Windsor Star

No hazardous goods on bridge: Gov. Whitmer

- BRIAN CROSS bcross@postmedia.com

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has crossed out a provision, tucked into a COVID relief bill, that would have allowed hazmat trucks on the Ambassador Bridge for the first time in 91 years.

The hazardous materials provision was one of 11 provisions subjected to line item vetoes as Whitmer signed Enrolled Senate Bill 748 on Tuesday morning.

“It's all stricken out and Whitmer's signature is right after it,” MP Brian Masse said later in the day after receiving an emailed copy of the signed bill. “The governor has fixed the problem.”

Masse rang the alarm bells last week after learning the provision had been included in the bill — intended to provide financial help to many Michigande­rs suffering due to COVID restrictio­ns — and passed by the state senate the previous Friday. His letter alerting Canada's Transport Minister Marc Garneau of the surprise change to regulation­s forbidding hazardous materials on the bridge brought an immediate response. Transport Canada officials met the next day with officials representi­ng Whitmer, who still had to sign the bill.

“I really give a lot of credit to Brian and the mayor (Drew Dilkens) for speaking out on this so quickly because it was timed to be at a time that was very inconvenie­nt for everybody, in the middle of the holidays and kind of in the dark of night,” said Gregg Ward, owner of the Detroit-windsor Truck Ferry, which is permitted to transport trucks carrying hazardous materials across the river.

The issue only came to light when Michigan state Sen. Stephanie Chang (D — Detroit), who represents neighbourh­oods around the Ambassador Bridge, discovered the Ambassador Bridge provision — allowing certain hazardous materials — in the bill and voted against it, despite the bill's overall good intent.

“Allowing these types of hazardous materials to be transporte­d across the Ambassador Bridge — a bridge that is over 90 years old, not up to the same level of inspection­s, traffic safety features, spill containmen­t, or fire suppressio­n systems needed to protect my residents' safety — is downright dangerous,” Chang wrote in a commentary in the Detroit Free Press.

An attempt to reach an Ambassador Bridge spokesman Tuesday was not successful.

Ward said the owners of the bridge have invested a lot of money in lobbying, “so I don't think they'll crawl off and accept defeat.”

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