Site icon ASCE's 2021 Infrastructure Report Card

Mississippi’s infrastructure grade improves to a ‘C-’

Mississippi’s infrastructure now has a ‘C-’ grade according to the 2024 Report Card for Mississippi’s Infrastructure, which was released by ASCE’s Mississippi Section outside the State Capitol Building on November 14th. That grade is a one-step improvement over the ‘D+’ grade the state received in 2020 and matches the national grade from the 2021 Report Card for America’s Infrastructure.

Four of the 12 infrastructure categories (Bridges, Dams, Rail, and Solid Waste) saw their grades increase compared to the previous Report Card, while two categories (Drinking Water and Wastewater) saw their grades drop one level compared to the 2020 Report Card.

Grade Categories
B Rail
B- Ports
C+ Solid Waste
C Aviation, Energy
D+ Bridges, Dams
D Inland Waterways, Levees
D- Drinking Water, Roads, Wastewater

 

Focus on water infrastructure, current funding is just a drop in the bucket

The only two categories to see grade decreases in the 2024 Report Card for Mississippi’s Infrastructure were Drinking Water and Wastewater. Both fell from a ‘D’ in 2020 to a ‘D-’ in 2024.

The 2022 water crisis in Jackson revealed the dangerous consequences to public health and safety that come from decades of underinvestment and deferred maintenance of life-sustaining water systems. Lawmakers at all levels acted after the Jackson water crisis by increasing funding for water systems to support maintenance and improvement projects.

These investments are making a big impact as maintenance and improvement projects take hold across the state. However, many of these projects are ongoing and have not yet been registered in available data, which is why didn’t lead to grade improvement during this report’s cycle. The long-term reliability of water systems requires consistent, reliable, and sustainable funding to prevent a repeat of what Mississippians saw in Jackson two years ago.

According to the EPA’s Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment, Mississippi has more than $8 billion in water system funding needs over the next two decades, an increase from $4.6 billion in the last report card.

Current funding only covers a small percentage of those needs. Much of the need for water systems is for repair and rehabilitation of existing systems where user fees primarily cover operating costs and not long-term needs.

Another problem Mississippi water systems face is a high rate of treated water lost due to leaks. Some systems lose more than 30 percent of treated water, which is twice the industry standard. Jackson’s water system loss is more than 40 percent.

Wastewater systems in Mississippi are also aging and face large repair costs. The consequences of a wastewater system failure are both a public health and environmental hazard, as untreated wastewater can overflow into rivers and other water sources when systems are overwhelmed.

Roads and bridges: Moving toward better conditions

Mississippi’s bridges saw a two-step grade increase to a ‘D+’ in the 2024 Report Card, compared to a ‘D-’ in 2020. Over the last four years, the percentage of bridges in poor condition dropped from 9.8 percent to 6.3 percent. However, in this same timeframe, the percentage of bridges in good condition fell from 58.4 percent to 56.1 percent, and the number of bridges that have limits on the weight they can carry grew by more than 400.

The grade for roads in Mississippi is unchanged in the 2024 report card at a ‘D-’. Of the roads where pavement condition information exists, 24.3 percent are in poor condition, and the Mississippi Department of Transportation (MDOT) is only able to rehabilitate five percent of the poor-condition roads every year.

The state also estimates it has a $400 million funding gap for roads every year. Mississippi also has the highest rate of roadway fatalities, with 25 deaths per 100,000 people annually. Forty-three percent of all roadway deaths are related to drunk driving.

Mississippi’s infrastructure helps power America’s economy

Mississippi’s location along the Gulf Coast helps drive the economy of the state and nation, with ports and inland waterways playing an important role in getting products in and out of the United States. Ports received the highest grade on the Report Card of ‘B-’, the same grade as in 2020.

The state’s ports generate $17 billion in gross state product annually and support one out of every ten jobs in Mississippi. Many ports in the state saw extensive rehabilitation projects after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, while other ports built during the 1950s are nearing the end of their service life and lack updates to prepare them for severe weather and hurricanes.

As shipping companies start using larger ships to move goods, expansion projects are needed to ensure Mississippi’s ports can receive those ships. The state’s inland waterways, which help get products to and from ports, received a ‘D’ grade, the same as in 2020.

Barges on those waterways face frequent delays and need extensive improvements so they can remain a reliable economic driver for the state. It is estimated Mississippi’s inland waterways need nearly $5 billion in upgrades over the next 20 years.

How to raise Mississippi’s infrastructure grade

The Report Card for Mississippi’s Infrastructure includes four recommendations to raise the grade.

What’s next

State infrastructure report cards are a valuable advocacy tool at all levels of government. ASCE members are looking forward to discussing the new Report Card and steps to raise the grade with state lawmakers when they start the 2025 legislative session in January, and with Mississippi’s members of Congress during ASCE’s Legislative Fly-In, which takes place in March, immediately after the release of the 2025 Report Card for America’s Infrastructure.

Thank You

ASCE Government Relations and Infrastructure Initiatives Department would like to thank every member who contributed their time and energy to researching and writing the 2024 Report Card for Mississippi’s Infrastructure.

Committee Chair

Jennifer Sloan Ziegler

Release And Logistics Support

William D. Carruth

Sarah McEwen

Christy Prouty

Dennis Truax

Authors/Contributors

Payton Billingsley

Wayne Black

Patrick Border

James Buras

Aaron Cagle

Jacob Forrester

Brent French

Phillip Gibson

Josh Hancock

Tom Henderson

Edith Martinez‐Guerra

Blake Palmer

Dustin Pittman

Alex Reeb

Laurel Lynn Rowse