After bridge collapse, Maryland governor urges Congress to pass funding
for rebuild
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[April 01, 2024]
By Gabriella Borter
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -With efforts underway to clean up thousands of
tons of steel debris from the collapsed bridge in Baltimore's harbor,
Maryland Governor Wes Moore on Sunday urged Republicans to work with
Democrats to approve the federal funding needed for rebuilding the
bridge and to get the port economy back on its feet.
Baltimore's Francis Scott Key bridge collapsed early on Tuesday morning,
killing six road workers, when a container ship nearly the size of the
Eiffel Tower lost power and crashed into a support pylon. Much of the
span crashed into the Patapsco River, blocking the Port of Baltimore's
shipping channel.
The Biden administration released $60 million in initial emergency aid
on Thursday to assist in cleaning up the bridge debris and reopening the
port, which is the largest in the U.S. for "roll-on, roll-off" vehicle
imports and exports of farm and construction equipment. The port has
been closed since Tuesday, leaving in limbo the jobs of some 15,000
people who rely on its daily operations.
Federal officials have told Maryland lawmakers the final cost of
rebuilding the bridge could soar to at least $2 billion, Roll Call
reported, citing a source familiar with the discussions.
Democratic President Joe Biden has pledged that the federal government
will cover the cost, but that will depend on passage of legislation
authorizing the funds by both the Republican-led House of
Representatives and Democratic-led Senate. The divided Congress has been
repeatedly riven by partisan battles over funding, with hardline
Republicans often at odds even with members of their own party.

Moore, a Democrat, said Republicans should be willing to approve the
funding for the sake of not just the city of Baltimore, but for the
national economy.
"The reason that we need people to move in a bipartisan basis ... is not
because we need you to do Maryland a favor," Moore told CNN on Sunday.
"We need to make sure that we're actually moving quickly to get the
American economy going again, because the Port of Baltimore is
instrumental in our larger economic growth."
Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg expressed optimism on Sunday
that Congress would approve the funds necessary for the cleanup and
rebuild, noting that the divided legislative body had passed Biden's $1
trillion infrastructure package in 2021.
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Maryland Governor Wes Moore speaks before U.S. President Joe Biden
arrived to deliver remarks touting Infrastructure Law spending to
replace the Baltimore and Potomac railroad tunnel with the Frederick
Douglass Tunnel project, during an event in Baltimore, Maryland,
U.S., January 30, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

"If there's anything left in this country that is more bipartisan
than infrastructure, it should be emergency response. This is both,
and I hope that Congress will be willing if and when we turn to
them," Buttigieg told CBS's "Face the Nation."
Biden was expected to visit the bridge collapse site this week.
An enormous crane began cutting up portions of the collapsed bridge
to prepare them for removal on Saturday, which officials said was
the first step of what will be a long and complicated cleanup. A
spokesperson for the governor's office said on Sunday that a 200-ton
(180-metric ton) piece of the bridge had been removed and officials
were working to determine the best strategy for pulling the ship off
the wreckage.
Later Sunday officials said they were preparing to establish an
alternate route for "commercially essential vessels," although few
additional details were released and the timing of the alternate
route's opening wasn't made clear.
In a statement, coordinator Capt. David O'Connell said that the
alternate would "support the flow of marine traffic into Baltimore."
Video released by responders showed Coast Guard officials dropping
buoys into the water near the site of the collision.
The wreckage and hazardous weather conditions have made it
impossible for divers to continue searching for the four remaining
bodies of the deceased construction workers in recent days, Moore
said.
Moore and other officials have declined to give an estimated
timeline for the reopening of the port and the rebuilding of the
bridge.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Washington; additional reporting
by Brendan O'Brien, Hannah Lang, and Raphael Satter; Editing by Mary
Milliken, Leslie Adler, Jonathan Oatis and Michael Perry)
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