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Recovered gloves, wanted Ring doorbell footage highlight Guthrie case latest; Georgia's 988 crisis line faces gaps as demand grows; IL college works to close the rural pharmacy gap; NC explores child care solutions for community college students.

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The EPA rescinds its long-standing authority to regulate greenhouse gases, Congress barrels toward a DHS shutdown and lawmakers clash with the DOJ over tracking of Epstein file searches. States consider ballot initiatives, license plate readers and youth violence.

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The crackdown on undocumented immigrants in Minneapolis has created chaos for a nearby agricultural community, federal funding cuts have upended tribal solar projects in Montana and similar cuts to a college program have left some students scrambling.

Report Card: PA gets 'C-minus' for its infrastructure

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Wednesday, April 2, 2025   

Pennsylvania gets a grade of "C-minus" in a new Report Card about the condition of America's infrastructure.

The American Society of Civil Engineers said the nation has a long way to go to upgrade outdated structures and systems. It gives the U.S. a "C" grade overall.

Darren Olson, chair of the report card committee, said federal investments under the Biden administration have helped but more work and funding are recommended. He explained Pennsylvania's lower rating is a result of improvements needed in stormwater systems, a need extending across the entire country.

"Pennsylvania is an older state and a lot of this infrastructure was put in decades ago, maybe a century ago," Olson explained. "What we're seeing now is, we're seeing rain events and storm events that are really testing the limits of these older systems."

Olson noted while the state didn't receive an "A" grade for any of the 18 categories on the report card, there were no failing grades. The civil engineers estimate a $3.7 trillion shortfall between planned investments and the funding needed to keep the nation's infrastructure in good working condition.

Olson pointed out the report card is a nationwide assessment of infrastructure, focused on everything from dams, levees, stormwater, bridges and aviation, with a new category for broadband internet. He added broadband received a "C-plus," because of all the recent public and private investments to improve it.

"Just a small percentage of people actually had broadband access in 2000 and now, roughly 80% of the nation has broadband access," Olson reported. "Broadband is also one of these pieces of infrastructure that links other pieces of infrastructure together."

Olson added bad roads, power outages and travel delays from failing infrastructure cost American households about $2,700 a year.


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