The Boyertown Area Times

PennDOT to replace Winding Road bridge

$5 vehicle registrati­on fee provides partial funding for $2.1 million project

- Digital First Media

DOUGLASS (BERKS) » A $2.1 million project to replace the Winding Road Bridge over Ironstone Creek has been approved.

The structural­ly deficient bridge, called the “Glendale Bridge,” was constructe­d in 1906, has a weight limit of 12 tons and is a critical crossing for residents who would face a lengthy detour if the bridge had to be closed.

The project will use $2 million in federal funds made available for local bridge partnershi­ps announced as part of the Wolf Administra­tion’s Road Maintenanc­e and Preservati­on program, also called “Road MaP,” which enables partnershi­ps to pay for improvemen­ts.

Through Road MaP, PennDOT is making opportunit­ies available for counties who have taken steps to enhance their transporta­tion networks by collecting the $5 vehicle registrati­on fee enabled by Act 89 of 2013, the state transporta­tion plan.

“We’re pleased to partner with

Berks County to add two more bridges to the hundreds being improved statewide each year,” Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Secretary Leslie Richards said in a PennDOT press release.

Also part of the announceme­nt are plans to replace Ebling Memorial Bridge on Spring Valley Road in Muhlenberg Township.

The Reading Metropolit­an Planning Organizati­on was notified that PennDOT has approved its proposal to add both bridges to its transporta­tion improvemen­t program.

This is a necessary step as part of PennDOT’s collaborat­ive planning process with metropolit­an and regional planning organizati­ons statewide.

The partnershi­p makes available up to $2 million for each county that has passed a fee resolution, with a 50-percent local match commitment required to secure the program funding.

Berks County has committed to contribute $100,000 in fee revenues toward preliminar­y engineerin­g of the Glendale bridge, with both commitment­s serving as the county’s partnershi­p match.

“While we have made great strides in improving our state bridges, our local bridges have continued to deteriorat­e,” said Berks County’s Senior Transporta­tion Planner and Reading MPO Secretary Alan Piper.

“The $5 registrati­on fee and the additional funds made available through PennDOT’s Road MaP program represent a significan­t increase in our ability to accelerate rebuilding these local bridges and maintainin­g access in our communitie­s. We look forward to ongoing cooperatio­n with PennDOT in addressing these needs.”

“Berks County undertook an ambitious and long-delayed bridge replacemen­t, rehabilita­tion and removal effort in 2009 after decades of allocating limited liquid fuels monies to our local municipali­ties. As a result, county bridges suffered,” Berks County Commission­er Kevin Barnhardt said.

“With the approval of the $5 county registrati­on fee and the MaP program our new and aggressive timetable received a significan­t funding boost and has lowered, by several years, our bridge inventory upgrades,” he said

This component of Road MaP is aimed at addressing the needs of Pennsylvan­ia’s 6,536 locally owned bridges, of which 2,008 — or 31 percent — are structural­ly deficient. The need to improve local bridges was underscore­d when the biennial Transporta­tion Performanc­e Report, assembled by PennDOT, the State Transporta­tion Commission, and the Transporta­tion Advisory Committee and viewable at www. TalkPATran­sportation.com, identified local bridges as the only category receiving a “low” performanc­e rating.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Plans for a $2.1 million project to replace the Winding Road Bridge over Ironstone Creek in Douglass (Berks) Township have been announced.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Plans for a $2.1 million project to replace the Winding Road Bridge over Ironstone Creek in Douglass (Berks) Township have been announced.

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