Miami Herald

Baltimore bridge falls after powerless ship rams support column; 6 presumed dead

- BY LEA SKENE Assoociate­d Press

BALTIMORE

A cargo ship lost power and rammed into a major bridge in Baltimore early Tuesday, destroying the span in a matter of seconds and plunging it into the river in a terrifying collapse that could disrupt a vital shipping port for months. Six people were missing and presumed dead.

The ship’s crew issued a mayday call moments before the crash took down the Francis Scott Key Bridge, enabling authoritie­s to limit vehicle traffic on the span, Maryland’s governor said.

The ship struck one of the bridge’s supports, causing the structure to colpothole­s lapse like a toy. A section of the span came to rest across the bow of the vessel, which caught fire, and thick, black smoke billowed out of it.

With the ship barreling toward the bridge at “a very, very rapid speed,” authoritie­s had just enough time to stop cars from coming over the bridge, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said.

“These people are heroes,” Moore said. “They saved lives last night.”

The crash happened in the middle of the night, long before the busy morning commute on the bridge that stretches 1.6 miles and was used by 12 million vehicles last year.

The six people still unaccounte­d for were part of a constructi­on crew filling on the bridge, said Paul Wiedefeld, the state’s transporta­tion secretary.

A senior executive at the company that employed the workers said Tuesday afternoon that they were presumed to be dead, given the water’s depth and the length of time since the crash.

Jeffrey Pritzker, the executive vice president of Brawner Builders, said the crew was working in the middle of the bridge when it fell. No bodies have been recovered, and rescue crews continued the search into the late afternoon.

“This was so completely unforeseen,” Pritzker said. “We don’t know what else to say. We take such great pride in safety, and we have cones and signs and lights and barriers and flaggers. But we never foresaw that the bridge would collapse.”

Jesus Campos, who has worked on the bridge for Brawner Builders and knows members of the crew, said he was told they were on a break and some were sitting in their trucks when the bridge went down.

“I know that a month ago, I was there, and I know what it feels like when the trailers pass,” Campos said. “Imagine knowing that is falling. It is so hard, one would not know what to do.”

Rescuers pulled two people out of the water. One person was treated at a hospital and discharged hours later. Multiple vehicles also went into the river, although authoritie­s did not believe anyone was inside any of them.

“It looked like something out of an action movie,” said Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott, calling it “an unthinkabl­e tragedy.”

A police dispatcher put out a call just before the collapse saying a ship had lost its steering and asked officers to stop all traffic, according to Maryland Transporta­tion Authority first responder radio traffic obtained from the Broadcasti­fy.com archive.

One officer who stopped traffic radioed that he was going to drive onto the bridge to alert the constructi­on crew. But seconds later, a frantic officer said: “The whole bridge just fell down. Start, start whoever, everybody … the whole bridge just collapsed.”

On a separate radio channel for maintenanc­e and constructi­on workers, someone said officers were stopping traffic because a ship had lost steering. There was no follow-up order to evacuate, and 30 seconds later the bridge fell and the channel went silent.

From 1960 to 2015, 35 major bridge collapses occurred worldwide because of ship or barge collisions, according to the World Associatio­n for Waterborne Transport Infrastruc­ture.

The collapse is sure to create a logistical nightmare for months, if not years, along the East

Coast, shutting down ship traffic at the Port of Baltimore, a major shipping hub. The accident will also snarl cargo and commuter traffic.

“Losing this bridge will devastate the entire area, as well as the entire East Coast,” Maryland state

Sen. Johnny Ray Salling said.

U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg said at a news conference near the site that it was too soon to estimate how long clearing the channel would take.

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