Springfield News-Sun

Biden: Cincinnati bridge may finally get fix in $1T bill

- By Aamer Madhani and Bruce Schreiner MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Monday launched his sales pitch for his recently passed $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill, predicting that a notoriousl­y congested bridge that sits in Senate Republican leader Mitch Mcconnell’s backyard will finally get a long overdue overhaul.

Biden said in an interview with WKRC-TV that he expected the Brent Spence Bridge, which carries traffic over the Ohio River and connects Cincinnati with Northern Kentucky, would get funding in the bill that the House passed last week and he is expected to soon sign into law.

“You all are going to get in the state of Kentucky well over $10 billion,” Biden said in the interview. “It’s listed as one of the most notorious bridges in the country. And so my guess is that that’s going to be the choice that your governors are going to make and want to get done. And we can get it done now.”

The president spotlighte­d a proposed project in two states that he lost in the 2020 election to begin what is expected to be an extended administra­tion-wide effort to tell the country about what the infrastruc­ture bill could mean for Americans.

Biden and Cabinet members are expected to step up media appearance­s and visits around the country in the coming weeks to highlight what’s in the legislatio­n. The White House says Biden will visit Baltimore on Wednesday to underscore how the bill will help Americans by upgrading ports and strengthen­ing supply chains.

The busy Brent Spence Bridge has long been a bane of motorists in the both states. The Federal Highway Administra­tion declared the bridge functional­ly obsolete in the 1990s because its narrow lanes carried more cars than it was designed for.

Biden has previously pointed to the bridge proj- ect as the sort of muchneeded infrastruc­ture work that would finally get done if Congress passed the legislatio­n. In a July CNN town hall in Cincinnati, he made passing reference to the dangerousl­y outdated Brent Spence, vowing his administra­tion would “fix that damn bridge of yours” if his legislatio­n passed.

In Kentucky, Mcconnell said Monday he was “delighted” to see the infrastruc­ture bill on its way to Biden’s desk, heaping praise on the bipartisan package he supported even as he has derided the president’s broader $1.75 trillion social services and climate effort still making its way through Congress.

“This will be the first time I’ve come up here in a quarter of a century when I thought maybe there was a way forward on the Brent Spence Bridge,” Mcconnell told an audience at a stop in Covington, Kentucky.

He said Kentucky stands to gain $4.6 billion for so-called

“hard infrastruc­ture” and it will be the job of the state officials in Frankfort to divide it up.

“I think there may be a way forward not only in Kentucky, but across the country to deal with these long-standing infrastruc­ture problems,” Mcconnell said.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said fixing the Brent Spence was a high priority.

“I want to get this thing done,” Beshear said. “We’ve talked about it for decades. This is our best opportunit­y to do it. I want to be the governor that gets this done. What was once viewed as impossible suddenly now appears to be very possible.”

 ?? ?? The Brent Spence Bridge straddles the border between Ohio and Kentucky in Cincinnati. President Joe Biden said the federal infrastruc­ture bill has money to replace “one of the most notorious bridges in the country.”
The Brent Spence Bridge straddles the border between Ohio and Kentucky in Cincinnati. President Joe Biden said the federal infrastruc­ture bill has money to replace “one of the most notorious bridges in the country.”

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