Community Corner
Clinton Bridges on List of 'Structurally Deficient'
A report released Wednesday finds 406 bridges in Connecticut, or 1 in every 10 bridges in the state, in need of significant repair.

A federal study of bridge statistics released this week found 406 Connecticut bridges are βstructurally deficientβ β that is, needing significant repair, according to anΒ article in the Greenwich Times.
That number includes several sections of Interstate 95 that carry more than 100,000 people each day, the article says, as well as numerous spots along Routes 10, 179, 44 and Interstate 84. About 5.27 million vehicles travel over the state's deficient bridges every day.
In Clinton, the Kelseytown Road bridgeΒ is ranked as structurally deficient. The bridge, which carries 936 cars per day, was last inspected in December 2010,Β according to t4america.org.
The Pleasant Valley RoadΒ bridgeΒ is also ranked as structurally deficient. The bridge, which carries 520 cars per day, was last inspected in September 2010, according to t4america.org.
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And, the Carter Hill Road bridge is on the list. The bridge carries 310 cars a day and was last inspected in September 2010, according to t4america.org.
The list includes federal, state and locally maintained bridges and was released in a report Wednesday by the advocacy group Transportation for America after a review of the federal National Bridge Inventory.
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The term βstructurally deficientβ doesnβt mean the bridge is in imminent danger, transportation officials say, rather, that an element of the bridge was given a rating of βpoorβ or worse, including the deck, superstructure underpinning the roadway deck or the substructure, including piers, columns and crossbars, according the article.
Connecticut Department of TransportationΒ spokesmanΒ Kevin NursickΒ said the rating is cause for concern and is taken seriously by the state agency.
βNone of our bridges is unsafe. Period,β Nursick told theΒ New Haven Register. Currently, Nursick said, there areΒ more thanΒ 20 bridge projects being worked on with a total cost of more than $1 billion.
The number of bridges with the structurally deficient rating β about 10 percent - has increased 4.1 percent since 2011, the article says, something Nursick attributes to the bridges increasing age. The average age of bridges in the state is now 52 years.Β
State bridges are inspected biannually, with those found to have issues are inspected more frequently.
Of the 407 deficient bridges in the state, 193 are maintained by towns, the article says. The state has recently increased funding to theΒ Local Bridge Program, which currently is working on Town Bridge Road in Canton.
But as bridges are aging and those in need of maintenance increase, federal funding from the federal government has decreased, putting more of the burden on states to fund repairs, Transportation for American communications director David Goldberg told the Times.Β
To access an interactive database of stat bridges,Β click here.Β
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