Interesting People mailing list archives

The Bridge to Nowhere Lives!


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2006 09:37:30 -0400



Begin forwarded message:

From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne () warpspeed com>
Date: October 11, 2006 4:43:54 AM EDT
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <dewayne-net () warpspeed com>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] The Bridge to Nowhere Lives!
Reply-To: dewayne () warpspeed com

[Note:  This item comes from friend John McMullen.  DLH]

From: "John F. McMullen" <observer () westnet com>
Date: October 10, 2006 4:58:28 PM PDT
To: "johnmac's living room" <johnmacsgroup () yahoogroups com>
Cc: USA Talk List <USAtalk () yahoogroups com>, Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne () warpspeed com>
Subject: The Bridge to Nowhere Lives!

Thanks to Jim Connors -- I thought that this ****en boondoggle had died

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Odensedk () aol com
To: johnmac () acm org
Subject: Bridge to Nowhere

If it's fair to say, I think you were a bit appalled when I mentioned that the multi-million dollar, infamously irresponsible Alaskan "Bridge to Nowhere" did not in fact go away.

As confirmation, William Safire's column in the NY Times Magazine today reminds us that it was to have connected the megapolis of Ketchikan (population less than 8,000) with Gravina Island (population less than 50) for no seeming reason other than political pork. Although the measure ostensibly was squelched by front-page publicity, Safire confirms my recollection that the appropriation was reinserted, without directing where it must be spent. The bridge was, or is being, built.

Alaska is a state that has no income tax and annually distributes a multi-thousand dollar check to each of its residents as oil income largess.

This is a bi-partisan thing. If you travel through West Virginia, You can't possibly avoid seeing a Robert Byrd Throughway, Bridge, Municipal Building, One-Way Street or Barbeque Pit.

-------------------------------

Safire's Column -- <http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/08/magazine/ 08wwln_safire.html? ex=1317960000&en=15991fbe1c880ada&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss>

On Language
Bridge to Nowhere
By WILLIAM SAFIRE

Keith Ashdown was a few beers into a night at the Hawk n Dove, wrote Tory Newmyer in the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call, when he came up with the phrase that sparked a national debate over Congressional spending. Reaching for some way to get people worked up about earmarks directing taxes collected by the federal government into obscure local construction projects, the lobbyist for the unassailably named Taxpayers for Common Sense was struck by what he recalled was a moment of sheer focus.

He came up with a moniker for a proposed costly bridge to a sparsely populated island in Alaska. At first, no reaction; but three years later, the atmosphere became charged with scandals of political influence-peddling, and The Washington Post reported that the Bridge to Nowhere became a national symbol of porkmania.

Ashdowns Bridge to Nowhere was the phrase that launched a thousand editorials. On the left, Salon noted with scorn that Alaskas Gravina Island (population less than 50) will soon be connected to the megalopolis of Ketchikan (pop. 8,000) by a bridge nearly as long as the Golden Gate. On the right, the Heritage Foundation denounced the planned span to the Ketchikan International Airport as an object of national ridicule and a symbol of fiscal irresponsibility.

Did Ashdowns sheer focus lead to a shiny coinage? No; a bridge to nowhere was not only the title of a 1986 movie about kids finding a mysterious hermit but was also in minor headlines in The New York Times in 1981 and 2000. It is the unofficial name of the concrete-and- steel span connecting Middle and Lower Hooper Island in Chesapeake Bay, Md. In a 1960 feature in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Mel Seidenberg wrote of the Fort Duquesne Bridge that calling it a bridge to nowhere may be cutting the truth a bit short, since drivers were likely to wind up on some obscure back street of the lower North Side. Chris Potter of the Pittsburgh City Paper reports today that the bridge certainly gets used a lot. Steelers fans use it on game days; Heinz Field is nearby.

Opponents of vital infrastructure projects have used this term to describe other bridges, the press aide to Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska informs me. These include Louisianas sunshine bridge across the Mississippi, originally hooted at as the bridge to nowhere, as well as the Astoria-Megler Bridge over the Columbia River in Oregon, which like the proposed Gravina Island span replaced a ferryboat and is now known as the Bridge to the World.

The feisty Stevens, a longtime Republican leader and stalwart on mental-health appropriations, threatened to quit the Senate if his state was stripped of aid to this and another bridge to spur development. A compromise was reached to send the money to Alaska for local decision making, but as testimony to an apt tropes power to marshal bipartisan media ridicule without earmarks directing where it must be spent.

I can empathize with the lobbyist Ashdown in the face of all the antedatings of his coinage. Only last month, in a fit of lexical triumphalism, I gleefully claimed to have minted e-maelstrom to mean a storm of e-mails only to be brought low by the Gotcha! Gangs pajama-top patrol citing five previous usages and going nyah-nyah.

[snip]

Weblog at: <http://weblog.warpspeed.com>



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