The Boston Globe

Md. leaders seek Baltimore bridge money Biden promised

Funding could face obstacles from the GOP

- By Erin Cox and Jacob Bogage

Democratic Maryland Governor Wes Moore launched an inperson lobbying effort in Congress on Tuesday, aiming to fulfill President Biden’s vow to replace Baltimore’s collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge.

He will return to further press his case later this week, as more than 12,000 tons of steel and concrete from the wreckage still block the main shipping channel for the Port of Baltimore and strangle a key economic artery for the region.

“I’m going to Capitol Hill because I want to meet with them face-to-face and have them hear from me and the delegation directly as to why this is so important, not just to the state of Maryland, but why this is so important to the country,” Moore said in an interview.

“I want to be able to spend time with members of Congress to explain to them that in this moment, they have a responsibi­lity — a patriotic responsibi­lity — to make sure that we can get the bridge rebuilt,” he said.

Moore’s in-person lobbying effort is part of a multiprong­ed effort that involves the Biden administra­tion and all 10 members of the Maryland congressio­nal delegation, including its lone Republican, Representa­tive Andy Harris.

Funding could face obstacles from some congressio­nal Republican­s, even though such aid has been approved on a bipartisan basis in the past. The conservati­ve Freedom Caucus to which

Harris belongs, for example, conditione­d federal aid on several factors, including cutting the federal budget elsewhere, limiting how the money could be spent, and tying it to the Biden administra­tion’s policies on liquefied natural gas export terminals.

“Tragedy knows no partisansh­ip,” Harris said during a rare appearance with the nine Democrats who represent Maryland with him. “It wasn’t a Republican tragedy, it wasn’t a Democrat tragedy. And the solution won’t be a partisan solution.”

The cost to rebuild the 1.6mile span could exceed $1 billion, though leaders were reluctant to put a price tag on it Tuesday. And some members hope federal help will go even further.

The federal government already sent Maryland $60 million in emergency aid and repurposed an existing $8 million federal grant to aid economic recovery.

A massive container ship, the Dali, lost propulsion and veered into one of the bridge’s main supports two weeks ago. Six constructi­on workers tasked with filling potholes were on the bridge when it collapsed about 1:30 a.m.

So far, the bodies of three victims — Alejandro Hernandez Fuentes, 35; Dorlian Ronial Castillo Cabrera, 26; and Maynor Suazo Sandoval, 38 — have been recovered from the Patapsco River, authoritie­s said. Three others are still missing, and federal and state leaders reiterated Tuesday that finding the bodies is the top priority.

The federal government, through the Army Corps of Engineers and Coast Guard, is paying for the recovery of the workers and to remove the jumbled steel and concrete superstruc­ture of the bridge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States