California

2012 Report Card GPA:
C

Significant investments are needed to address renewal and replacement, maintenance, security and reliability funding for the State’s Wastewater infrastructure. These investments will increase the  reliability and sustainability of infrastructure and protect our coastal and inland water resources into the future. The annual investment needed to raise our Wastewater infrastructure grade from a "C+" to a “B” is $4.5 billion annually, for the next 10 years. California’s 100,000 miles of sewers and over 900 wastewater treatment plants generally perform adequately to protect the water resources of the State by managing the approximately 4 billion gallons of wastewater generated every day by California’s citizens and businesses. Nevertheless, the condition and performance of California wastewater infrastructure (sewers, treatment plants and effluent disposal) are quite variable ranging across the state and from agency to agency. The wastewater collection systems continue to require significant investments to be in compliance with the State-wide Waste Discharge Requirements adopted in 2006.

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California Infrastructure Grades

2012 Report Card GPA:
C
Aviation
C+
Drinking Water
C
Levees
D
Ports
B-
Solid Waste
B
Transportation
C-
Urban Runoff
D+
Wastewater
C+

A: Exceptional, B: Good, C: Mediocre, D: Poor, F: Failing, ?: Incomplete

Each category was evaluated on the basis of capacity, condition, funding, future need, operation and maintenance, public safety, resilience, and innovation

Key Facts About California Infrastructure

Aviation

191 public-use airports

Bridges

2,769 of the 24,955 bridges are structurally deficient

Bridges

$429.30 million in bridge funds came from the Federal Highway Bridge Fund in 2011

Dams

52% of the state regulated dams have an Emergency Action Plan

Dams

678 high hazard dams

Drinking Water

$44.5 billion in drinking water infrastructure needs over the next 20 years

Energy

58.881 gigawatt-hours of renewable energy every year, ranking it 2nd

Hazardous Waste

98 sites on the National Priorities List

Inland Waterways

290 miles of inland waterways, ranking it 26th nationally

Levees

13,571 miles of levees

Ports

220.8 million short tons of cargo in 2012, ranking it 3rd nationally

Public Parks

$3.6 billion of unmet needs for its parks system

Rail

25 freight railroads covering 5,307 miles across the state, ranking 3rd nationally by mileage

Roads

$17 billion a year in costs to motorists from driving on roads in need of repair, which is $703 /yr per motorist

Roads

31,827 of the state’s 175,499 public roads are major roads, and 34% are in poor condition

Schools

$25.4 billion in estimated school infrastructure funding needs

Transit

1.4 billion annual unlinked passenger trips via transit systems including bus, transit, and commuter trains

Wastewater

$29.9 billion in wastewater infrastructure needs over the next 20 years

Sources

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