Data shows Ill. spending stimulus cash on repairs

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CHICAGO (AP) — The vast majority of Illinois road and bridge projects that have won federal stimulus money to date focus on repairing crumbling infrastructure statewide — an approach many watchdog groups have praised as offering the best bang for the stimulus buck.

That’s according to new data on how Illinois is spending the funds six months after President Barack Obama signed a $789 billion economic stimulus bill. In the bill $27 billion was set aside for road and bridge construction and repair nationwide with $935 million going to Illinois.

Out of around 340 Illinois projects that have received money so far, nearly 250 are devoted to road repaving and similar improvements, a recently released list from the U.S. Department of Transportation revealed.

Illinois also is using the stimulus cash to begin fixing some of the hundreds of aging bridges, with more than 30 projects on the federal list for bridge repair and upgrades. Six projects were categorized as “bridge replacement,” and there was one project to build a new bridge.

Gov. Pat Quinn recently signed a five-year, $31 billion construction plan — the state’s first capital bill in more than 10 years — that will expand infrastructure work paid for with federal stimulus money. The state bill includes more than $14 billion for roads and bridges.

A report released recently by the Illinois Public Interest Research Group, or Illinois PIRG, highlighted the need for repair work, noting that 54 percent of state roads are in poor condition and 822 bridges are deemed structurally deficient.

It also argues that repair work is better at stimulating growth, saying such projects generate 16 percent more jobs than new construction. It adds that shabby roads cost drivers an average of $335 a year in damaged tires and suspensions, as well as in reduced fuel efficiency.

The report contrasts Illinois’ emphasis on repairs to other states that devote a far larger chunk of their federal money to new construction. Kentucky, for example, is spending the majority of its federal funds on new roads, according to the PIRG report.

Some of the Illinois projects are already under way, with many others set to begin soon.

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