"Perhaps we think to think about updating our
infrastructure."
That would seem to be the common-sense approach, but you have to remember the immensity of such an undertaking. You know from living here, that when one pothole gets filled, there's pandemonium! Another problem is that any money that gets allocated for capital improvement projects disappear quickly into the pockets of the politicians and crooked contractors.....everything is "Homeland Security", "Homeland Security", and even that money vanishes without anything meaningful having been done.
For instance, several capital improvement projects to rebuild the subway, which was getting better ten years ago, have long ceased to be. Basic maintenance is non-existent (last week I was clocked by a falling piece of painted plaster on the staircase), and the city council recently agreed that, in the absence of realistically being able to refurbish the stations in the foreseeable future, they will instead paint every station, so that the ridership "feels" less depressed.
BTW, this little exercise in futility will take an estimated ten years.
So, it's not even just the pipes, the electrical grid, the overjammed streets, the transit system going (back) to the dogs, etc. It's the confluence of all these factors together that make restoration seem insurmountable (and another issue is that they don't really restore, but replace with some structure that won't last thirty years, much less a hundred...)
I'm sorry. Can you tell I'm down on the city this morning?
