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Bay Bridge holds a lesson for health care reform

By: Mary L.G. Theroux
November 9, 2009

Trust no one: As Bay Area residents continue to use a Bay Bridge with a Band-Aid fix, we should be asking ourselves if government has our best interests in mind. (Examiner file photo)

Whether or not you like it, Congress’ health care bill ultimately comes down to one question: How much faith do you have that a politically appointed committee in Washington, D.C., can determine what’s best? After last week’s Bay Bridge failure, Bay Area residents would do well to consider the obvious parallel. If the government can’t build a bridge that keeps us safe, can it really be trusted with the future of American health care?

The original proposal — prompted by the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake — was a relatively straightforward bridge repair and seismic retrofit, estimated to take four years and cost $150 million to $200 million. A bigger idea, however, took hold: Rather than simply fix the broken bridge, why not replace it with an entirely new structure, one with a “world-class design” intended to create “an inspirational identity for Oakland and the East Bay”?

A Bay Bridge Design Task Force was appointed and eventually selected a never-before-built design for the new span, eliciting the protests of knowledgeable engineers who denounced it as seismically unsafe. Despite the lowest bid coming in at $300 million more than cost projections, Caltrans forged ahead with the plan. Choosing not to revise its cost estimates for the bridge, Caltrans instead promised to “pursue cost-saving measures aggressively to stay within the $2.6 billion project budget.” Currently, the bridge is projected to be complete in 2013 — 24 years after Loma Prieta — at a cost of $6.3 billion.

The first sign that the design might not be so “world-class” was the crack in the eyebar discovered during — and likely caused by — Labor Day weekend construction. As diagnosed by UC Berkeley civil engineering professor Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl, who has spent 20 years studying the bridge, the Labor Day crack was a “warning sign” that the “repair they were doing was really a Band-Aid.” After just seven weeks the Band-Aid broke.

Such an outcome should be no surprise. Once authority was handed over to a political committee, decisions ceased to be based on what best served users of the bridge. Cost and functionality took a backseat to visually appealing but unnecessary features, all to be paid for with higher bridge tolls. These additions were planned with no concern for what impact those higher tolls might have on those who pay them.

Unfortunately, the proposed health care bill provides for precisely the same kind of decision making by political appointees with no accountability to those who will actually be using or paying for the resulting system.

The bill establishes a Health Benefits Advisory Committee with the power to restrict or permit anyone’s future access to health care. The committee is entrusted with providing details for the “public option” and setting the price for plan participants. In short, the committee will have enormous power to decide what health services any public or private insurer can cover, at what cost and for whom.

Those hoping to have future health care covered by something other than a Band-Aid should seriously evaluate the appropriateness of a politically entrenched health care committee accountable to none. Improvements can and should be made, but a federal overhaul of the entire sector is no more necessary or desirable than a budget-busting, seismically unsound, “signature design” replacement for our utilitarian Bay Bridge.

Promises to pay for the bridge’s cost overruns — of which there remains no end in sight — with “cost-saving measures” came to naught, just as those currently being made by health care overhaul proponents surely will. If we allow health care to go the way of the Band-Aid plan, we shouldn’t be surprised when the outcome resembles the bridge — a flawed design with skyrocketing costs and dwindling benefits.

 

Mary L.G. Theroux is the senior vice president of the Independent Institute in Oakland.
 



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

my

Nov 9, 2009

Do not believe the Healthcare will be run efficiently. These are all just about power, control and money for their pet projects. Jobs are leaving the country.

 

PatPiano

Nov 9, 2009

An article like this appearing in the San Francisco Examiner??? I think the author should watch her back - especially in Oakland!

 

doesitreallymatter

Nov 9, 2009

First the author describes the replacement bridge currently being built as having a "world-class design." Then she states that the "first sign that the design might not be so “world-class” was the crack in the eyebar." I'd really love to know what the crack in the eyebar has to do with the "word-class" design of the replacement bridge. They're different bridges!

 

Mary Theroux

Nov 9, 2009

While the cracked eye-beam was on the older part of the bridge, a best guess by engineers is that the crack was caused by loadings from the construction work that happened Labor Day weekend. Thus, it is part of the replacement process, and I believe reflects the overall experimental approach of this project, rather than a well-planned one.

 

doesitreallymatter

Nov 9, 2009

Don't get me wrong, I mostly agree with the conclusions of the article and the initial repair was clearly not thought out. I simply disagree that you can condemn the replacement bridge based on the band-aid repair of the eye-bar (which was probably the right choice at the time, when everyone wanted was the bridge to open on time). My point was mainly that the statement "The first sign that the design might not be so “world-class” was the crack in the eyebar" is misleading, at best.

 

bridging-gaps

Nov 9, 2009

I see the point:
If you don't have a bridge, you will settle for a government bridge of any sort. And realistically, are you getting a bridge any other way?
If you don't have healthcare, you will take a government healthcare plan. Because realistically, how else are you going to afford healthcare if your employer doesn't offer it?

 

Big Government

Nov 10, 2009

Healthcare is a private citizens primary concern. If you want healthcare, and your employer doesn't offer it, and you aren't poor (otherwise you would qualify for Medicaid),you do away with cellphones, car rims, T.V. (gasp), new car, fancy clothes, etc... to pay for your own healthcare. Real shocker for liberals to understand self reliance, huh? Self reliance is a no-no in their Communist Utopia. Most libs can't look any further than Big Government to figure out how to take care of themselves. Sad......really sad....

 

zenthrop

Nov 10, 2009

Remember 'The Lion King?' Remember Scar's stirring speech about a new league between the Lion and the Hyena?
Remember the devastation and hunger that resulted?

Scar sounds so much like Mr. Obama. But then it's just a cartoon. Can't happen here.

 

pila@grassrootinstitute.org

Nov 10, 2009

Great piece, but not very surprising. The surprise will come when somebody can offer and example of the government doing something better than the free(ish) market.

Keep up the good work!

 

tyler durden

Nov 10, 2009

I agree with the conclusions, the analogy with the bridge was poor.

Comparing the health bill and the politics of the bridge project is a good parallel. Plus the use of a recent break down- leading to an inconvience to commuter traffic- hits home as an opinion piece, but to zero in on details like the repair defect derails the argument.

 

jeff in sfo

Nov 10, 2009

spot on. the interesting thing is that today's heathcare more closely resembles a govt program than a free market creation. Only affordable insurance is through the gov't (Medicare/Medicaid) or your employer (vis-a-vis a select few insurers). Your choice is strictly limited to carriers that are authorized in your state and that your employer selects for you. The only way to choose a diff plan is to quite (yea, that's convenient). The end consumer is 100% disconnected from the price they pay. So what' the solution - to make it MORE bureaucratic, and nearly a 100% take over by the govt. Hello! limited choice and consumers that are clueless to what they are actually paying is precisely why we are hear today

 

MarkS

Nov 11, 2009

Whether or not you like it, Congress’ health care bill ultimately comes down to one question: How much faith do you have that private for profit insurance companies who are only accountable to their shareholders, can determine what’s best?

 

Fair Citizen

Nov 11, 2009

I trust the Government w/:

Safety (Military)
Children (Public Education)
Transportation (Roads)
Health Care (Medicare)

I trust big business such as Aetna w/
NOTHING

Don't be fooled, only the wealthy 16 Trillion Dollar Health Care industry wants to STOP progress.

Go and Support Obama and the House and Senate
Let's take this great country back from the Rich and Privileged.

 


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