Florida

2016 Report Card GPA:
C

As a top destination, more than 50% of Florida’s commercial airports will experience demand levels that will totally saturate their operational capacity over the next 15 years, according to the Florida Aviation System Plan. Currently, Florida’s airports fly 139 million passengers into and out of the state each year—that’s equal to 7 flights for each permanent resident. Florida’s airports also transport over 2.7 million tons of cargo annually, worth about $46 billion. Generally, the airports have utilized their resources to maintain their infrastructure needs well, but forecasted capacity needs over the next 5 years (new runways, terminal and baggage system expansions) will require long term commitments from a healthy funding stream. Many airports will also need road access improvements, improved multi-modal connections, and commitments to maintain the general aviation airports. To keep pace and improve technology, Florida airports’ funding requests over the next 5 years total $1.1 billion, which exceeds available State funds by almost 70%.

Download the Report Card

Florida Infrastructure Grades

2016 Report Card GPA:
C
Aviation
B-
Bridges
B
Coastal Areas
D+
Drinking Water
C+
Energy
C-
Ports
B-
Roads
C
School Facilities
D+
Stormwater
D
Transit
C
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 Florida Infrastructure

Aviation

100 public-use airports

Bridges

259 of the 12,070 bridges are structurally deficient

Bridges

$91.30 million in bridge funds came from the Federal Highway Bridge Fund in 2011

Dams

37% of the state regulated dams have an Emergency Action Plan

Dams

79 high hazard dams

Drinking Water

$16.5 billion in drinking water infrastructure needs over the next 20 years

Energy

4.664 gigawatt-hours of renewable energy every year, ranking it 21st

Hazardous Waste

55 sites on the National Priorities List

Inland Waterways

1,540 miles of inland waterways, ranking it 7th nationally

Levees

1,824 miles of levees

Ports

91.5 million short tons of cargo in 2012, ranking it 8th nationally

Public Parks

$31.3 million of unmet needs for its parks system

Rail

14 freight railroads covering 2,907 miles across the state, ranking 23rd nationally by mileage

Roads

$2.5 billion a year in costs to motorists from driving on roads in need of repair, which is $181 /yr per motorist

Roads

15,073 of the state’s 121,829 public roads are major roads, and 4% are in poor condition

Schools

$8.9 billion in estimated school infrastructure funding needs

Transit

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

Wastewater

$19.6 billion in wastewater infrastructure needs over the next 20 years

Sources

Take Action Today

We must commit today to make our vision of the future a reality –
an American infrastructure system that is the source of our prosperity.

Tell Your Legislator Got a Question? Sign Up for Updates Be Social

Save America's Infrastructure

Congressional Hearings Focus on Aviation, Flood Control

As the President’s repeated in his address to Congress his pledge to dramatically increase infrastructure spending to the tune of $1 trillion, various Congressional Committees

Read More >>

President’s Address Includes Infrastructure

On Tuesday night, President Trump addressed a joint-session of Congress for the first time in his presidency. Infrastructure was among the many issues he discussed.

Read More >>

What VMT On The Rise Means for Roads

U.S. motorists set a new record for vehicle miles travelled (VMT) in 2016, driving over 3.2 trillion miles, an increase of 70 billion miles from

Read More >>

Photo Credit: California Department of Water Resources

Infrastructure in the News: No Rest for Weary Infrastructure

Romantic dates, the Grammy awards and celebrating black history are not the only milestones of this week; the Oroville dam crisis in California and the

Read More >>

Help Save America's Infrastructure!
Hide Buttons