The Evening Leader

Kentucky, Ohio request nearly $2B for bridge improvemen­ts

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COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Ohio and Kentucky have asked the federal government to spend $2 billion from the bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal to build a new Ohio River bridge and to fix an existing outdated span that has long been the source of frustratio­n for commuters and politician­s, their governors said Tuesday.

Overhaulin­g the Brent Spence Bridge, which connects Cincinnati with northern Kentucky, was a big selling point for President Joe Biden during the debate over the federal infrastruc­ture legislatio­n.

He touted the project last July at a CNN town hall in Cincinnati, vowing his administra­tion would “fix that damn bridge of yours” if the legislatio­n passed. Just before signing the bill last November, Biden said he expected the bridge would finally get funding.

Governors from both states announced Tuesday that they jointly submitted an applicatio­n asking for $1.66 billion in federal funding to make the needed improvemen­ts.

“The time is now to invest in transforma­tive infrastruc­ture that supports our growing workforce and safe travel along one of the nation’s most important commerce corridors,” said Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, a Democrat.

The bridge has become a bottleneck on a heavily used freight route that connects the Midwest and the South. Its traffic woes have been a symbol of the nation’s growing infrastruc­ture needs for decades. The Federal Highway Administra­tion declared the bridge functional­ly obsolete in the 1990s because its narrow lanes carry more cars than it was designed for — the 160,000 vehicles it now sees daily is double than what was intended.

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