Colorado

2010 Report Card GPA:
C+

Colorado’s drinking water infrastructure is satisfactory condition
currently, with the future dependent on continued funding and
establishment and implementation of asset management plans. With
a user-fee income base, this sector is more immune to budget
uncertainties. Water distribution systems continue to age and
deteriorate.

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Colorado Infrastructure Grades

2010 Report Card GPA:
C+
Air Quality
B-
Aviation
B+
Bridges
C-
Dams
C+
Drinking Water
C-
Education
D+
Energy
D
Environmental Cleanup
C+
Roads
D
Solid Waste
B-
Transit
D+
Wastewater
C
Water Supply
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 Colorado Infrastructure

Aviation

49 public-use airports

Bridges

536 of the 8,612 bridges are structurally deficient

Bridges

$32.50 million in bridge funds came from the Federal Highway Bridge Fund in 2011

Dams

98% of the state regulated dams have an Emergency Action Plan

Dams

387 high hazard dams

Drinking Water

$7.1 billion in drinking water infrastructure needs over the next 20 years

Energy

5.133 gigawatt-hours of renewable energy every year, ranking it 19th

Hazardous Waste

18 sites on the National Priorities List

Levees

55 miles of levees

Public Parks

$594.0 million of unmet needs for its parks system

Rail

15 freight railroads covering 2,688 miles across the state, ranking 26th nationally by mileage

Roads

$2 billion a year in costs to motorists from driving on roads in need of repair, which is $535 /yr per motorist

Roads

10,186 of the state’s 88,524 public roads are major roads, and 17% are in poor condition

Schools

$4.7 billion in estimated school infrastructure funding needs

Transit

105.3 million annual unlinked passenger trips via transit systems including bus, transit, and commuter trains

Wastewater

$1.5 billion in wastewater infrastructure needs over the next 20 years

Sources

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