Why It Takes So Long
to Build a Bridge in America
There's plenty of money. The problem is
interminable environmental review.
By Philip K. Howard
President Obama went
on the stump this summer to promote his "Fix It First" initiative,
calling for public appropriations to shore up America's fraying infrastructure.
But funding is not the challenge. The main reason crumbling roads, decrepit bridges,
antiquated power lines, leaky water mains and muddy harbors don't get fixed is
interminable regulatory review.
Infrastructure
approvals can take upward of a decade or longer, according to the Regional Plan
Association. The environmental review statement for dredging the Savannah River
took 14 years to complete. Even projects with little or no environmental impact
can take years.
Raising the roadway of
the Bayonne Bridge at the mouth of the Port of Newark, for example, requires no
new foundations or right of way, and would not require approvals at all except
that it spans navigable water. Raising the roadway would allow a new generation
of efficient large ships into the port. But the project is now approaching its
fifth year of legal process, bogged down in environmental litigation.
Mr. Obama also pitched
infrastructure improvements in 2009 while he was promoting his $830 billion
stimulus. The bill passed but nothing much happened because, as the
administration learned, there is almost no such thing as a "shovel-ready
project." So the stimulus money was largely diverted to shoring up state
budgets.
Building new
infrastructure would enhance U.S. global competitiveness, improve our
environmental footprint and, according to McKinsey studies, generate almost two
million jobs. But it is impossible to modernize America's physical
infrastructure until we modernize our legal infrastructure. Regulatory review
is supposed to serve a free society, not paralyze it.
Other developed
countries have found a way. Canada requires full environmental review, with
state and local input, but it has recently put a maximum of two years on major
projects. Germany allocates decision-making authority to a particular state or
federal agency: Getting approval for a large electrical platform in the North
Sea, built this year, took 20 months; approval for the City Tunnel in Leipzig,
scheduled to open next year, took 18 months. Neither country waits for years
for a final decision to emerge out of endless red tape.
In America, by
contrast, official responsibility is a kind of free-for-all among multiple
federal, state and local agencies, with courts called upon to sort it out after
everyone else has dropped of exhaustion. The effect is not just delay, but
decisions skewed toward the squeaky wheels instead of the common good. This is
not how democracy is supposed to work.
America is missing the
key element of regulatory finality: No one is in charge of deciding when there
has been enough review. Avoiding endless process requires changing the regulatory
structure in two ways:
Environmental review
today is done by a "lead agency"—such as the Coast Guard in the case
of the Bayonne Bridge—that is usually a proponent of a project, and therefore
not to be trusted to draw the line. Because it is under legal scrutiny and
pressure to prove it took a "hard look," the lead agency's approach
has mutated into a process of no pebble left unturned, followed by lawsuits
that flyspeck documents that are often thousands of pages long.
What's needed is an
independent agency to decide how much environmental review is sufficient. An
alteration project like the Bayonne Bridge should probably have an
environmental review of a few dozen pages and not, as in that case, more than
5,000 pages. If there were an independent agency with the power to say when
enough is enough, then there would be a deliberate decision, not a multiyear
ooze of irrelevant facts. Its decision on the scope of review can still be
legally challenged as not complying with the basic principles of environmental
law. But the challenge should come after, say, one year of review, not 10.
It is also important
to change the Balkanized approvals process for other regulations and licenses.
These approvals are now spread among federal, state and local agencies like a
parody of bureaucracy, with little coordination and frequent duplication of
environmental and other requirements. The Cape Wind project off the coast of
Massachusetts, now in its 12th year of scrutiny, required review by 17
different agencies. The Gateway West power line, to carry electricity from
Wyoming wind farms to the Pacific Northwest, requires the approval of each
county in Idaho that the line will traverse. The approval process, begun in
2007, is expected to be complete by 2015. This is paralysis by federalism.
The solution is to
create what other countries call "one-stop approvals." Giving one
agency the authority to cut through the knot of multiple agencies (including
those at state and local levels) will dramatically accelerate approvals.
This is how
"greener" countries in Europe make decisions. In Germany, local
projects are decided by a local agency (even if there's a national element),
and national projects by a national agency (even though there are local
concerns). One-stop approval is already in place in the U.S. New interstate gas
pipelines are under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
Special
interests—especially groups that like the power of being able to stop
anything—will foster fears of officials abusing the public trust. Giving people
responsibility does not require trust, however. I don't trust anyone. But I can
live with a system of democratic responsibility and judicial oversight. What
our country can't live with is spinning our wheels in perpetual review. America
needs to get moving again.
Mr. Howard, a lawyer,
is chairman of the nonpartisan reform group Common Good. His new book,
"The Rule of Nobody," will be published in April by W.W. Norton.
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