Legislation Could Provide Funding for Nationally
& Regionally Significant Bridges
Washington (May 25, 2021) – U.S. Senators Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), Sheldon Whitehouse
(D-R.I.), Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Rob Portman (R-Ohio),
Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), John Boozman (R-Ark.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.),
Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), and
Bob Casey (D-Penn.) introduced their bipartisan
Bridge Investment Act ahead
of the Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee highway markup this week.
This bill would establish a competitive grant program to assist the repair and
replacement of deficient and outdated bridges and ease the national bridge
repair backlog. The EPW Committee will vote on this legislation tomorrow, and
it is then expected to be included in a larger surface transportation bill
considered on the Senate floor. The Senators
previously
introduced this legislation in 2019.
“Bridges
across our country and particularly in Massachusetts are falling apart,
threatening the safety and security of people who rely on these arteries for
evacuation routes, commerce, and transportation,” said Senator Markey. “We need to make a large
investment in bridges to improve both the safety and efficiency of our
infrastructure, including critical evacuation routes such as the Sagamore and
Bourne Bridges on Cape Cod. These two bridges connect the nearly 250,000 people
living on the Cape and Islands to the rest of Massachusetts, and they are in
desperate need of replacement. I am proud to join my colleagues in introducing
this legislation today.”
“Rebuilding
bridges across the U.S. will create new jobs and make our country more
competitive,” said Senator Brown, who serves as Chairman on the Senate Banking,
Housing and Urban Affairs Committee. “Ohio has more than 3,200 bridges that need to be repaired or replaced to
make them safer and reduce congestion. But states and cities can’t do it alone
– they need real investment to help fix these outdated bridges that clog up our
roads and leave drivers at greater risk of an accident. This bipartisan program
will help deliver a new Brent Spence and make travel safer across Ohio.”
“Oklahomans
are well aware of the need to invest in bridges,” said Senator Inhofe. “Our state used to be one of the
worst states for having a high number of structurally-deficient bridges, but because
of my work in SAFETEA-LU, MAP-21 and the FAST Act, Oklahoma received the
federal resources needed to make bridge repairs and replacement a priority.
Today, we are ninth in the nation for having the fewest number of structurally
deficient highway system bridges. Now, we cannot rest on our past success, we
need to continue to make improving our nation’s infrastructure a priority.
That’s why I am glad to re-introduce the Bridge Investment Act alongside
Sen. Brown and I will work to ensure its inclusion in the bipartisan Surface
Transportation Reauthorization Act of 2021.”
“The
Ocean State has no shortage of bridges in serious need of repair or
replacement,” said Senator Whitehouse. “Competing pressures on state
and local budgets over decades have led to a massive national backlog of bridge
projects. Our bipartisan Bridge Reinvestment Act will invest billions of
dollars in bridge upgrades in Rhode Island and across the country, making roads
safer for drivers and creating good jobs in the process.”
“Many
of Mississippi’s bridges were built decades ago and are in need of major
repairs. This problem also exists across the nation. The Bridge Investment Act
would launch a competitive federal grant program specifically designed for
bridges, allowing states like Mississippi to access much-needed resources to
complete these capital-intensive projects,” said Senator Wicker, who serves as ranking
member of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee and is a
member of the Environment and Public Works Committee.
“Oregonians
strongly support investments in our crumbling infrastructure. With half of
Oregon’s bridges being more than 50 years old, our state is particularly
vulnerable. Bridges allow goods to move to market and commuters to get to work,
and the Bridge Investment Act would provide a critical boost of funding to
improve safety and promote economic growth,” said Senator Wyden.
“I’m
pleased that the Bridge Investment Act will be included in the bipartisan
transportation bill being considered by the Environment and Public Works
Committee this week because this common-sense legislation will get us that much
closer to a solution for the Brent Spence Bridge,” said Senator Portman.
“The
recent closure of the Interstate 40 bridge across the Mississippi River
demonstrates the need to ensure states have the funding necessary to make
structural improvements to critical infrastructure,” said Senator Boozman. “This legislation
will allow targeted federal investments to make repairs to our aging bridges so
we can prevent unexpected closures, promote safety and support economic
growth.”
“Mississippi,
with nearly 6,000 bridges, faces the same challenges seen across the nation in
terms of bridge disrepair,” said Senator Hyde-Smith. “Our proposed competitive federal grant program and
other reforms would help states and communities overcome the public safety,
economic, and quality of life challenges arising from aged and compromised
bridges.”
“Michigan
knows the consequences of outdated and crumbling bridges,” said Senator Stabenow. “Our bipartisan bill invests in
our bridges and addresses our backlog of critical maintenance, meeting a need I
hear about all the time from people in Michigan. This investment will give our
state the tools to ensure our bridges are safe, create jobs and encourage
economic growth.”
“Tennesseans,
particularly those in Memphis and the Mid-South, know all too well right now
the necessity of maintaining our bridges with the ongoing closure of the I-40
bridge,” said
Senator Hagerty.
“Tennessee taxpayers are supportive of investing in hard infrastructure, which
offers a tangible and lasting return on their investment and ensures our state
remains a hub for competition and commerce.”
“I
am as frustrated as anyone with the traffic and long commutes caused by aging,
crumbling infrastructure in our state,” said Senator Murray. “I’m committed to
delivering Washington state families new, safe, and secure roads and bridges,
and this bill would help do just that. By funding the construction of bridges
big and small across the country, the bipartisan Bridge Investment Act is a
commonsense solution to a huge piece of our infrastructure crisis, and would
improve the daily lives and commutes of millions of people in Washington
state.”
The
Bridge Investment Act provisions expected to be included in the EPW
package would:
·
Provide $3.265
billion to fund the Highway Trust Fund, which establishes a bridge
investment program to award competitive grants to certain governmental entities
for projects that improve the condition of bridges as well as the safety,
efficiency, and reliability of the movement of people and freight over bridges
·
Authorize an additional
$3.265 billion that can be provided in future appropriations to support the
new bridge program
·
Require strong Buy
America rules, by requiring all projects funded by the grants to use
American-made steel and iron
·
Ensure that a
transportation bill could rehabilitate or replace bridges of all sizes,
including nationally significant large bridges, like the Brent Spence Bridge
between Ohio and Kentucky
·
Create an innovative
evaluation process for proposed projects to ensure the fair and efficient
allocation of federal funding
·
Provide quick grants
for small bridge projects and allow projects to be bundled into a single
application to cut down on red tape and accelerate repairs
·
Allow entities of all
sizes and scope to apply for funding, including: states, counties, cities,
metropolitan planning organizations, special purpose districts, public
authorities with transportation functions, federal land management agencies and
Indian tribes
The American Society of
Civil Engineers’
Report
Card for America’s Infrastructure found there are at least 46,154 bridges
in the U.S. that are ‘structurally deficient’ and 231,000 still need repair and
preservation work. Additionally, a
report,
released by the American Road and Transportation Builders Association,
estimates it would take nearly 40 years to repair the current backlog of
‘structurally deficient’ bridges in the U.S. at the current pace.