Houston Chronicle

Buttigieg vows federal help to fix collapsed I-95 section

- By Marc Levy

U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg promised Tuesday to help repair the East Coast’s main north-south highway as quickly as possible and said that the destructio­n of a section of I-95 will likely raise the cost of consumer goods because truckers must now travel longer routes.

Speaking near the site where an out-of-control tractor-trailer hauling gasoline flipped over on an Interstate 95 off-ramp and caught fire, Buttigieg said he expected that disruption­s in trucking routes will put “upward pressure” on shipping costs along the East Coast.

Buttigieg toured the site and then, over the sounds of heavy machinery and demolition, told reporters that “every resource that is needed will be made available” to help Pennsylvan­ia repair the bridge as quickly and safely as possible.

Most drivers traveling the I-95 corridor between Delaware and New York City use the New Jersey Turnpike rather than the segment of interstate where the collapse occurred.

But the collapse is snarling traffic in Philadelph­ia as the summer travel season starts, upending hundreds of thousands of morning commutes, disrupting countless businesses and forcing trucking companies to find different routes.

Pennsylvan­ia State Police said they believe the driver perished in the accident, although the city’s medical examiner has not identified the body pulled from the wreckage. The resulting fire caused the collapse of the northbound lanes of I-95. The southbound lanes were compromise­d by the heat from the fire, authoritie­s say.

It could take weeks, at least, to replace the damaged and destroyed section.

Pennsylvan­ia’s transporta­tion secretary, Michael Carroll, said demolition work is continuing around the clock and that his agency will release a replacemen­t plan Wednesday for the roughly 100foot section of I-95.

Buttigieg said he had not seen any sort of estimate for what sort of cost increases consumers might be facing, but said the trucking industry is working to make the most of alternativ­e routes. He also suggested that the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion is working with route-selecting software firms such as Google and Waze to optimize their products.

“At the end of the day, there’s no substitute for I-95 being up and running in full working condition,” Buttigieg said.

Of the 160,000 vehicles a day that travel that section, 8 percent are trucks and “obviously that is a lot of America’s GDP moving along that road every single day,” Buttigieg said.

Subodha Kumar, a professor of statistics, operations and data science at Temple University’s Fox School of Business, said it is impossible to calculate the scale of shipping delays and higher costs caused by detours without analyzing all the alternativ­e trucking routes.

But, Kumar said, the added cost will not be small, and the impact will last for weeks or longer. It will affect commerce to Canada, and create cascading effects throughout the supply chain, he said.

“Any small disruption can multiply exponentia­lly and can make the changes much bigger,” he said.

The effect will be immediate on perishable foods, he said.

For now, I-95 will be closed in both directions.

The elevated southbound portion of I-95 will have to be demolished, as well as the northbound side, officials say.

State police officials said the trucking company had contacted them about the accident and was cooperatin­g, although they have declined to identify the company or say whether it was properly licensed for hauling gasoline.

Rebuilding the stretch is likely to drag into July or August.

 ?? Alejandro A. Alvarez/Tribune News Service ?? U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, left, meets with Sen. Jimmy Dillon, Mayor Jim Kenney and Pennsylvan­ia transporta­tion chief Mike Carroll.
Alejandro A. Alvarez/Tribune News Service U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, left, meets with Sen. Jimmy Dillon, Mayor Jim Kenney and Pennsylvan­ia transporta­tion chief Mike Carroll.

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