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White House to Have States Compete for 10 Biggest Bridge Fixes

White House to Have States Compete for 10 Biggest Bridge Fixes

The Biden administration plans to have states compete for a slice of the proposed $2.25 trillion infrastructure-and-jobs program that’s dedicated to fixing 10 unnamed bridges that are seen as economically important.

The American Jobs Plan, unveiled by President Joe Biden on March 31, pledged to “fix the ten most economically significant bridges in the country in need of reconstruction,” along with the “worst” 10,000 smaller ones in need of repair. None of those were specified by name.

The administration’s plan would create a competitive grant program to determine which bridges get funding, according to an administration official. The U.S. Department of Transportation would ask states to submit applications and articulate why their nominee qualifies, offering details on data such as traffic volume or condition of the bridge, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

White House to Have States Compete for 10 Biggest Bridge Fixes

The selection process suggests the potentially long road ahead for some of the giant spending bill, which includes money for green energy, and child and elderly care along with traditional transportation-infrastructure items, to make its way into the economy. In the meantime, a previously enacted $1.9 trillion pandemic-relief bill is seen by economists boosting growth at least through 2022.

Peter DeFazio, chair of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, said on Tuesday that the infrastructure portions of the Biden package will “probably” be reported out of his panel in the third week of May. It will be modeled on the nearly $500 billion INVEST in America Act, which passed the House as part of a wider Moving Forward Act infrastructure package in 2020 but wasn’t taken up by the Senate.

The American Road & Transportation Builders Association estimates that about one in three U.S. bridges need repair work. It would cost $41.8 billion to repair the more than 45,000 bridges considered structurally deficient, the group says.

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