New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Biden touts Pittsburgh bridge as infrastruc­ture win

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PITTSBURGH — President Joe Biden on Thursday checked out the repair work underway at a Pennsylvan­ia bridge that became a symbol of the nation’s troubled infrastruc­ture when it collapsed nine months ago as he tries to showcase his administra­tion’s efforts to revitalize the nation’s roadways.

The stop at Fern Hollow Bridge, which collapsed into a ravine just hours before Biden visited Pittsburgh last January, was part of the president’s latest road trip to sell White House accomplish­ments in the runup to midterms elections that are less than three weeks away.

Administra­tion officials say the repair job, expected to be finished by December, was accelerate­d by passage of a bipartisan infrastruc­ture law that Biden signed late last year. Biden had diverted from his planned itinerary last January to visit the site of the just-collapsed bridge.

On Thursday, he returned to the bridge to turn it into a symbol of success for the White House and Democrats, who count the bipartisan law as one of several achievemen­ts during the first two years of Biden’s presidency.

“When you see these projects in your neighborho­ods and cranes going up, shovels in the ground, I want you to feel the way I feel: Pride,” Biden said, speaking next to a tall, yellow crane at the edge of the new span of Fern Hollow. “Pride in what we can do when we work together.”

He added: “Instead of infrastruc­ture week — which was a punchline for four years under my predecesso­r — it’s infrastruc­ture decade, a headline on my watch.”

The legislatio­n is one of Biden’s successes from the first two years of his term, and he repeatedly emphasizes its impact while traveling the country to roadways, airplane terminals and seaports. Out of roughly $1 trillion in spending, about $40 billion is dedicated to bridges.

“We’ve made tremendous progress,” said Mitch Landrieu, a senior White House adviser tasked with overseeing spending and implementa­tion of the massive infrastruc­ture bill. Landrieu said the funding for the swift repair came in part because of the infrastruc­ture law funding going to the state. “We have actually rebuilt this bridge within a year.”

“The president is standing in the breach and actually demonstrat­ing with historic legislatio­n that he’s passed, that his choices are different and better for the country.”

The Biden administra­tion has sought to increase the pace of building infrastruc­ture projects, hosting a summit last week at the White House to help state and local government officials streamline their processes.

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