The Report Card measured six broad goals for America’s Watershed—Ecosystems, Flood Control and Risk Reduction, Transportation, Water Supply, Economy, and Recreation. The Report Card measures how well we are currently meeting each one of these goals, using real data and relevant information that was identified by experts in these fields. Graphic: America's Watershed Initiative

By Jim Salter
14 October 2015 ST. LOUIS (AP) – A report card is out on the Mississippi River basin, and the grade is not good: a D+, with an aging transportation infrastructure topping the list of concerns. The report by America’s Watershed Initiative, released Wednesday in St. Louis, assesses categories such as the abundance of clean water, flood control and risk, ecosystem health, the economy and recreation on the river and its watershed, which includes the Missouri, Tennessee and Ohio rivers and other tributaries. All told, the watershed touches parts of 31 states and covers two-fifths of the continental U.S. The category of biggest concern is the condition of infrastructure such as locks and dams, creating what initiative members call a threat to the nation’s economy. The report card gave a D grade to infrastructure condition, and an F to infrastructure maintenance. “Our aging water infrastructure desperately weakens America’s capability to reliably and efficiently move and export food and goods,” said Stephen Gambrell, director of the Mississippi River Commission and a member of the initiative’s steering committee. The report said key components of many locks and dams are in poor condition, and lack of funding for maintenance “means that multiple failures may be imminent.” Those failures, the report said, would “result in severe economic, public safety, and water security problems.” Poor marks were also given to issues related to water supply, flood control, and flood risk reduction. To control floods and reduce flood risks, the report said, new strategies are needed “that respond to a changing climate, rising sea level, coastal subsidence, and erosion.” [more]

‘Report card’ gives Mississippi River basin a D+