Minnesota Bridge Collapse Kills 4

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The 40-year-old Minneapolis bridge that collapsed yesterday was being repaired when it buckled and dropped into the Mississippi River, killing four people and leaving at least 20 missing, officials said.

``A bridge in America shouldn't just fall down,'' U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, said in a local news conference. ``We have to get to the bottom of this.''

Divers expect to find more bodies and are focusing on recovery rather than rescue, Minneapolis Fire Chief James Clack said.

The National Transportation Safety Board, which will investigate, declined to describe the repairs that were being made yesterday. The governor said several projects were under way, including concrete replacement, guardrail and lighting repairs and work on the joints.

Two years ago, the Interstate 35W bridge scored 50 out of 120 in a federal highway inspection, indicating it was ``structurally deficient.'' The rating means replacement is needed eventually, not that a bridge is unsafe, U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said at the conference.

As many as 80,000 bridges in the U.S. share the rating, said Governor Tim Pawlenty. ``There was no call by anyone that it should be closed,'' he said. However, he ordered an immediate inspection of all similarly designed bridges in the state.

The six-story span buckled during the bumper-to-bumper traffic in the early evening rush hour, tossing as many as 50 vehicles into the river, officials said. The Associated Press, citing hospital officials, said at least 79 people were injured.

Three Sections Collapse

The eight-lane bridge near the University of Minnesota and the Metrodome stadium, where the Minnesota Twins baseball team was playing, stretched almost 2,000 feet (610 meters). Three of its four sections gave way, collapsing into the water and onto a freight train running on riverside tracks.

``It apparently is just a loading and unloading track,'' said Tom White, a spokesman for the Washington-based Association of American Railroads. ``It's not a real busy line.''

U.S. grain and freight shipments on the river are unlikely to be disrupted by the collapse because most cargo is loaded downstream, traders and a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman said.

The bridge, built in 1967, was inspected in 2005 and 2006. A March 2001 study by the state's transport agency found that the approach spans ``exhibited several fatigue problems, primarily due to unanticipated out-of-plane distortion of the girders. Concern about fatigue cracking in the deck truss is heightened by a lack of redundancy in the main truss system.''

The agency recommended that the deck be replaced by 2020 or beyond, Pawlenty said.

Bridge Just `Vanished'

South Minneapolis resident Xavier Sose said he was standing in the doorway of his balcony yesterday when he heard and felt a low rumble. He looked toward the bridge and saw dust shoot out of each end.

``The next thing you know, the entire center section of the bridge just vanished,'' he said in a phone interview. ``Cars were sliding down, and everything was covered in dust.''

Survivors were taken to the riverbank and transported to area hospitals, Minnesota State Patrol spokesman Steve Johnson said.

A school bus carrying about 60 children was on the bridge. As many as 10 were taken to hospitals and the rest released to their families, Ted Canova of the American Red Cross said. He put out a call for blood donors and financial donations.

The Hennepin County Medical Center received one drowning victim, six others with serious injuries and 22 more with non- critical injuries, Joseph Clinton, chief of emergency medicine, said in a televised news conference.

``We in the federal government must respond, and respond robustly, to help the people there not only recover, but to make sure that lifeline of activity -- that bridge -- gets rebuilt as quickly as possible,'' President George W. Bush told reporters this morning.



I hope nobody has family members over there!!!!
 
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Yeah, very sad indeed. I hope as pix said that no freaks or those related 2 them have been hurt.
 
I was picking up my wife from work when all the police and fire dept vehicles with boats towed behind them zooms by. I was expecting something happened on the river, but I didnt expect the bridge collapsed. As anyone who live in minnepolis or near it, 35W is a vital freeway that at some point you will cross it. I do it every weekend.
 
This is a truly horrible thing to read about. My thoughts and prayers go out to the families of those who have lost loved ones in this accident.
 
Absolutely heartbreaking, I echo the thoughts of other Freaks and hope no one we know was hurt or killed.
 
Was the bridge under going major construction? Could that have been the cause?

National news is saying "major" repairs but they were just resurfacing the road. I would call that common not major. The national news is also calling it a bridge between Minneapolis and St Paul which it isn't.
 
The national news is also calling it a bridge between Minneapolis and St Paul which it isn't.

yeah, that seems to be a common misconception. minneapolis and St Paul are close to one another, but they are not "next to " one another. There are many little cities in between them. beside, 35w is for minneapolis, st paul has 35e
 
It is well and proper to express sympathy for those killed and injured in this terrible incident.

But what do we learn from it that will prevent this type of thing from happening again and again and again so that the death toll increases with passing years? Check this:

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota (CNN) -- Two reports published since 2001 pointed to structural problems with the Interstate 35W bridge that collapsed Wednesday into the Mississippi River, but both reports determined the bridge was safe despite deficiencies.


A federal review of the Interstate 35W bridge, seen here in 2005, said the span was "structurally deficient."

"The bridge's deck truss system has not experienced fatigue cracking, but it has many poor fatigue details on the main truss and the floor truss system," said a report conducted for the Minnesota Department of Transportation in 2001.

Trusses are support mechanisms, and floor trusses often act as the "primary load-carrying members in a bridge superstructure," according to the American Society of Civil Engineers.

The executive summary of the report -- undertaken by the University of Minnesota's Department of Civil Engineering -- also points to fatigue problems with the bridge's approach span, the segments that connect the main span of the bridge to land. It attributed the fatigue problems primarily to "unanticipated out-of-plane distortions in the girders."

Does anyone know how many bridges there are across this vast nation that may be in similar condition? Over the last few decades the states and municipalities have cut way back on expensive repairs and rebuilding that is necessary. When a bridge is found to have problems, little or nothing is done about it.

Who is to blame? You figure it out. And God bless our efforts in Iraq and elsewhere.
 
Yes, quite sad indeed. My thoughts and prayers go out to all those who are involved in this very sad ordeal. And as stated previously, I hope no Freaks are affected by any of this.
 
I'm afraid that there may be victims that may never be recovered or even identified by the time they get it cleared out.

What a horrible thing, its just heart wrenching.
 
It's so close to home. I been in that city a few times the last 5 years. Great city. Love the people there. Always nice. I must have went over that bridge. It's so sad and awful that had to happen. I hope that the death toll doesn't escalate.

Really sad that this had to happen. Maybe more care will be put into keeping structures like this more up to code.
 
The scary thing is that there are some 80,000 bridges across the country that are just as old that received the same rating upon recent safety inspections.
 
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