FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 5, 2007 SB-07-43
NTSB CHAIRMAN TESTIFIES BEFORE THE HOUSE ON STRUCTURALLY DEFICIENT BRIDGES
"Forty years ago, following the bridge collapse in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, we issued safety recommendations to the Federal Highway Administration to establish national bridge inspection standards for locating, inspecting, evaluating and correcting bridge deficiencies," Rosenker said. "Currently, Safety Board staff is still on-scene in Minnesota investigating the tragic accident that claimed 13 lives and involved 133 injuries."
A month after the bridge accident, much of the bridge superstructure is still underwater and there is still considerable work remaining to determine why the structure collapsed.
During this initial stage of the investigation, the Safety Board has learned the following:
"We will determine the probable cause of the bridge collapse; make recommendations, and help restore public confidence that this kind of accident will not happen again-that is our mission," Rosenker said.
Last year, Congress turned to the Safety Board to investigate the collapse of ceiling panels in the Big Dig tunnel in Boston. As a result of the NTSB's investigation, there are radical changes in the thinking in the highway construction industry about the long-term structural properties of epoxy in the overhead applications as they relate to epoxy creep.
The full text of Chairman Rosenker's speech can be found on the NTSB's website at the following link: http://www.ntsb.gov/speeches/rosenker/mvr070905.htm.
NTSB Home | Contact Us | Search | About the NTSB | Policies and Notices | Related Sites