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Here’s Why It Could Take Longer To Rebuild The Baltimore Bridge Than The Whole Transcontinental Railroad
Daily Caller ^ | April 3, 2024 9:39 PM ET | WILL KESSLER

Posted on 04/04/2024 8:12:53 AM PDT by Red Badger

The effort to rebuild the recently collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge near Baltimore, Maryland, could quickly turn into a years-long quagmire as a result of environmental red tape under the Biden administration, experts told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

The Baltimore Bridge was struck by a container ship navigating the Patapsco River out of the Port of Baltimore in late March, sending several cars and workers into the water and rendering the passageway unusable. It is unknown exactly how long the bridge could take to rebuild, as officials could expedite the process, but experts warned the DCNF that government red tape, such as environmental reviews filed by government entities or environmental activists, could slow down its construction after debris is cleared from the site and new plans for a replacement bridge are drawn up. +

“If the bridge gets special regulatory treatment, then five years is a reasonable timeline,” Ryan Young, senior economist at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, told the DCNF. “There is some hope for this, based on last year’s collapse of a stretch of I-95 near Philadelphia. It reopened in 12 days, mostly thanks to red tape being waived. It would have taken months otherwise. Of course, that was a much smaller project.”

Following the disaster, the Biden administration announced that it would be sending $60 million to the city of Baltimore to assist in the clean-up and rebuilding, far from the sum needed to rebuild the project fully. President Joe Biden has also pledged to completely cover the cost of reconstructing the bridge, pending Congressional approval, according to Reuters.

An official cost of a new bridge has yet to be announced, but some estimates are around $500 million up to $1 billion, depending on the size and design of the project, according to the AP. The original bridge cost just $60.3 million to build, according to CNN.

“The Key Bridge recovery can take multiple paths, but the two we need to be keeping an eye on are first, where is the red tape around environmental historical preservation bogging down the efforts to help this community recover, and second, what coordination is occurring at the federal level to effect a more resilient recovery for the community, who’s looking at what the vision is, long term,” Brian Cavanaugh, visiting fellow in the Border Security and Immigration Center at the Heritage Foundation, told the DCNF.

A similar bridge disaster occurred in 1980, when a freighter struck the Sunshine Skyway in Tampa Bay, Florida, according to The Associated Press. Construction on a new bridge finished 7 years later, in 1987, 19 months later than it was originally projected to be complete and $20 million over budget.

“Federal and state regulations, including in Maryland, give NIMBYs and environmentalists a lot of ways to block projects,” Young told the DCNF. “Hopefully the Key Bridge’s high visibility will help them restrain their worst anti-development impulses, but that is no guarantee.”

Many large infrastructure projects are often bogged down by environmental reviews, such as California’s high-speed rail project, which has spent more than $600 million on environmental reviews since it was approved by voters more than 15 years ago.

“My fear here is that people can generate environmental reviews that they flag concerns for, say the oyster population or if there’s a bird that breeds in the Patapsco River or water quality,” Cavanaugh told the DCNF. “All these things could easily be triggered through a federal review process and would drag on. Those reviews are not always efficient. The efficacy of those is to be determined by others, but they’re certainly not expedited.”

The Biden administration has expanded the national environmental review framework, rolling back changes that the Trump administration made to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which requires federal agencies to review the environmental impacts of projects before approval. If the federal government remains involved in the project, environmental reviews may bog down the process, as the average NEPA environmental impact statement between 2010 and 2018 took 4.5 years to complete, halting construction completely, according to the White House’s Council on Environmental Quality.

“The rebuilding cost will almost certainly be higher than the original bridge, for several reasons, though I have no idea by how much,” Young told the DCNF. “A good rule of thumb is Edwards’ law—costs are usually at least double what officials first propose.”

Some analysts say that after cleaning up the site, creating new plans and building the bridge, the whole process could take up to a decade, according to WYPR, an outlet local to Baltimore. It took six years to build the Transcontinental Railroad.

“I fear that the cost of regulations is going to be more impactful than people are giving it credit for,” Cavanaugh told the DCNF. “Depending on what design they go with, like what birds fly in the area or what fish are in the Patapsco River, the cost of studying that and mitigating the negative impacts would be a problem. The mitigation measures to make the bridge more resilient and safe are going to be an added cost. But that’s an added cost not captured by inflation for any bridge built today.”

The Maryland Governor’s Office deferred the DCNF to statements made in previous press conferences. The White House did not immediately respond to a request to comment.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; History; Politics
KEYWORDS: baltimore; baltimorebridge; keybridge; maryland
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To: nwrep

That will make it likely to hinder timely completion once work starts, as well as, fail sooner as well. 👍


21 posted on 04/04/2024 8:30:58 AM PDT by Robert DeLong
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To: Red Badger

Back in the day, they had some gold for that final spike.

Not any more.

Gold is in the corrupt pockets and the spike is our hearts.


22 posted on 04/04/2024 8:31:24 AM PDT by Scrambler Bob (Running Rampant, and not endorsing nonsense)
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To: Red Badger

Related, in opposition

https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/midwest/ohio-train-derailment/epa-on-east-palestine-derailment/


23 posted on 04/04/2024 8:32:27 AM PDT by combat_boots
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To: Robert DeLong
Regulations & ecological impact studies. Now I'll go see if I am even close. 🤣

You forgot political graft and seeing that a good chunk of that money goes to illegals.

24 posted on 04/04/2024 8:32:30 AM PDT by EinNYC
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To: nwrep

Remember Boston’s Big Dig? Or California’s high speed rail?


25 posted on 04/04/2024 8:32:31 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Red Badger

Unions, government over-reach, graft, fraud... They’ll be lucky to get it done at all...

Big Dig all over again. Bank on it.


26 posted on 04/04/2024 8:34:00 AM PDT by Dead Corpse (A Psalm in napalm...)
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To: Red Badger

Baltimore survived before the bridge, and they will survive afterwards. Cheaper just to send the traffic around the harbor. Expand whatever beltway is there a couple of lanes.


27 posted on 04/04/2024 8:36:37 AM PDT by Fido969
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To: Red Badger

Do you a picture of the current one?


28 posted on 04/04/2024 8:37:29 AM PDT by alternatives?
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To: Red Badger

My great grandfather and my grandfather different sides of the family - one helped put the gargoyles on the Chrysler building the other created and placed the ornamental platering in radio city music hall

We had a bricklaying company in the family like many Irish defiant NINAs did. They had a contract to help build the Empiere State building

It was built in under a year. It’s not a crappy structure like you see now. It has marble and good Otis elevators.

They built it Drung the Great Depression. Partly to encourage Americans and the western world

That was before the communists took over our country


29 posted on 04/04/2024 8:38:13 AM PDT by stanne
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To: Red Badger

The ramps and approaches are already there. That’s the hard work.

All they need to do is put in a new span with some pier protections.


30 posted on 04/04/2024 8:39:00 AM PDT by Fido969
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To: Red Badger

Clean up the mess and wait for Trump.

Problem solved.

But maybe that’s the problem, hmmm...


31 posted on 04/04/2024 8:39:15 AM PDT by mewzilla (Never give up; never surrender!)
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To: Fido969
Cheaper just to send the traffic around the harbor.

That was the function of the Francis Scott Key bridge, built in the 1970s,

Expand whatever beltway is there a couple of lanes.

Do I understand correctly that you don't live within 1000 miles of Baltimore, have never been to Baltimore, and have no knowledge whatever of the Baltimore traffic pattern?

32 posted on 04/04/2024 8:40:17 AM PDT by NorthMountain (... the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: stanne
We had a bricklaying company in the family like many Irish defiant NINAs did. They had a contract to help build the Empiere State building.

True, but how many of those workers are still in the concrete?

33 posted on 04/04/2024 8:40:22 AM PDT by Fido969
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To: Red Badger

To be fair, technology was far more advanced in 1863.


34 posted on 04/04/2024 8:40:35 AM PDT by gitmo (If your biography doesn't match your theology, what good is it?)
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To: Scrambler Bob

That ‘final spike’ was a publicity set-up.

The builders were not stopping to ‘meet up’.

They were being paid ‘by the mile’ and the two ‘ends’ did not meet until government and public outcry caused the situation to be eliminated.

There are to this day two parallel tracks that went past each other for 25 miles.....................


35 posted on 04/04/2024 8:41:17 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

The bridge will be twice as long and twice as wide as the old one.

You left out the bicycle lanes going in either direction, plus the ordinary walk ways, since pedestrians cannot be allowed to use either bike or wheelchair lanes.

Better add more to the cost, more time to completion, and more width to the bridge.


36 posted on 04/04/2024 8:41:45 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: Red Badger
The I-35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis occurred in early August 2007. The new bridge that was built in its place was open to traffic in September 2008.

Ironically, replacing a major bridge after a total collapse actually has a FASTER timeline than a project to build a new one or rehabilitate/replace an old one that is obsolete. There are two factors at work here:

1. When a bridge is constructed to replace one that has been taken out of commission unexpectedly due to a disaster, the normal environmental review requirements are waived as long as the new bridge is an "in-kind" replacement of the original one.

2. When a bridge is rehabilitated or replaced as a planned capital project, one of the factors that greatly extends the timeline for completion is the need to keep the old bridge open for traffic while the new one is constructed in stages. This is why it takes far less time to build a new bridge from the ground up than it does to build one in multiple stages to accommodate normal traffic operations as much as possible.

37 posted on 04/04/2024 8:42:51 AM PDT by Alberta's Child (If something in government doesn’t make sense, you can be sure it makes dollars.)
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To: Red Badger

Of course the railroad was built with massive amounts of corruption. Basically giving a bunch of rich people blank checks, which got us on our path of government by corporation that we’re still suffering from today. So not really a great yardstick.


38 posted on 04/04/2024 8:45:29 AM PDT by discostu (like a dog being shown a card trick)
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To: Red Badger

Lets hope it doesn’t take as long as the California Bullet Train is taking.......


39 posted on 04/04/2024 8:47:32 AM PDT by hillarys cankles
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To: Red Badger
Pending congressional approval?

Isn’t that backwards?

Isn’t Congress supposed to send a spending request to the President for approval?

40 posted on 04/04/2024 8:48:01 AM PDT by HIDEK6 (God bless Donald Trump. A)
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