Biden visits Pittsburgh bridge collapse, vows more U.S. investment
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[January 29, 2022]
By Andrea Shalal and Doina Chiacu
PITTSBURGH (Reuters) -President Joe Biden
stopped to look at a Pittsburgh bridge that collapsed just hours before
he arrived for a scheduled visit to the city on Friday, dramatically
underscoring the urgency of his drive to rebuild the United States'
creaky infrastructure.
Visibly moved, Biden gazed across a ravine over the buckled sections of
the half-century-old Fern Hollow Bridge, flanked by Pennsylvania and
local officials and emergency workers as he surveyed the damage.
"The idea that we have been so far behind on infrastructure, for so many
years -- it's just mind-boggling," the president told them.
One emergency worker described the scene after the collapse as loud as a
jet engine. Biden praised the work of rescuers, noting a natural gas
leak that was not stopped until some 30 minutes after first responders
arrived at the scene.
Rescuers rappelled at least 150 feet (46 meters) into Fern Hollow, and
used ropes to pull people to safety after the snow-covered span over the
ravine collapsed around 6 a.m. (1100 GMT), Pittsburgh Fire Chief Darryl
Jones said.
"They helped the firefighters that were here initially on scene, also
did like a daisy chain, with hands just grabbing people and pulling them
up," Jones said.
Ten people suffered minor injuries, including four who were taken to the
hospital, city officials said. Jones added that crews would search under
the bridge for any victims.
The incident was a high-profile example of the need to rebuild the
nation's aging bridges, highways and other infrastructure with money
from $1 trillion spending bill that was a signature achievement of
Biden's first year in office.
Images of the collapse showed the four-lane span buckled into three
large sections, with several vehicles piled in the rubble of the
collapsed roadway at the bottom of the ravine. The tail end of a long,
red city bus appeared trapped by the rubble.
The massive gas leak caused by the collapse forced the evacuation of
several families from their homes before being brought under control,
Jones said.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a team
to the site.
Pennsylvania has 3,198 bridges rated as being in poor condition,
according to the U.S. Department of Transportation.
The collapse came just two weeks after Pennsylvania got $327 million
from the U.S. Department of Transportation for bridge repair as part of
the Biden administration's new infrastructure law. Pennsylvania's share
of the bridge-repair money is the third-largest state allocation, behind
only California and New York.
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President Joe Biden stopped to look at a Pittsburgh bridge that
collapsed just hours before he arrived for a scheduled visit to the
city on Friday, dramatically underscoring the urgency of his drive
to rebuild the United States' creaky infrastructure.
Biden said he was astonished to
learn Pittsburgh had more bridges than any city in the world. "And
we're going to fix them all," he said before leaving the site.
ECONOMIC GROWTH JUMPS
Biden, whose approval ratings have fallen in recent months amid a
surge in the COVID-19 pandemic and inflation, got a boost on
Thursday when the Commerce Department reported the U.S. economy grew
the fastest in nearly four decades in 2021.
Economists say Biden-backed fiscal stimulus, including the $1.9
trillion American Rescue Plan that pumped money into states for
COVID relief and into households in the form of stimulus payments,
played a big role.
In Pittsburgh, the president toured Mill 19, a former steel mill
building now serving as a research and development hub, and said he
was taking stock of what he had accomplished so far.
"Making it in America is what built this city, the steel city," he
said. Pittsburgh understands the consequences of what happens "when
we ignore the backbone and fail to invest in ourselves."
The Democratic president was returning to the site of his first
major campaign event in 2019 and his first stop after he was
inaugurated. The state is a crucial battleground for Democrats to
retain control of the Senate in the 2022 midterms.
He touted the creation of 6.4 million jobs and 367,000 manufacturing
jobs since he took office a year ago, and the passage of the
infrastructure bill -- a rare bipartisan victory in a deeply divided
Congress.
"It takes a federal government that doesn't just give lip service"
to buying American, he said. "Now we're beginning to see the
results."
In recent days, General Motors Co has said it would invest $7
billion in Michigan to expand electric vehicle production and Intel
Corp has said it would invest $100 billion to build a chip-making
complex in Ohio.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Katharine Jackson, Steve Holland, Doina
Chiacu, Andy Sullivan, Heather Timmons; Editing by Howard Goller,
Jonathan Oatis and Cynthia Osterman)
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