. (It does not help, to say the least, when a prominent liberal Democrat like Sen. Charles Schumer defends the privileged tax status of earnings from hedge funds that flow to multi-millionaires and billionaires.)When Democrats echo Norquist's
"no tax increase" message, they only reinforce the current paralysis over
rebuilding New Orleans
and our bridges, and tie their own hands if and when the Democrats achieve
power.
A slightly revised version of this article appears in The Progressive Populist at
http://www.populist.com/07.15.bybee.html