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Best Photos and Coverage of Minneapolis Bridge Collapse

It’s hard not to be fixated on the main news story today — the continuing coverage of the horrific catastrophe here in the Twin Cities, which has affected everyone on our town in some way. And it really just strikes home to anyone, anywhere. 35wbridgecollapse

Here’s a local photographer’s site with an array of sobering images. All I know is his name is Tim, and he’s from Little Canada, MN. (The graphic I show here is copyright 2007, Consolidated Photo, his company.)

For the best continuing coverage, I’d recommend our local TV station sites, who are all doing an amazing job of reporting, with lots of videos and photos and personal stories:
KSTP: ABC, Channel 5
KARE: NBC, Channel 11
WCCO: CBS, Channel 4
KMSP: Fox, Channel 9

And hats off to my friends at our two daily papers, who are doing an excellent job as well (with much reduced staffs lately):
Minneapolis Star-Tribune
St. Paul Pioneer Press

Also, for you technical types and engineers out there, you may wish to read this 2001 MN DOT “fatigue” report on “Bridge 9340” — as the 35W bridge is known in their lingo. There were concerns that many years ago. I hate to say it, but guano (pidgeon poop) is one culprit that cannot be ignored. Then again, forty Minnesota winters were certainly not kind to this bridge, either. (Thanks to my one of my favorite engineer friends, Bill Proffer, for the heads-up on this report.)

I’m also hearing there was a lot of extra weight on the bridge in the days before it fell — in the way of many piles of aggregate, and several cement trucks. That, on top of the fact that our cars are so much heavier today, so many SUVs, and so many more trucks on the highways…. My God, what was the collective weight on the bridge at that time, with bumper-to-bumper traffic stacked up, too?

It’s all very concerning. And we continue to pray for the victims and their families, the first responders, the medical professionals — and, wow, the everyday people who risked their lives to save others they didn’t even know. God bless them all.

Really makes you think….

1 Comment

  1. Graeme Thickins

    I can’t believe I missed a great story about local Internet coverage of the disaster in our own market! Guess I’ve been way too busy. I just met with Julie Burrows of one of Minnesota’s largest Internet companies, Internet Broadcasting, and learned about this story in the NY Times about our local “Channel4000.com” web site: Bridge Disaster Revives a Quiet Web Site, Making It a Source for Original Reporting. It was written by a talented, young reporter who just joined the Times, Brian Stelter, who had picked up on a mention on the blog Lost Remote.

    Amazing how blogs are often leading the way to great stories out there…the feet on the ground for so many MSM journalists 🙂

    Anyway, I’m going to blogging lots more about Internet Broadcasting, so stay tuned…..
    —–
    PING:
    TITLE: Internet Publishing Or Internet Broadcasting
    URL: http://www.broadcastingcareer.info/internet-publishing-or-internet-broadcasting/
    IP: 216.246.8.63
    BLOG NAME: Internet Publishing Or Internet Broadcasting
    DATE: 08/17/2007 08:23:17 PM
    This subsector comprises establishments exclusively engag

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