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Tag: bridge

  • Police: 21 homes evacuated in Eustis neighborhood after bridge washout

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    At least 21 homes have been evacuated in a Lake County neighborhood after a bridge was ruled unsafe and partially collapsed. The evacuations occurred at the Spring Ridge Estates subdivision on Creek Run Lane in Eustis on Thursday night. The neighborhood is blocked off, and the closure is being monitored by law enforcement.Residents, however, are allowed to enter the neighborhood on foot, the city’s fire chief said in a news conference on Friday afternoon.Extensive rain Eustis saw more than 19 inches of rain on Sunday night, leading to extensive flooding and road washouts. Officials said because emergency responders cannot cross the bridge, and water has been turned off at the homes is why they were evacuated. Eustis officials explained that flash flooding caused the bridge to wash out. Most residents were prepared to leave quickly after seeing parts of the bridge start to fall off.The fire chief said the repair will not be a quick fix because several utilities are impacted underneath the bridge including sewer and water. More than 50 people and six dogs were part of the evacuation. Many were put up in hotels, officials said. >> This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is released.

    At least 21 homes have been evacuated in a Lake County neighborhood after a bridge was ruled unsafe and partially collapsed.

    The evacuations occurred at the Spring Ridge Estates subdivision on Creek Run Lane in Eustis on Thursday night.

    The neighborhood is blocked off, and the closure is being monitored by law enforcement.

    Residents, however, are allowed to enter the neighborhood on foot, the city’s fire chief said in a news conference on Friday afternoon.

    Extensive rain

    Eustis saw more than 19 inches of rain on Sunday night, leading to extensive flooding and road washouts.

    Officials said because emergency responders cannot cross the bridge, and water has been turned off at the homes is why they were evacuated.

    Eustis officials explained that flash flooding caused the bridge to wash out. Most residents were prepared to leave quickly after seeing parts of the bridge start to fall off.

    The fire chief said the repair will not be a quick fix because several utilities are impacted underneath the bridge including sewer and water.

    More than 50 people and six dogs were part of the evacuation. Many were put up in hotels, officials said.

    >> This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is released.

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  • Broadway Bridge Closing Monday for Six-Month Repair Project – KXL

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    PORTLAND, Ore. — One of Portland’s key river crossings is shutting down for months. Beginning Monday, Oct. 13, the Broadway Bridge will close to all vehicle traffic as Multnomah County begins a six-month deck replacement project.

    Crews will remove the deteriorating bridge deck, built in 1913, and replace it with new steel panels and streetcar tracks designed to extend the bridge’s lifespan and improve reliability.

    The closure, scheduled through April 11, 2026, will affect drivers, TriMet riders, and streetcar service. TriMet’s Line 17 will reroute over the Steel Bridge, while Portland Streetcar passengers should expect up to 40-minute delays as routes shift to Tilikum Crossing.

    The south sidewalk will remain open to pedestrians, cyclists, and mobility device users for most of the project. County officials say the work is necessary to keep the lift span balanced and operational for river traffic.

    More about:


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    Jon Eric Smith

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  • A seemingly cursed Big Sur hiking trail finally reopens. But for how long?

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    Even in picturesque California, few landscapes are as stunning – or as fragile – as Big Sur. The constant storms and seismic activity that forged its dramatic cliffs and canyons also make its infrastructure a nightmare to maintain.

    The primary road through the region, world-famous Highway 1, which clings to cliffs high above the Pacific Ocean in postcard worthy fashion, is almost constantly closed by landslides, isolating communities and stranding weary travelers.

    Local hiking trails don’t fare much better.

    The Pfeiffer Falls Trail intersects with the Valley View Trail, a lovely loop that provides gorgeous views of the state park clear out to the Pacific.

    (Lisa Winner / Save the Redwoods League)

    So, as if they had just taken a deep breath and crossed their fingers, California State Parks officials announced this week that one of the region’s most beloved hikes, the Pfeiffer Falls Trail, will finally reopen after a towering redwood collapsed in a 2023 storm taking out its signature pedestrian bridge.

    The trail, a .75 mile stroll that cuts through Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park and ends with a stunning view of a 60-foot waterfall, is one of the prime draws for a park that attracts roughly 750,000 people each year.

    For such a short walk, the trail has a long history.

    In 2008, the 162,818-acre Basin Complex Fire devastated much of the route and surrounding forest. It took $2 million and nearly 13 years to complete a renovation project — removing aged and damaged concrete, rerouting the trail and constructing the bridge — to finally reopen the hike in June 2021.

    About 18-months later, that storm arrived and a towering redwood crashed the party.

    The Pfeiffer Falls Bridge in 2023 after a fallen tree damaged the structure

    The Pfeiffer Falls Bridge in 2023 after a giant redwood fell on part of the structure, closing the trail.

    (California State Parks)

    The tree splintered a 15-foot section of the bridge. Crews salvaged much of the original structure but replaced the damaged section with fiber-reinforced polymer in the hope of making the span stronger and more resilient to its unforgiving environment.

    “It’s unfortunate that the trail had to close so soon after our original renovations,” said Matthew Gomez, senior parks program manager for Save the Redwoods League, a non-profit that helped with the repairs. “But our close partnership with California State Parks allowed us to rebuild the bridge better than ever.”

    It is a truly spectacular hike. Enjoy it while it lasts.

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    Jack Dolan

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  • Dozens of Denver bridges are ‘deficient,’ so we took a tour

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    According to Denver’s Department of Transportation & Infrastructure, there are six bridges in the city in need of repair or full replacement.

    Beneath the new and old Monaco Street Parkway bridges over the Cherry Creek, as the old one is being phased out. July 9, 2025.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The Monaco Street bridge over Cherry Creek has been cut in half.

    One side of the bridge is under heavy construction. Workers in helmets and protective gear walk by, and the sound of welding sneaks in between car horns. The other side is filled with traffic and the occasional pedestrian jumping as a car zooms by the tiny sidewalk.

    The $12.7 million replacement project began in October to address steel fatigue, water degradation and overall aging. The Monaco Street bridge was built 60 years ago with steel girders that aren’t so easy to maintain or repair now.

    Denver’s new Monaco Street Parkway bridge over the Cherry Creek (left) and the old one that’s on its way out. July 9, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “ [Steel fatigue] is a small stress that’s repeated over and over and over again can cause cracking. When that crack propagates, it can happen very suddenly,” said Patrick Bergman, senior engineer with DOTI’s bridge group. The issue, he said, is with the  “detailing” of the bridge’s steel components — the way they are designed and connected.

    “Steel, if it’s not detailed properly or it’s a detail that was popular in the 1960s that has been improved upon since then, is difficult to retrofit. It’s difficult to do anything about it in place,” Bergman said.

    Patrick Bergman, senior engineer with Denver’s Department of Transportation and Infrastructure, stands beneath the new Monaco Street Parkway bridge over the Cherry Creek. July 9, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The project, which also includes an expanded sidewalk, is slated to wrap up next summer. 

    It’s one of the local Department of Transportation and Infrastructure’s biggest bridge replacement projects, but hardly the last one.

    In June, the department released a report that identified six bridges in need of repair or replacement. Three of them — the 6th Avenue and Lincoln Street bridges over Cherry Creek, and the Smith Road bridge over Quebec Street — will require full bridge replacements. 

    The Quebec Street over Airlawn Road bridge also needs to be removed, and the 6th and 8th avenue viaducts are slated for modifications.

    Each one was built over 50 years ago.

    The city report found about 14 percent of the city’s vehicular bridges are “structurally deficient,” a rate higher than the national average of 9 percent. Close to 80 of the 642 bridges in the city require some form of modification, monitoring or replacement.

    Discoloration on the underside of the Monaco Street Parkway bridge, over the Cherry Creek, is an indication that water has gotten into the structure. July 9, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    Discoloration on the underside of the Monaco Street Parkway bridge, over the Cherry Creek, is an indication that water has gotten into the structure. July 9, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “Structurally deficient” means that one of the bridge’s main components — deck, superstructure, substructure or culvert — was rated in poor condition. This assessment is performed by city engineers following guidelines set by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and the National Bridge Inspection Standards (NBIS).

    Bergman clarified that a “structurally deficient” rating does not mean the bridges are about to fall down or are “unsafe to operate.” Rather, it’s a call for closer monitoring and assessment to determine which bridges might need rehabilitation or replacement. Some bridges could even be “load posted,” with the city placing weight limits for vehicles on the structure.

    A number of factors can contribute to bridge degradation and poor condition: age of the bridge, exposure to natural elements like flooding and traffic patterns. There are also considerations about when the bridge was built and what materials were used at the time.

    “The term ‘structurally deficient’ was defined to encompass more than just the structural condition of a bridge, and so it is possible that you can have a bridge in good condition, but it was designed to an older code,” Bergman said. “So it wasn’t designed for the vehicles that it’s seeing nowadays.”

    Identifying these projects is just the first step. Paying for them is a different story.

    While DOTI currently receives $7 million each year from Capital Improvement Funding for bridge work, city officials say they would need another $22 million per year for bridge work. The city funded the Monaco Street bridge work with the Elevate Denver bond package, which voters approved in 2017.

    Denver’s new Monaco Street Parkway bridge over the Cherry Creek (right) and the old one that’s on its way out. July 9, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Now, the proposed Vibrant Denver bond includes nearly $170 million for four of DOTI’s priority projects — the 6th and 8th avenue viaducts and the Cherry Creek bridges. The Quebec Street bridge was included in an initial project list, but was cut out of the final proposal. 

    Replacement of the Smith Road bridge over Quebec Street was not included.

    Voters will choose whether to approve that money — and hundreds of millions for other projects — in November.

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  • Plum Island drawbridge work resumes

    Plum Island drawbridge work resumes

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    NEWBURY — Repairs to the Plum Island Turnpike drawbridge resumed Thursday, reducing the only way on or off the island to one lane – a traffic pattern that is expected to remain for roughly two months, according to town officials.

    As a result, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation will employ a temporary alternating traffic pattern on the bridge as crews complete structural steel repairs. Work is scheduled to take place from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. until mid-December but crews may work around the clock if necessary.

    In a statement, Newbury police Chief Patty Fisher called the repairs “necessary” and said she is pleased work is taking place when it will have the least possible impact on Plum Island traffic.

    “I appreciate that it’s expected to be completed before the first snowfall,” Fisher said. “It goes without saying that people traveling through the single lane should use caution and abide by the traffic signals and speed. Be mindful that pedestrian and vehicle traffic are sharing the lane.”

    While temporary traffic control signals and barriers are in place, a 24/7 signal-controlled, alternating traffic pattern will be used as work is performed beneath the bridge deck.

    Signs and police details will also be used to guide drivers through the work zone. Drivers traveling through the work zone should expect delays, reduce their speed and use caution as the eastbound/westbound traffic patterns are subject to change, according to MassDOT.

    Fisher said workers will be often stationed under the bridge.

    “Just because you can’t see them, doesn’t mean they aren’t there,” Fisher said.

    The work is being completed as part of a $7.7 million districtwide drawbridge operations and repair contract.

    In March, MassDOT noted some deterioration in the steel along with some heaving of a limited portion of the bridge deck. MassDOT worked with the U.S. Coast Guard to implement a detour to keep the bridge closed to marine traffic until the interim repairs were performed, according to a MassDOT spokesperson.

    That prompted MassDOT officials to devise a plan to shift motorists away from the center of the bridge where deterioration was discovered so that the interim repairs could be made. The temporary traffic plan was implemented April 19 right before those repairs began.

    An April 19 advisory from MassDOT stated the drawbridge would not be open to marine vessels through Aug. 5 to allow for repairs to the road surface. The speed limit on the bridge was reduced and traffic was periodically limited to one lane to allow the state to restore the bridge to full capacity. Because one lane will remain open at all times, Newbury first responders will not be stationed on the island during construction, according to Fisher.

    “We only station responders there if we anticipate the turnpike will flood or they’re opening the bridge,” the police chief said.

    Fisher encourages residents to sign up for the town’s CodeRed rapid response notification system and to follow the Newbury Police Department on Facebook for the latest project information and for important messages throughout the year. To sign up for CodeRed, visit public.coderedweb.com/CNE/en-US/943F7ED331D9.

    Dave Rogers is the editor of the Daily News of Newburyport. Email him at: drogers@newburyportnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @drogers41008.

    Dave Rogers is the editor of the Daily News of Newburyport. Email him at: drogers@newburyportnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @drogers41008. 

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    By Dave Rogers | drogers@newburyportnews.com

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  • Fall baking! SoCal temperatures are set to soar above normal. How high will they go?

    Fall baking! SoCal temperatures are set to soar above normal. How high will they go?

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    For a minute there, it felt like fall.

    But even as October kicks off, the cool weather reprieve is ending, and Southern California is going to see temperatures climb into the extreme range again, forecasters say.

    “There is some potential for record-breaking heat,” said Todd Hall, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

    Highs in some areas could soar into the triple digits.

    Temperatures this week in Southern California are expected to be about 10 degrees above normal, according to the weather service. Parts of Los Angeles County will begin to see high temperatures starting Tuesday, with Wednesday the hottest day of the week, Hall said.

    Palmdale and Lancaster are among the areas that could see records fall.

    Hall said L.A. County usually sees warm weather this time of year, but the Santa Ana winds have not yet arrived, and cloudy weather has kept the region cooler.

    Last October, the state faced a heat wave that drove temperatures across Southern California 15 degrees above normal and brought record heat to Northern California.

    Hall said that after the heat peaks on Wednesday, cooler temperatures should arrive later in the week.

    Woodland Hills is expecting a high of 105 degrees on Wednesday, and Burbank could see 97, Hall said. The weather service issued an excessive heat advisory beginning Tuesday through Wednesday evening for the San Fernando and Santa Clarita valleys, with temperatures reaching as high as 106.

    Other parts of Southern California will also face triple-digit temperatures. Ojai is expected to hit 105 on Tuesday and Wednesday, while residents in Paso Robles could see temperatures reach 108. San Luis Obispo will see temperatures as high as 100 on those days as well.

    Hall advised residents to be cognizant of the hot weather and avoid outdoor activity, or confine their activity to the early morning hours.

    There is also an elevated fire risk with the rising temperatures, Hall said. But there are no high winds in the forecast that could drive the fire risk even higher.

    Firefighters are still working on fully containing three Southern California wildfires. The Airport, Bridge and Line fires started near the beginning of September and have been burning for weeks.

    The Airport fire in Orange and Riverside counties has burned 23,526 acres and is 95% contained. Authorities have made daily progress, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. The Bridge fire in L.A. and San Bernardino counties has burned 54,878 acres and is 97% contained.

    The most active fire remaining is the Line fire in San Bernardino County, which was 83% contained but had a significant flare-up on Sunday, as the Victorville Daily Press reported. The county Sheriff’s Department issued an evacuation order Sunday afternoon for the community of Seven Oaks.

    Cal Fire said the Line fire was still burning actively in Bear Creek on Sunday and producing a lot of smoky conditions because of dried-out fuels. Relative humidity in the fire area was expected to range as low as 12%, with winds gusting to about 15 mph. Cal Fire said it had strengthened the containment line on the ridge and had at least 10 helicopters working in the area.

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    Melissa Gomez

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  • As CDOT looks to replace I-25 bridges at Speer and 23rd, community differs on interchange ramp design

    As CDOT looks to replace I-25 bridges at Speer and 23rd, community differs on interchange ramp design

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    DENVER — The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) is working to replace the bridges over Interstate 25 at Speer Boulevard and 23rd Avenue. The department is also considering changes to the interchange ramps at 23rd Ave.

    CDOT has floated three options for the 23rd Ave. interchange ramps. Alternative 1 is a braid alternative at 23rd Ave.

    At the moment, a “weave occurs when vehicles are both entering and exiting in the same lane, creating unsafe conditions,” according to CDOT. The department said the braid would “eliminate this weave by having exiting and entering traffic cross over or under each other.”

    CDOT

    23rd Ave braid alternative

    “This alternative has northbound vehicles exiting I-25 to go under 23rd Avenue to get to Speer Boulevard. Those who want to get on and off of I-25 to 23rd Avenue will exit on more traditional ramps. This removes the existing weave for drivers going north on I-25 from 23rd Avenue and those trying to get off of I-25 to Speer Boulevard. A signal would be added to the east side of the 23rd Avenue bridge to improve non-motorist safety,” according to the CDOT project website.

    Alternative 2 would “remove the existing ramps to get off and on I-25,” meaning there would no longer be access to or from I-25 at 23rd Ave.

    CDOT OPTION 2.jpg

    CDOT

    Close 23rd Avenue Interchange with I-25 Alternative

    “Closing the ramps at 23rd Avenue would eliminate the weave on I-25 between 23rd Avenue and Speer Boulevard. This allows 23rd Avenue to serve bikes and pedestrians. Visitors to businesses such as the Children’s Museum, Aquarium, and REI will need to use Speer Boulevard or other roads. Access to 17th Avenue to and from I-25 will still be available,” according to the CDOT project website.

    Alternative 3 would “replace the bridges and ramps and install a new signal on the east side of the ramps.”

    CDOT OPTION 3.jpg

    CDOT

    23rd Avenue Bridge Replacement Only Alternative

    “This alternative does not improve the short northbound I-25 weave between the 23rd Avenue on-ramp and the eastbound Speer Avenue Boulevard off-ramp. This alternative provides improved safety for non-motorized users by adding a signal on the east side of the 23rd Avenue bridge. This will improve non-motorist safety by removing the “free-flow” ramp movements. Access to and from I-25 from 23rd Avenue would remain,” according to the CDOT project website.

    Jill Locantore, executive director of Denver Streets Partnership, said she and others are pushing for Alternative 2.

    “The city has put in a lot of work to add a safe and comfortable protected bike lane on 23rd on either side of I-25, but the chain is only as strong as the weakest link,” Locantore said. “We think it’s important for them to hear from people who regularly use 23rd Avenue as a cyclist, as a pedestrian, also people who live in this area and regularly drive in this area, what they would like to see in terms of a safer street network for everybody who’s trying to travel through this space.”

    That’s where neighborhood residents and cyclists like Allen Cowgill and David Chen come into play.

    “I probably go down this three or four times a week, just going into downtown, running errands and things like that,” Cowgill said. “I think my biggest concern is that the safety won’t go far enough.”

    He and Chen believe the full closure of the ramps is the best solution.

    “We’ve had a lot of close calls coming up this bridge, especially during rush hour when drivers are especially impatient,” Chen said. “Closing those ramps would be a huge, huge deal for the West 23rd Avenue protected bike lane.”

    Cowgill and Chen frequently cycle with their children to nearby amenities, including the Children’s Museum of Denver Marsico Campus.

    In a statement, the Children’s Museum said it supports Alternatives 1 and 3.

    Full statement:

    The safety of our guests, staff and community is a top priority for us. We have been working with CDOT and stakeholders in our neighborhood on solutions to improve safe access for cyclists, pedestrians and other multimodal transportation options.

    We believe that Alternatives 1 and 3 proposed by CDOT will support these outcomes.

    Michael Yankovich, president and CEO of the Children’s Museum, told Denver7 that while he understands cyclist and pedestrian patron concerns over safety near the interchange ramps, he doesn’t believe a closure is the right call.

    “Some of the concerns we have with some of the options, particularly Alternative 2, is one of the things is by removal of the ramps, we’re concerned about first responders being able to access not just our neighborhood but also the Children’s Museum,” Yankovich said. “The second one is we’re worried about, you know, if those ramps are removed, does that really push hundreds of thousands of cars, buses, delivery vehicles, into the neighboring community?”

    “The other one that we’ve been thinking deeply about are the Children’s Museum serves over half a million community guests and friends every single year. If those ramps are removed, our concern is the additional distance that they will need to come to get to the Children’s Museum,” Yankovich continued.

    Chen hopes more residents and cyclists speak up and submit input to CDOT. He also hopes museum officials change their minds.

    “I think that’s short-sighted because they’re not actually taking into consideration the patrons that use the bike lane to get to the museum, which we do,” he said. “I think the museum can be convinced. I think their hearts are in the right place. They want safety for the kids that come to their museum, but they need to kind of get out of their car..”

    The project is still in its study phase. Comments can be submitted through this link.

    In a statement, CDOT said it is “assessing the needs and opportunities to include additional improvements to the interchange system and how to support broader goals for the I-25 mainline and those of the surrounding community.”

    Full statement:

    CDOT is in the study phase of the I-25: Speer & 23rd Bridge & Interchange Project. A key focus of this project is replacing the bridges at Speer Boulevard and 23rd Avenue over I-25 in Denver. The bridges do not provide adequate clearance over I-25 and the girders have been damaged by truck hits. CDOT is also assessing the needs and opportunities to include additional improvements to the interchange system and how to support broader goals for the I-25 mainline and those of the surrounding community. The goal of the project is to improve safety and operations for motorists on I-25, and improve safety and connectivity for pedestrians and cyclists.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos

    At Denver7, we’re committed to making a difference in our community. We’re standing up for what’s right by listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the featured videos in the playlist above.

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    Veronica Acosta

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  • Trio bound man with tape and forced him to jump off bridge into traffic, OK cops say

    Trio bound man with tape and forced him to jump off bridge into traffic, OK cops say

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    Three people are accused of kidnapping a man and forcing him to jump off a bridge into traffic, Oklahoma officials say.

    Three people are accused of kidnapping a man and forcing him to jump off a bridge into traffic, Oklahoma officials say.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    Three people are accused of kidnapping a man, tying him up and forcing him to jump off a bridge into traffic, Oklahoma officials say.

    Deputies responded to the scene in Okmulgee County after a caller reported seeing “someone jumping into traffic” along Highway 266, the sheriff’s office said in a July 26 Facebook post. The incident happened near the Deep Fork River bridge, which is close to the town of Grayson — a roughly 100-mile drive east from Oklahoma City.

    Deputies said the man was “badly injured” and needed “immediate medical attention.” They also noticed he had been bound with duct tape, suggesting the decision to jump wasn’t one made willingly, according to the sheriff’s office.

    “Further investigation revealed the victim in this case had been abducted and forced off the bridge after being bound with duct tape,” the sheriff’s office said.

    After speaking with witnesses, deputies arrested three people, Sean Lunney, Brianna Nohmer and Jaysen Lawson, according to officials. Deputies also found a gun that they believe was used in the kidnapping.

    Nohmer, 18, was booked into the Okmulgee County Detention Center on charges of assault with intent to kill and kidnapping, jail records show. Lawson, 21, is charged with attempted murder, kidnapping and assault and battery with a deadly weapon. The oldest, 31-year-old Lunney, is also charged with kidnapping, plus aggravated assault and battery and pointing a firearm, records show.

    Investigators didn’t say what may have motivated the abduction.

    “This case is an ongoing investigation and no other information will be released at this time,” the sheriff’s office said.

    Mitchell Willetts is a real-time news reporter covering the central U.S. for McClatchy. He is a University of Oklahoma graduate and outdoors enthusiast living in Texas.

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    Mitchell Willetts

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  • The DeBoer Park bridge won’t be fixed until 2026

    The DeBoer Park bridge won’t be fixed until 2026

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    Someone expressed their discontent with the DeBoer Park bridge, which is closed and will probably not reopen until 2026. July 9, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Everyone likes to hear a story about a bridge.

    Unless you’re Ben Corum, and the bridge in question will be closed for two more years.

    “It’s been a bummer,” he told us.

    Corum said he first noticed that DeBoer Park’s footbridge over Harvard Gulch was closed to the public about a year ago.

    The DeBoer Park bridge is closed and will remain so until, probably, 2026. July 9, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Others have noticed too, with one section of the broken structure tagged by some local artist.

    “THIS BRIDGE IS A SCAM!” it reads. “Fix meeeeee”

    Corum tried to figure out why, but said he hit a dead-end when he tried tweeting at city departments.

    So he wrote us, asking for an explanation. (You can do that, too, you know!)

    Here’s the deal with the bridge

    Denver Parks and Rec spokesperson Stephanie Figueroa said officials discovered it was unsafe.

    “During routine inspection last year, the pedestrian bridge in DeBoer Park that goes over Harvard Gulch was determined to be structurally unsafe and needed to be closed for safety precautions. The City has installed ‘Bridge Closed’ signs at the closures.  Detour routes for bicycles and pedestrians have also been posted to connect the trail on either side of the closed bridge,” she wrote us.

    The DeBoer Park bridge is closed and will remain so until, probably, 2026. July 9, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    As for the timeline, she added:

    “[Denver Parks and Rec] is aiming for a Spring/Summer 2026 opening. Construction can only be done during low flow season which is October-April. With design starting now, we’re aiming for construction to start October 2025.”

    She said they won’t know what the replacement will cost until they have a plan. They also won’t need much of a public input process, since they’re not really changing anything.

    A path at DeBoer Park. July 9, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “The floodplain regulations make the structure selection very restrictive. The only eligible structure type is a low-flow bridge,” she wrote. “This is essentially replacing a structure with a structure.”

    City Council member Paul Kashmann’s office posted a notice recently, saying they “understand the inconvenience” and “thank you for following the alternative routes and for your patience.”

    Related: Do you want these bridges?

    For now, more waiting

    Corum said he understands.

    Still, he lives on the park’s south side and has been missing what was once an easy crossing over the gulch.

    “It definitely matters to us,” he told us. “We feel it every time we go out to walk the dog.”

    Olive, the pewter-colored Labrador mutt, will have to lead her owners around the park’s edges for a good long while.

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  • “The Can Opener Bridge” puts Glenville bridge safety to music

    “The Can Opener Bridge” puts Glenville bridge safety to music

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    GLENVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) -Simon Rieffel lives in Glenville, just a few minutes from what he sings about in his song, “The Can Opener Bridge”. The town is well known on social media for its frequent bridge hits. The humorous song is one more way to encourage drivers to pay attention, even if they miss the many signs and lights that lead to the Glenridge Road Bridge.

    “The Can Opener Bridge” was written after a year of Glenridge Road Bridge strikes. Simon Rieffel says the song is a public service announcement to not only make his local community aware, but truckers across the country.

    “No matter what they do to prevent trucks from hitting it, they still hit the bridge. So, maybe if truckers get this song stuck in their head, they’ll avoid the bridge,” explained Rieffel. “Even if it prevents one person from hitting the bridge, then my goal is accomplished.”

    Rieffel has been performing his song at open mics and most recently at the Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School talent show. After hearing the song, Town Supervisor Chris Koetzle said the Glenridge Road Bridge is being described in a positive way; accurately depicting the work the Department of Transportation has put into its safety.

    GPS now also notes Glenridge Road Bridge is a low railroad bridge. Koetzle stated the last strike was around last Labor Day. “Never have gone that long without a strike here. We then had a couple of hits over on Maple in that time frame, but not here.”

    NEWS10 reported on the Maple Avenue Bridge in December when a tractor-trailer carrying compressed fuel hit it and exploded, with smoke and flames that could be seen for miles. Repairs of the bridge finished in a week on Friday, April 26.

    “They had to replace some I-beams that were damaged. Nothing that was structural to the bridge itself,” said Koetzle.

    Some local residents even put up their own warning signs after the accident… That’s how Crazy Carl was born. “It started off with my husband putting the skeleton out as something big that would catch everybody’s attention. Maybe it would do something for the community,” explained Kassondra Paull.

    Crazy Carl has a Facebook group where members discuss how to prevent bridge strikes from happening. He took a break during construction and went on vacation to Florida.

    One day, Rieffel hopes the Town can take more drastic measures for both bridges. “The only real permanent solution would be to raise the bridge, obviously. But, that’s not super realistic.”

    Simon Rieffel’s original song, “The Can Opener Bridge”, can be found on his YouTube page by clicking here.

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    Anthony Krolikowski

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  • Section of Maple Avenue in Glenville closed for bridge repairs

    Section of Maple Avenue in Glenville closed for bridge repairs

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    GLENVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) — Maple Avenue in Glenville is closed as repairs to the bridge are taking place. In December 2023, the rail trail bridge was hit by a tanker truck and then caught on fire.

    Town officials said the repairs should take about a week to be completed. Drivers should follow the signed detours that take them down Route 50 and Freemans Bridge Road.

    Officials said this will not be the final phase of work being done to the bridge, and more phases will need to be completed in the future.

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    Courtney Ward

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  • ‘If it was 1 minute later, I probably wouldn’t be here’: Man among last people to cross Key Bridge

    ‘If it was 1 minute later, I probably wouldn’t be here’: Man among last people to cross Key Bridge

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    JOINS US LIVE FROM DUNDALK. AND TORI, YOU SPOKE WITH THAT MAN WHO SAYS THAT HE’S STILL IN SHOCK, UNDERSTANDABLY RIGHT. KHIREE YOU CAN’T EVEN IMAGINE LARRY DESANTIS TELLING ME THAT HE’S STILL TRYING TO PROCESS EVERYTHING, KNOWING THAT HE MAY HAVE BEEN ONE OF THE LAST PEOPLE TO CROSS THE KEY BRIDGE AS HE WAS COMING TO WORK IN DUNDALK EARLY TUESDAY MORNING. IF I WAS ONE MINUTE LATER, I PROBABLY WOULDN’T BE HERE NOW. STILL PROCESSING LARRY DESANTIS SAYS HE LEFT FROM HIS JOB IN PASADENA AROUND 1:18 A.M., ROUGHLY TEN MINUTES BEFORE THE KEY BRIDGE COLLAPSED TUESDAY MORNING TO HEAD TO A SECOND JOB AT HERMAN’S BAKERY IN DUNDALK. WHEN I WAS GETTING ON, THERE WAS A TRACTOR TRAILER, A TRACTOR TRAILER, BUT IT ONLY HAD A TRACTOR, NOT THE TRAILER PART OF IT. I GOT OUT IN FRONT OF HIM OR WHATEVER, AND WE BOTH GOT ON THE BRIDGE. LARRY SAYS HE WAS GOING AROUND 45MPH BECAUSE OF THE CONSTRUCTION. HE SAYS HE SAW CONSTRUCTION WORKERS ONCE HE GOT OVER THE TOP PART OF THE BRIDGE. THERE WAS A POLICE CAR. WHEN I WENT BY RIGHT BEFORE THE TOLL BRIDGE. FROM WHAT I UNDERSTAND, THEY KNEW SOMETHING WAS GOING TO HAPPEN. SO HE WAS WAITING TO GET THE WORD TO STOP THE TRAFFIC. SO I GUESS I WAS LIKE THE LAST ONE THAT WENT THROUGH. AND ONCE HE GOT OFF THE BRIDGE, HE DIDN’T SEE OR HEAR THE COLLAPSE. THE ONLY REASON HE KNEW IS BECAUSE ONE OF HIS COWORKERS CALLED HIM. WHILE I’M SITTING AT THE LIGHT, THE WOMAN FROM HERE CALLED ME AND SAID, WHERE ARE YOU AT? BECAUSE SHE KNEW I WAS, YOU KNOW, SHE SAID, DID YOU GO HOME OR YOU? I SAID, NO, I JUST WENT OVER THE BRIDGE. SHE SAID, WELL, IT JUST COLLAPSED. HE SAYS HE’S STILL IN SHOCK, ESPECIALLY KNOWING SOME OF THE CONSTRUCTION CREW HE PASSED ON THE BRIDGE DIED IN THE COLLAPSE. I KNOW, I KNOW, YOU KNOW, AND THEY STILL HAVEN’T FOUND SOME OF THEM. IT’S SAD. IT REALLY IS. AND I MEAN, THEY’RE DOING THEIR JOB AND NOW COUNTING HIS BLESSINGS, SAYING HE’S GRATEFUL TO BE ALIVE. THE GUY I WORK WITH, YOU KNOW, WE LEAVE. WE LEFT AT THE SAME TIME. IF WE HAD STOPPED AND TALKED FOR A MINUTE, WHICH WE DO A LOT OF TIMES, BUT WE BOTH HAD OTHER JOBS TO GO TO, SO WE JUST LEFT. JUST CRAZY TIMING. DEFINITELY ON LARRY’S SIDE THERE. HE TELLS ME HE’S BEEN GETTING A LOT OF CALLS ALL WEEK BECAUSE EVERYBODY KNEW THAT HE USED THAT BRIDGE ALMOST DAILY TO GET TO AND FROM HIS FIRST AND SECOND JOB LIVE TONIGHT FROM DUNDALK. I’

    ‘If it was 1 minute later, I probably wouldn’t be here’: Man among last people to cross Key Bridge

    A Maryland man said he crossed the Francis Scott Key Bridge early Tuesday morning, heading to his second job just moments before the bridge collapsed. Larry DeSantis, who works his job in Pasadena before heading to his overnight shift at Herman’s Bakery in Dundalk, told sister station 11 News that the speed limit on the bridge was reduced to 45 mph due to construction. “I left (the Green Valley Market Place) parking lot at 1:18 a.m. to go over to Herman’s, my normal thing,” DeSantis told sister station 11 News. “When I was getting on (the Key Bridge) there was a tractor-trailer, but it only had a tractor, not the trailer part of it. I got in front of it and we both got on the bridge. Once I got over the top of the bridge, there was a lot of construction going on, so I (was) cautious.”DeSantis said he noticed construction workers just as he was crossing the middle part of the bridge. “It was quite a bit of construction going on because even off the bridge they were doing quite a bit also,” he said.DeSantis believes he and the tractor-trailer following behind, may have been some of the last people to cross the Key Bridge.”There was a police car when I went by, right before I went on the toll bridge, but what I understand is they knew something was going to happen, so (police) were waiting to get word to stop traffic,” he said. “So, I guess I was, like, the last one to get through. Once I got down Peninsula Highway, I saw one speed by, and he went back the other way.”DeSantis said he did not hear the collapse and didn’t even realize it had happened until he got a call from his co-worker checking in on him.”While I’m sitting at the light, the woman here called me and said, ‘Where you at?’ because she knew. She said, ‘Did you go home?’ And, I said, ‘No, I just went over the bridge,’ and she said, ‘Well, it just collapsed.’”DeSantis said he saw the video of the collapse online and could see “where my truck was going over just as it was about to hit the bridge.” He told 11 News he’s still in shock and processing what had happened Tuesday morning. “At any given time, you never know. It’s really scary, it is. It’s sad. I mean (the construction workers were just) doing their job,” he said.

    A Maryland man said he crossed the Francis Scott Key Bridge early Tuesday morning, heading to his second job just moments before the bridge collapsed.

    Larry DeSantis, who works his job in Pasadena before heading to his overnight shift at Herman’s Bakery in Dundalk, told sister station 11 News that the speed limit on the bridge was reduced to 45 mph due to construction.

    “I left (the Green Valley Market Place) parking lot at 1:18 a.m. to go over to Herman’s, my normal thing,” DeSantis told sister station 11 News. “When I was getting on (the Key Bridge) there was a tractor-trailer, but it only had a tractor, not the trailer part of it. I got in front of it and we both got on the bridge. Once I got over the top of the bridge, there was a lot of construction going on, so I (was) cautious.”

    DeSantis said he noticed construction workers just as he was crossing the middle part of the bridge.

    “It was quite a bit of construction going on because even off the bridge they were doing quite a bit also,” he said.

    DeSantis believes he and the tractor-trailer following behind, may have been some of the last people to cross the Key Bridge.

    “There was a police car when I went by, right before I went on the toll bridge, but what I understand is they knew something was going to happen, so (police) were waiting to get word to stop traffic,” he said. “So, I guess I was, like, the last one to get through. Once I got down Peninsula Highway, I saw one speed by, and he went back the other way.”

    DeSantis said he did not hear the collapse and didn’t even realize it had happened until he got a call from his co-worker checking in on him.

    “While I’m sitting at the light, the woman here called me and said, ‘Where you at?’ because she knew. She said, ‘Did you go home?’ And, I said, ‘No, I just went over the bridge,’ and she said, ‘Well, it just collapsed.’”

    DeSantis said he saw the video of the collapse online and could see “where my truck was going over just as it was about to hit the bridge.”

    He told 11 News he’s still in shock and processing what had happened Tuesday morning.

    “At any given time, you never know. It’s really scary, it is. It’s sad. I mean (the construction workers were just) doing their job,” he said.

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  • Baltimore bridge collapses after cargo ship hits support column; 6 presumed dead, Coast Guard says

    Baltimore bridge collapses after cargo ship hits support column; 6 presumed dead, Coast Guard says

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    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, and the search for them was suspended until Wednesday morning.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.As the vessel neared the bridge, puffs of black smoke could be seen as the lights flickered on and off. It struck one of the bridge’s supports, causing the structure to collapse like a toy, and a section of the span came to rest on the bow. 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.”In the evening, Col. Roland L. Butler Jr., superintendent for Maryland State Police, announced that the search and rescue mission was transitioning to one of search and recovery. He also said the search was being put on pause and divers would return to the site at 6 a.m. Wednesday, when challenging overnight conditions were expected to improve. No bodies have been recovered, Butler said.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 missing people were part of a construction crew filling potholes on the bridge, said Paul Wiedefeld, the state’s transportation secretary.Video below: Brother of bridge victim speaks after prayer vigilGuatemala’s consulate in Maryland said in a statement that two of the missing were citizens of the Central American nation. It did not provide their names but said consular officials were in contact with authorities and assisting the families.Honduras’ Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Antonio García told The Associated Press that a Honduran citizen, Maynor Yassir Suazo Sandoval, was missing. He said he had been in contact with Suazo’s family.And the Washington Consulate of Mexico said via the social media platform X that citizens of that nation were also among the missing. It did not say how many.A senior executive at the company that employed the workers also said, in the afternoon, that the workers were presumed dead given the water’s depth and how much time had passed. Aerial footage below shows Baltimore bridge collapse aftermathJeffrey Pritzker, executive vice president of Brawner Builders, said the crew was working in the middle of the bridge when it came down.“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.”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.“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.”Father Ako Walker, a Roman Catholic priest at Sacred Heart of Jesus, said he spent time with the families of the missing workers as they waited for news of their loved ones.“You can see the pain etched on their faces,” Walker said.Maryland Gov. Wes Moore: ‘Please pray for these families’ of missing workersRescuers 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. “It looked like something out of an action movie,” Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said, calling it “an unthinkable tragedy.”Video below shows moment Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsesA police dispatcher put out a call just before the collapse saying a ship had lost its steering and asked officers to stop all traffic on the bridge, 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, there were 35 major bridge collapses worldwide due to ship or barge collision, according to the World Association for Waterborne Transport Infrastructure.Tuesday’s collapse is sure to create a logistical nightmare along the East Coast for months, if not years, shutting down ship traffic at the Port of Baltimore, a major hub. The loss of the bridge will also snarl cargo and commuter traffic.Video below: The history of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge“Losing this bridge will devastate the entire area, as well as the entire East Coast,” Maryland state Sen. Johnny Ray Salling said.Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, speaking at a news conference near the site, said it was too soon to estimate how long it will take to clear the channel, which is about 50 feet deep.“I do not know of a bridge that has been constructed to withstand a direct impact from a vessel of this size,” he said.Video below: Some of Sec. Buttigieg’s comments during a press conference TuesdayThe Dali, which was headed from Baltimore to Colombo, Sri Lanka and flying under a Singapore flag, is about 985 feet (300 meters) long and about 157 feet (48 meters) wide, according to according to data from Marine Traffic.Synergy Marine Group — which manages the ship, called the Dali — confirmed the vessel hit a pillar of the bridge at about 1:30 a.m. while in control of one or more pilots, who are local specialists who help guide vessels safely into and out of ports. The ship is owned by Grace Ocean Private Ltd.Video below: When were the bridge, the Dali last inspected?Synergy said all crew members and the two pilots on board were accounted for, and there were no reports of any injuries.The ship was moving at 8 knots, roughly 9 mph, the governor said.Inspectors found a problem with the Dali’s machinery in June, but a more recent examination did not identify any deficiencies, according to the shipping information system Equasis.Danish shipping giant Maersk said it had chartered the vessel.Jagged remnants of the bridge could be seen jutting up from the water in the aftermath of the collapse. The on-ramp ended abruptly where the span once began.Donald Heinbuch, a retired chief with Baltimore’s fire department, said he was startled awake by a deep rumbling that shook his house for several seconds and “felt like an earthquake.” He drove to the river’s edge and couldn’t believe what he saw.“The ship was there, and the bridge was in the water, like it was blown up,” he said.Video below: President Biden on Baltimore bridge collapse The bridge spans the Patapsco River at the entrance to a busy harbor, which leads to the Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean. Opened in 1977, the bridge is named for the writer of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”Wiedefeld said all vessel traffic into and out of the port would be suspended until further notice, though the facility was still open to trucks.President Joe Biden said he planned to travel to Baltimore and intends for the federal government to pick up the entire cost of rebuilding.“This is going to take some time,” Biden said. Last year, the Port of Baltimore handled a record 52.3 million tons of foreign cargo worth $80 billion, according to the state.Video below: Maryland Secretary of Transportation responds to Key Bridge collapseThe head of a supply chain management company said Americans should expect shortages of goods from the effect of the collapse on ocean container shipping and East Coast trucking.“It’s not just the port of Baltimore that’s going to be impacted,” said Ryan Petersen, CEO of Flexport.The collapse, though, is not likely to hurt worldwide trade because Baltimore is not a major port for container vessels, but its facilities are more important when it comes to goods such as farm equipment and autos, said Judah Levine, head of research for global freight booking platform Freightos.___Associated Press journalists around the world contributed to this report, including Sarah Brumfield, Rebecca Santana, Jake Offenhartz, Joshua Goodman, Ben Finley, Claudia Lauer, Brian Witte, Juliet Linderman, David McHugh, John Seewer, Michael Kunzelman and Mike Catalini.

    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, and the search for them was suspended until Wednesday morning.

    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.

    As the vessel neared the bridge, puffs of black smoke could be seen as the lights flickered on and off. It struck one of the bridge’s supports, causing the structure to collapse like a toy, and a section of the span came to rest on the bow.

    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.”

    In the evening, Col. Roland L. Butler Jr., superintendent for Maryland State Police, announced that the search and rescue mission was transitioning to one of search and recovery. He also said the search was being put on pause and divers would return to the site at 6 a.m. Wednesday, when challenging overnight conditions were expected to improve. No bodies have been recovered, Butler said.

    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 missing people were part of a construction crew filling potholes on the bridge, said Paul Wiedefeld, the state’s transportation secretary.

    Video below: Brother of bridge victim speaks after prayer vigil

    Guatemala’s consulate in Maryland said in a statement that two of the missing were citizens of the Central American nation. It did not provide their names but said consular officials were in contact with authorities and assisting the families.

    Honduras’ Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Antonio García told The Associated Press that a Honduran citizen, Maynor Yassir Suazo Sandoval, was missing. He said he had been in contact with Suazo’s family.

    And the Washington Consulate of Mexico said via the social media platform X that citizens of that nation were also among the missing. It did not say how many.

    A senior executive at the company that employed the workers also said, in the afternoon, that the workers were presumed dead given the water’s depth and how much time had passed.

    Aerial footage below shows Baltimore bridge collapse aftermath

    Jeffrey Pritzker, executive vice president of Brawner Builders, said the crew was working in the middle of the bridge when it came down.

    “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.”

    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.

    “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.”

    Father Ako Walker, a Roman Catholic priest at Sacred Heart of Jesus, said he spent time with the families of the missing workers as they waited for news of their loved ones.

    “You can see the pain etched on their faces,” Walker said.

    Maryland Gov. Wes Moore: ‘Please pray for these families’ of missing workers

    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.

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

    Video below shows moment Francis Scott Key Bridge collapses

    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 on the bridge, 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, there were 35 major bridge collapses worldwide due to ship or barge collision, according to the World Association for Waterborne Transport Infrastructure.

    Tuesday’s collapse is sure to create a logistical nightmare along the East Coast for months, if not years, shutting down ship traffic at the Port of Baltimore, a major hub. The loss of the bridge will also snarl cargo and commuter traffic.

    Video below: The history of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge

    “Losing this bridge will devastate the entire area, as well as the entire East Coast,” Maryland state Sen. Johnny Ray Salling said.

    Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, speaking at a news conference near the site, said it was too soon to estimate how long it will take to clear the channel, which is about 50 feet deep.

    “I do not know of a bridge that has been constructed to withstand a direct impact from a vessel of this size,” he said.

    Video below: Some of Sec. Buttigieg’s comments during a press conference Tuesday

    The Dali, which was headed from Baltimore to Colombo, Sri Lanka and flying under a Singapore flag, is about 985 feet (300 meters) long and about 157 feet (48 meters) wide, according to according to data from Marine Traffic.

    Synergy Marine Group — which manages the ship, called the Dali — confirmed the vessel hit a pillar of the bridge at about 1:30 a.m. while in control of one or more pilots, who are local specialists who help guide vessels safely into and out of ports. The ship is owned by Grace Ocean Private Ltd.

    Video below: When were the bridge, the Dali last inspected?

    Synergy said all crew members and the two pilots on board were accounted for, and there were no reports of any injuries.

    The ship was moving at 8 knots, roughly 9 mph, the governor said.

    Inspectors found a problem with the Dali’s machinery in June, but a more recent examination did not identify any deficiencies, according to the shipping information system Equasis.

    Danish shipping giant Maersk said it had chartered the vessel.

    Jagged remnants of the bridge could be seen jutting up from the water in the aftermath of the collapse. The on-ramp ended abruptly where the span once began.

    Donald Heinbuch, a retired chief with Baltimore’s fire department, said he was startled awake by a deep rumbling that shook his house for several seconds and “felt like an earthquake.” He drove to the river’s edge and couldn’t believe what he saw.

    “The ship was there, and the bridge was in the water, like it was blown up,” he said.

    Video below: President Biden on Baltimore bridge collapse

    The bridge spans the Patapsco River at the entrance to a busy harbor, which leads to the Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean. Opened in 1977, the bridge is named for the writer of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

    Wiedefeld said all vessel traffic into and out of the port would be suspended until further notice, though the facility was still open to trucks.

    President Joe Biden said he planned to travel to Baltimore and intends for the federal government to pick up the entire cost of rebuilding.

    “This is going to take some time,” Biden said.

    Last year, the Port of Baltimore handled a record 52.3 million tons of foreign cargo worth $80 billion, according to the state.

    Video below: Maryland Secretary of Transportation responds to Key Bridge collapse

    The head of a supply chain management company said Americans should expect shortages of goods from the effect of the collapse on ocean container shipping and East Coast trucking.

    “It’s not just the port of Baltimore that’s going to be impacted,” said Ryan Petersen, CEO of Flexport.

    The collapse, though, is not likely to hurt worldwide trade because Baltimore is not a major port for container vessels, but its facilities are more important when it comes to goods such as farm equipment and autos, said Judah Levine, head of research for global freight booking platform Freightos.

    ___

    Associated Press journalists around the world contributed to this report, including Sarah Brumfield, Rebecca Santana, Jake Offenhartz, Joshua Goodman, Ben Finley, Claudia Lauer, Brian Witte, Juliet Linderman, David McHugh, John Seewer, Michael Kunzelman and Mike Catalini.

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  • Video shows moment when Baltimore’s Key Bridge collapses

    Video shows moment when Baltimore’s Key Bridge collapses

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    Video shows moment when Baltimore’s Key Bridge collapses

    A cargo ship collided with the Francis Scott Key Bridge early Tuesday, causing it to snap in a few places and plunge into the river below, sending people into the frigid water.Watch video of the bridge collapse in the player above.Two people were pulled from the Patapsco River, Baltimore City Fire Department Chief James Wallace said. One person wasn’t injured and the other was taken to a local trauma center in “very serious condition.”Rescuers are searching for multiple people in the water.Aerial footage below shows Baltimore bridge collapse aftermath

    A cargo ship collided with the Francis Scott Key Bridge early Tuesday, causing it to snap in a few places and plunge into the river below, sending people into the frigid water.

    Watch video of the bridge collapse in the player above.

    Two people were pulled from the Patapsco River, Baltimore City Fire Department Chief James Wallace said. One person wasn’t injured and the other was taken to a local trauma center in “very serious condition.”

    Rescuers are searching for multiple people in the water.

    Aerial footage below shows Baltimore bridge collapse aftermath

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  • 25 Facts About Manhattan Bridge That You Didn’t Know 2024: Engineering, History, and Impact –

    25 Facts About Manhattan Bridge That You Didn’t Know 2024: Engineering, History, and Impact –

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    Spanning the East River, the Manhattan Bridge stands as a vital artery in the urban landscape of New York City, connecting the bustling neighborhoods of Manhattan and Brooklyn.

    Its status as one of the key suspension bridges in the city is underscored by the continuous flow of commuters, whether they be in cars, on subway trains, or utilizing pedestrian walkways and bikeways for their daily travels. 

    With its majestic presence and significant role in the city’s infrastructure, the Manhattan Bridge not only serves a practical purpose but also emerges as an iconic symbol within the rich tapestry of New York City’s history.

    As a piece of engineering prowess, the bridge’s design and functionality continue to support the city’s relentless pace, firmly establishing it as an essential structure within the energetic metropolis.

    Key Takeaway

    • The Manhattan Bridge connects Manhattan and Brooklyn, embodying NYC’s engineering and historical depth.
    • Repainted blue to honor Dutch heritage and represent Manhattan.
    • Political ambitions influenced its design, highlighting politics’ role in urban architecture.
    • A structural flaw causing sway was addressed with significant renovations for safety.
    • Reflects the challenges of urban growth and infrastructure demands.
    • An iconic symbol of NYC’s blend of history and modernity.

    1. Overview

    Manhattan Bridge facts

    The Manhattan Bridge is a renowned suspension bridge spanning the East River that links the notable boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn in New York City. Notably, it figures as one of the trio of major suspension bridges constructed across the East River, accompanying the iconic Brooklyn and Williamsburg Bridges. When beholding the Manhattan Bridge, one’s gaze is also met with the impressive backdrop of the Manhattan skyline, featuring landmark spires like those of the Empire State and Chrysler Buildings.

    2. Location of Manhattan Bridge

    Engineering feats Manhattan BridgeEngineering feats Manhattan Bridge

    The Manhattan Bridge provides a pivotal connection, linking Downtown Manhattan to Downtown Brooklyn. It spans the gap across two bustling areas, securing passage between Canal Street in Manhattan and the Flatbush Avenue Extension in Brooklyn according to NYC Gov.

    3. Construction Timeline

    It was the last of the 3 suspension bridges to be built across the East River. The nearby Brooklyn Bridge was built first and completed in 1883, followed by the Williamsburg Bridge in 1903.

    Construction of the Manhattan Bridge started in 1901 and the bridge officially opened for traffic on December 31, 1909.

    4. It Was Supposed to Have a Different Name

    Historical significance Manhattan BridgeHistorical significance Manhattan Bridge

    • Intended Name: Initially deemed “Bridge Number 3”
    • Reason: It was the third of its kind over the East River
    • Change Occurred: Renamed to “Manhattan Bridge” in 1902
    • Decision by: The overseeing construction board

    Knowing it was almost called “Bridge Number 3” adds a layer of trivia that fascinates me. The decision to name it the Manhattan Bridge feels more personal, more connected to its identity and the borough it serves.

    5. The New York Times Didn’t Approve of the Moniker

    Manhattan Bridge construction detailsManhattan Bridge construction details

    The New York Times had a distinct perspective on naming the bridge. They felt the chosen name fell short in significance, suggesting instead a name connected to the bridge’s location, offering “Wallabout Bridge” as an option – alluding to Wallabout Bay to give it a sense of historical and geographical context. They argued that since every bridge spans the East River, the title “Manhattan Bridge” lacked distinctiveness.

    6. Engineer Behind the Manhattan Bridge

    • Nationality: Immigrant from Latvia
    • Name: Leon Solomon Moisseiff
    • Education: Graduated with a civil engineering degree from Columbia University in 1895
    • Achievement: Regarded as a top authority on suspension bridges in the early 20th century
    • Notable Works: Manhattan Bridge showcased his expertise
    • Later Career: Career tarnished by the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapse in 1940
    • Death: Suffered a heart attack three years post-Tacoma disaster according to Dokumen.pub

    7. Financial Shortfalls

    Impact of Manhattan BridgeImpact of Manhattan Bridge

    Construction efforts for the Manhattan Bridge began in 1901, focusing first on the tower foundations with active progress by 1903. Fast forward to 1908, the initial allocation of $10 million proved to be insufficient as it covered less than half of the necessary expenses. Eventually, they utilized a total sum of $31 million to complete the bridge according to Study.com.

    • Foundation Start: 1901
    • Active Construction on Caissons: 1903
    • Initial Budget: $10 million
    • Final Cost: $31 million

    Budget Overrun:

    • Original budget fell short
    • Additional $22 million required

    8. Pioneering Journey Across the Bridge

    Structural engineering Manhattan BridgeStructural engineering Manhattan Bridge

    100 of the most notable citizens of Brooklyn were allowed to be the first people to ever cross Manhattan Bridge. This happened on December 5, 1909 as per Hotels.com.

    This event marked the “unofficial opening” of Manhattan Bridge, which was followed on December 31, 1909, with the official opening by outgoing Mayor George B. McClellan Jr.

    Imagining the first group of Brooklyn’s notable citizens crossing in 1909 gives me a sense of connection to those early moments of anticipation and pride. It must have been a remarkable sight, signaling a new era of connectivity.

    9. Stabilizing the Manhattan Bridge

    Manhattan Bridge infrastructureManhattan Bridge infrastructure

    • 1907: Decision taken to add subway tracks to the Manhattan Bridge.
    • March 1908: Start of construction for railway tracks.
    • 1917: Completion of the track installation and the onset of stability issues due to the subway trains’ weight causing the bridge to tilt laterally.
    • 1956: Completion of structural modifications that corrected the tilting issue.

    The incorporation of the subway tracks significantly challenged the bridge’s equilibrium, necessitating important modifications for consistent stability across the span.

    10. Significant Renovation Expenditure

    Manhattan Bridge architectural detailsManhattan Bridge architectural details

    • Duration: Spanned over 12 years.
    • Completed: In 2004.
    • Expenses: Exceeded $800 million USD.
    • Necessity: The bridge was no longer accommodating heavy vehicles on its lower deck due to structural concerns.
    • Objective: Undertake extensive refurbishments to restore the bridge’s integrity.

    11. It Has a Structural Flaw in the Design

    Unique features Manhattan BridgeUnique features Manhattan Bridge

    When visiting the bridge, you might have felt a noticeable sway, a testament to an engineering oversight during its construction. This flaw stems from additional expansions that weren’t part of the original design, including seven external lanes and four subway tracks.

    As trains travel in parallel, the bridge experiences a significant dip, oscillating four feet towards the south and then four feet to the north, resulting in a total deflection of eight feet.

    12. The Original Color was Grey

    Manhattan Bridge design elementsManhattan Bridge design elements

    12 Quick Facts About Manhattan Bridge

    Manhattan Bridge construction challengesManhattan Bridge construction challenges

    1. Main Span: 1,470 feet (448 meters)
    2. Suspension Cables Length: 3,224 feet (983 meters)
    3. Total Bridge Length: 6,855 feet (2,089 meters)
    4. Width: Approximately 120 feet (37 meters)
    5. Tower Height: 336 feet (102 meters)
    6. Under-bridge Clearance: 135 feet (41.1 meters)
    7. Relative Size: Surpassed by Williamsburg Bridge, larger than Brooklyn Bridge
    8. Structural Layout:
      • Double-deck
      • Seven vehicular lanes
      • Four railway tracks
      • Dedicated bicycle lane
      • Pedestrian walkways
    9. Influential Design: Served as a model for subsequent suspension bridges, including Golden Gate Bridge
    10. Daily Vehicle Traffic: Roughly 90,000 vehicles
    11. Entrance Landmark: Adorned with a Greek Revival triumphal arch and colonnade from 1915, part of the early 20th century “City Beautiful movement”
    12. Designation:
      • NYC Landmark Status given to arch and colonnade on November 25, 1975
      • Recognized as a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark

    FAQ

    What Design Classifies the Manhattan Bridge?

    The Manhattan Bridge is a suspension bridge that spans the East River of New York City. It features a double-decked roadway, four subway tracks, a pedestrian walkway, and a bike path.

    The Historical Importance of the Manhattan Bridge?

    Opening in 1909, the Manhattan Bridge has played a crucial role in the development and connectivity of Manhattan and Brooklyn. It enabled the flourishing of trade and commutes between these boroughs, becoming a landmark of engineering and design during the early 20th century.

    Features Compared to the Brooklyn Bridge?

    • Design: Unlike its neighboring Brooklyn Bridge, the Manhattan Bridge employs a more conventional suspension design with modern touches.
    • Traffic Flow: It holds a double-deck motorway with reversible lanes to better accommodate traffic flow.

    Measurements of the Manhattan Bridge?

    The bridge stretches a total length of 6,855 feet or approximately 2,089 meters, with the suspension span alone measuring 1,480 feet, or 451 meters.

    Final Words

    Exploring the Manhattan Bridge reveals a fascinating blend of history, engineering, and cultural significance. From its initial grey hue to the vibrant blue it dons today, each aspect of the bridge tells a story of New York City’s evolution.

    Political influences, financial challenges, and structural innovations have all played a part in shaping this iconic structure.

    Despite facing design flaws and undergoing extensive renovations, the Manhattan Bridge stands as a testament to the city’s resilience and ingenuity.

    It’s more than just a bridge; it’s a symbol of connection, progress, and enduring strength in the face of change.

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    Srdjan Ilic

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  • As Disneyland reels from its third death in a year, what can be done to prevent suicides?

    As Disneyland reels from its third death in a year, what can be done to prevent suicides?

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    In San Francisco, a safety net is under construction at the Golden Gate Bridge to prevent future tragedies.

    In New York City, college officials opted for metal screens at a library where students had died. And in Missouri, fencing and steel mesh went up at a Columbia parking garage after a public outcry.

    Across the nation, the installation of fencing, nets or other physical barriers at tall structures has become a recognized strategy for preventing suicides. As the Disneyland Resort reels from the third such death in a year, many advocates say that such safety barriers have been shown to save lives.

    Suicide prevention and crisis counseling resources

    If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, seek help from a professional and call 9-8-8. The United States’ first nationwide three-digit mental health crisis hotline 988 will connect callers with trained mental health counselors. Text “HOME” to 741741 in the U.S. and Canada to reach the Crisis Text Line.

    Experts say that such barriers or obstructions can help buy time for someone to intervene or for a person’s suicidal impulse to dissipate. That can be critical because such feelings can soon evaporate: Most people who survive a suicide attempt do not go on to die of suicide later, studies have found.

    Since its most recent death, Disneyland has not publicly announced the installation of new fencing or other barriers, and has not answered questions from The Times about whether it was considering such a move.

    “In an effort to deter this type of tragedy, we have long had multilayered security protocols in place at our parking structures, which we have substantially enhanced over time,” a Disneyland Resort spokesperson said in an email. “However, as with all of our security and safety measures, we don’t discuss specifics so as not to compromise our efforts.”

    Last week, Anaheim police were called to a structure at the Disneyland Resort and found the body of a 24-year-old man. His death is being investigated as a suicide.

    People died in similar incidents in February 2023 and December 2022 at the same kind of structure at the Disneyland Resort, according to the Anaheim Police Department. Three others died in the same way in the area in 2010, 2012 and 2016, bringing the reported total to six since 2010.

    Installing physical barriers such as fences can help prevent deaths by stopping people from acting on a fleeting impulse, researchers say. In New Zealand, for instance, researchers found that suicides spiked after safety barriers were removed from a bridge, then stopped after barriers were reinstalled.

    When someone is suicidal, “their mental state is often in a state of crisis. And so they have less flexibility in their thinking,” said Jill Harkavy-Friedman, senior vice president of research at the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

    As a result, she said, if a physical barrier stops them from acting, “they’re not likely to shift gears and think of something else … They don’t say, ‘I can’t do that; let me do this instead.’”

    If there is a risk of suicide at a site, “there’s really no reason not to put a barrier in and every reason to put a barrier in,” Harkavy-Friedman said.

    Neither an Anaheim city spokesperson nor other city officials answered questions from The Times about whether the city had suggested that Disneyland install barriers following last week’s incident.

    “Our thoughts go out to a family grieving the loss of a loved one and to all who were impacted,” Anaheim Mayor Ashleigh Aitken said in a statement. “We want to respect them and also an ongoing review of the incident.”

    “We encourage everyone to continue raising awareness of the tragedy of suicide and the importance of mental health,” she added.

    Efforts to construct barriers typically focus on tall structures where deaths have occurred. Parking garages are a particular concern for suicide prevention, because they tend to have open sides and less monitoring than other tall structures, according to the International Parking & Mobility Institute.

    Bridges are also a common target of such interventions. In Pasadena, officials have erected mesh fencing at the Colorado Street Bridge and have unveiled several designs for permanent barriers to protect the public. In San Francisco, a 3.5-mile-long network of stainless steel mesh is nearly complete at the Golden Gate Bridge, where roughly 2,000 people have died by suicide since the iconic structure’s opening in 1937.

    The $217-million safety netting, which extends 20 feet out from the bridge, was designed to blend in with the span’s architecture. Between 2011 and 2020, there were an average of nearly 34 deaths by suicide at the bridge every year. In 2022, when the first part of the safety barrier was installed, there were 22 such deaths, bridge spokesperson Paolo Cosulich-Schwartz said.

    And fatal incidents have continued to decrease as the barrier netting has grown. As of Oct. 31, there had been 13 deaths by suicide at the Golden Gate Bridge this year, Cosulich-Schwartz said.

    “Restricting easy access to lethal means reduces suicides,” said Paul Muller, president of the Bridge Rail Foundation, a nonprofit that has advocated for a safety barrier at the Golden Gate since 2006.

    In a 2015 analysis of 22 peer-reviewed journal articles on suicide prevention methods, researchers found that measures that physically blocked people from accessing potentially lethal sites such as bridges or train tracks led, on average, to a 91% drop in deaths by suicide at those sites.

    “Barriers work,” said study author Jane Pirkis, director of the Center for Mental Health in the Melbourne School of Population and Global Health at the University of Melbourne.

    However, some scholars have argued that more studies are needed on their effectiveness. In 2020, researchers in the United Kingdom who reviewed existing studies said they had “methodological limitations.” More research is needed on the “potential for suicide method substitution and displacement,” they wrote.

    Veronica Kelley, chief of mental health and recovery services for the Orange County Health Care Agency, said that “while there is evidence that restricting access to means of suicide is an effective approach for preventing suicides, the evidence for preventing suicide by jumping is not well-established.”

    “Calling attention to suicide prevention is the most effective way to reduce suicides,” Kelley said.

    The Orange County agency is “actively participating in a national campaign with the goal of achieving zero suicides,” she said, and “we can all do our part by calling attention to the fact that suicide is preventable, treatment works, and recovery happens.”

    Harkavy-Friedman, who characterized the research on barriers as “quite strong,” said “there’s no reason to have an either/or — we need both. We need public education and we need barriers.”

    At some sites where barriers are impractical, advocates have also pushed for signage. Harkavy-Friedman said there is not a lot of research on the effectiveness of such signs in preventing suicide.

    Cincinnati-based editor Laura Trujillo learned after her mother died by suicide at Grand Canyon National Park in 2012 that dozens of people had lost their lives in the park the same way. Still, the thought of a barrier along the 277-mile canyon struck her as logistically improbable.

    Then in 2018, while visiting her eldest son at the Ohio State University, she saw a flier posted at a site where a student had died. It said: “Remember: You Matter,” alongside the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline phone number.

    The simple language struck her. If a person in crisis couldn’t be physically blocked from a dangerous location, she thought, perhaps they could still be deterred from harming themselves.

    Trujillo began writing letters to the National Park Service to encourage suicide prevention signs at the canyon. Although park officials never confirmed to her that they were taking any specific action, in 2021 she was sent a photograph of a sign with the Lifeline number inside a free park shuttle bus.

    When she saw the photo, Trujillo burst into tears. It was the same shuttle service her mother had taken on her last day.

    “I think of my mom sitting there. If that sign was up there, I have no idea if it could have interrupted her train of thought,” she said. But “sometimes, we all need that reminder.”

    If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, seek help from a professional and call 988. The first nationwide three-digit mental health crisis hotline will connect callers with trained mental health counselors. Or text “HOME” to 741741 in the U.S. and Canada to reach the Crisis Text Line.

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    Emily Alpert Reyes, Corinne Purtill

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  • So Much for Biden the Bridge President

    So Much for Biden the Bridge President

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    In retrospect, Joe Biden probably wishes he’d never uttered these words in public. Maybe it was just youthful exuberance: He was, after all, only 77 at the time.

    “Look, I view myself as a bridge, not as anything else,” Biden said at a rally in Detroit, one of his last pre-lockdown campaign appearances of the 2020 Democratic primaries. It was early March, and he was flanked by Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer and a pair of his former rivals, Kamala Harris and Cory Booker—all members of what Biden would call “an entire generation of leaders” and “the future of this country.”

    Few paid much attention to the future president’s remarks at the time. They appeared consistent with a prevailing assumption about his campaign: that Biden was running as an emergency-stopgap option. And once the emergency—Donald Trump—was dealt with, the old pro was expected to make way for that “entire generation.”

    “I view myself as a transition candidate,” Biden said during an online fundraiser shortly after he gave his bridge speech, according to The New York Times.

    Biden never explicitly said he would serve just one term, but multiple outlets reported that he and his advisers discussed making such a pledge. His allies reinforced the notion, even as Biden himself denied it. “It is virtually inconceivable that he will run for reelection in 2024, when he would be the first octogenarian president,” Politico reported in December 2019, citing four unnamed sources who spoke regularly with Biden.

    As it would turn out, the “bridge” declaration proved to be one of Biden’s most memorable utterances of the past four years. The line has been quoted a great deal, especially lately—or hurled at him, usually by someone pointing out that this bridge seems to be stretching on much longer than anyone expected.

    Americans are plainly impatient for Biden to retire already, a point hammered home by the preponderance of poll respondents—including Democrats and independents—who say Biden should not be seeking a second term that would begin after his 82nd birthday. Elected Democrats, operatives, and donors keep saying the same in private, while an array of op-ed and cable kibitzers have exhaled a steady barrage on this subject. (The Atlantic has also explored this topic.)

    But put aside the usual questions about Biden’s age and fitness to endure another campaign or term. What’s often overlooked in these discussions is the depth of frustration behind this public skittishness. It goes beyond the hand-wringing about possible health catastrophes that could befall the president at the worst possible time (i.e., next October). The displeasure over Biden’s determination to keep going suggests that voters might perceive him as acting selfishly, or that they feel misled by a candidate who ran for president on the pretense of a short-term fix, only to remain ensconced as a long-term proposition.

    When Biden ran in 2020, several friends and aides reportedly advised him to come out and say he would serve just one term, because that was understood to be his intent anyway. But he was loath to announce himself as a lame duck earlier than he had to. This was consistent with a Biden decree, dating at least to his days as vice president, when people asked whether he would consider running to succeed Obama. “Nobody in D.C. gains influence by declaring they are playing out the string,” Politico’s Glenn Thrush wrote in a profile of Biden, headlined “Joe Biden in Winter.” That was in 2014.

    In politics, Biden would tell people around him, you are either on your way up or on your way down—and there is no reason for a leader of any age to ever deny interest in moving up unless they want to declare themselves irrelevant to the future.

    Even so, the 2020 election was less about the future than it was about surviving a ghastly present. Biden came back to do a specific job. “I think it’s really, really important that Donald Trump not be re-elected,” Biden told me during the 2020 campaign, when I asked him why on Earth he was putting himself through another race at his age. “Don’t compare me to the Almighty. Compare me to the alternative,” he was always saying.

    Biden and his aides didn’t shy from the label of “transition candidate” and typically were noncommittal on the prospect of a second term—right up until Biden transitioned himself into the White House and became much more definitive. “The answer is yes,” Biden said at a news conference in March 2021, the first time he was asked as president whether he would run again in 2024. “My plan is to run for reelection,” he continued. “That’s my expectation.”

    In fact, pollsters and focus-group facilitators report that many of their subjects still haven’t fully accepted that Biden decided to run again. “It seems pretty implicit in the way voters talk that they didn’t expect him to be a two-term president,” Sarah Longwell, the Bulwark publisher who has interviewed panels across the political spectrum, told me.

    “To insiders, a Trump-Biden rematch is a foregone conclusion,” Ben Tulchin, a Democratic pollster who worked for Bernie Sanders in 2016 and 2020, told me. But in his own focus groups—mainly of young and Latino voters—Tulchin said voters are not fully buying that, whether out of denial or distaste. “They don’t like being forced to make a choice that they don’t want to make yet,” he said.

    Biden has enjoyed perhaps the most triumphant last hurrah in American political history. Also, the longest. Start the clock in August 2008, when Barack Obama first selected him as his running mate. “I want you to view this as the capstone of your career,” Obama told Biden when he offered him the job, according to the eventual vice president. “And not the tombstone,” Biden joked in reply.

    Fifteen years later, he might suffer from a general intolerance that voters reserve for high-level government officials who grow old in office. The various freeze-ups and infirmities of Senators Mitch McConnell (81) and Dianne Feinstein (90), respectively, have drawn more sneers than sympathy. The late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has come in for a great deal of posthumous scorn, even among her staunchest liberal admirers, for holding on long enough for her health to deteriorate and a Republican president (Trump) to appoint her successor.

    By appearances, Biden is in much better health than the examples cited above (especially Ginsburg, who died three years ago). But that does nothing to change the actuarial tables, or Biden’s unpopularity, or Vice President Kamala Harris’s. Nor does it stop anyone from trotting out Biden’s bridge quote and its corollaries from four years ago. The reminders carry a strong suggestion that the terms of the original “deal” have shifted, and that this is much more of Biden than anyone bargained for.

    “He has been a solid ‘transitional’ president, but transition requires transit, or a second act,” the journalist Joe Klein observed last week in a Substack column. National Review’s Jim Geraghty recently compared Biden to a relay runner who decides to “keep the baton to himself and attempt another circuit around the track, even though he’s slowing down.”

    Fairness demands a few qualifiers and caveats here. Again, Biden never said he would serve just one term. The president has every right to run again, and any serious Democrat is free to primary him. There are solid arguments that Biden still has the best chance of any Democrat to beat Trump, given the power of his incumbency, the possible fractiousness of an open primary, and the uncertainty of whoever an alternative Democratic nominee would be.

    But perhaps Biden’s best reason for running again in 2024, or defense against suggestions of a bait and switch, is this: He probably did not expect Trump to still be here. Nor did many of the rest of us. There is no precedent for a defeated one-term president to so easily resume his status as de facto standard-bearer of his party. After the January 6 insurrection, Republicans sounded more than ready to move on. This bipartisan exhale was made possible by Biden—God love ya, Joey! Beating Trump should have been the ultimate “capstone” of his career. Yet three years later, Trump is still here. And so is Biden.

    “Politicians who know Biden well say that if he were convinced that Trump were truly vanquished, he would feel he had accomplished his political mission,” the Washington Post columnist David Ignatius wrote in one of the most widely discussed recent entries to the “Please go away, Joe” cannon. In other words, meet the new justification, same as the last one. It’s probably as strong a rationale as any for Biden to attempt this.

    Except that it’s getting old, and so’s the bridge.

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    Mark Leibovich

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  • Whitmer abduction plot co-leader sentenced to 16 years in federal prison

    Whitmer abduction plot co-leader sentenced to 16 years in federal prison

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    GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — The co-leader of a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was sentenced Wednesday to 16 years in prison for conspiring to abduct the Democrat and blow up a bridge to ease an escape.

    Adam Fox returned to federal court Tuesday, four months after he and Barry Croft Jr. were convicted of conspiracy charges at a second trial in Grand Rapids, Mich.

    They were accused of being at the helm of a wild plot to whip up anti-government extremists just before the 2020 presidential election. Their arrest, as well as the capture of 12 others, was a stunning coda to a tumultuous year of racial strife and political turmoil in the U.S.

    The government had pushed for a life sentence, saying Croft offered bomb-making skills and ideology while Fox was the “driving force urging their recruits to take up arms, kidnap the governor and kill those who stood in their way.”

    But Judge Robert J. Jonker said that while Fox’s sentence was needed as a punishment and deterrent to future similar acts, the government’s request for life in prison is “not necessary to achieve those purposes.”

    See: ‘I love state government’: Michigan’s re-elected Democratic governor throws cold water on talk of national prospects

    “It’s too much. Something less than life gets the job done in this case,” Jonker said, later adding that 16 years in prison “is still in my mind a very long time.”

    In addition to the 16-year prison sentence, Fox will have to serve five years of supervised release.

    Fox and Croft were convicted at a second trial in August, months after a different jury in Grand Rapids couldn’t reach a verdict but acquitted two other men. Croft, a trucker from Bear, Del., will be sentenced Wednesday.

    Fox and Croft in 2020 met with like-minded provocateurs at a summit in Ohio, trained with weapons in Michigan and Wisconsin and took a ride to “put eyes” on Whitmer’s vacation home with night-vision goggles, according to evidence.

    “People need to stop with the misplaced anger and place the anger where it should go, and that’s against our tyrannical … government,” Fox declared that spring, boiling over COVID-19 restrictions and perceived threats to gun ownership.

    Whitmer wasn’t physically harmed. The FBI, which was secretly embedded in the group, broke things up by fall.

    “They had no real plan for what to do with the governor if they actually seized her. Paradoxically, this made them more dangerous, not less,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Nils Kessler said in a court filing ahead of the hearing.

    In 2020, Fox, 39, was living in the basement of a Grand Rapids–area vacuum shop, the site of clandestine meetings with members of a paramilitary group and an undercover FBI agent. His lawyer said he was depressed, anxious and smoking marijuana daily.

    Christopher Gibbons said a life sentence would be extreme.

    Fox was regularly exposed to “inflammatory rhetoric” by FBI informants, especially Army veteran Dan Chappel, who “manipulated not only Fox’s sense of ‘patriotism’ but also his need for friendship, acceptance and male approval,” Gibbons said in a court filing.

    He said prosecutors had exaggerated Fox’s capabilities, saying he was poor and lacked the capability to obtain a bomb and carry out the plan.

    Two men who pleaded guilty to conspiracy and testified against Fox and Croft received substantial breaks: Ty Garbin already is free after a 2½-year prison term, while Kaleb Franks was given a four-year sentence.

    Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses the media after signing a state budget bill in July.


    AP/Carlos Osorio/File

    In state court, three men recently were given lengthy sentences for assisting Fox earlier in the summer of 2020. Five more are awaiting trial in Antrim County, where Whitmer’s vacation home is located.

    When the plot was extinguished, Whitmer, a Democrat, blamed then-President Donald Trump, saying he had given “comfort to those who spread fear and hatred and division.” In August, 19 months after leaving office, Trump said the kidnapping plan was a “fake deal.”

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  • HAZON Passes Major Bridge Inspection Milestone

    HAZON Passes Major Bridge Inspection Milestone

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    Press Release



    updated: Aug 22, 2017

    HAZON Solutions (“HAZON”), the national leader in drone inspection services, announced today that the company has recently surpassed the inspection of more than 100,000 linear feet of railway bridges.  Since early 2016, Norfolk Southern has commissioned HAZON to conduct the most comprehensive drone-based inspections in the industry.

    “We’re very proud to announce this remarkable milestone,” said CEO and co-founder David A. Culler, Jr. CAPT USN (ret). “We are absolutely the industry leader for the inspection of critical infrastructure and Norfolk Southern is leading the rail industry with the safe and practical integration of unmanned systems into their operations.”

    We’re not just getting exterior shots, we’re flying underneath and inside the voids of bridges to make sure critical load bearing areas are covered from every possible angle.

    Sean Cushing, Co-Founder and COO

    In just 18 months, HAZON has conducted over 64 complete bridge inspections across the eastern United States. HAZON’s inspections include complete coverage of the entire bridge using high definition (HD) still frame, video and thermal imaging cameras. HAZON inspection teams fly within 15 feet of the rail bridges to capture the highest quality pictures possible. Additionally, HAZON inspection teams utilize proprietary techniques to fly under and inside bridge spans, collecting imagery from angles previously unavailable.

    “When we say comprehensive, we truly mean it,” said COO and co-founder Sean Cushing, CDR USN (ret). “We’re not just getting exterior shots, we’re flying underneath and inside the voids of bridges to make sure critical load bearing areas are covered from every possible angle. We also capture shots of every single bottom lateral and gusset plate; best of all, we don’t consume any track time. We collect actionable information and trains keep moving.”

    HAZON has also made a name for itself inspecting power transmission lines in the energy sector and launched the drone fleet management software known as the HAZON DMS. HAZON has a third vertical in providing training and consulting services to large enterprises helping them to build organic drone programs.

    “This milestone is great for HAZON, but also great for the entire drone industry,” said Culler. “Norfolk Southern has proven that UAS technology is a safe and effective tool for critical infrastructure inspections. The experience and expertise that HAZON has gained on the UAS inspection front have been invaluable; it has allowed us to move beyond proof-of-concept and into the transition period of integrating drones into the daily workflow. It’s a very exciting time for the entire drone ecosystem and the customers we serve.”

    About HAZON Solutions
    Based in Virginia Beach, HAZON Solutions is the leading U.S. developer of small unmanned systems operations, capability development, training, safety and testing programs. The mission of HAZON Solutions is to conduct, support, develop and validate small unmanned systems operations. Our goal is to provide unmatched quality, safety and value to our customers.

    HAZON has deep roots in naval carrier aviation and intelligence systems. The company’s leadership team has more than 100 years of cumulative command and operations experience in the most challenging and hostile aerial environments in the world. Its members share a common background of flying fighter jets from aircraft carriers. HAZON CEO David Culler, Jr., spent 26 years flying for the United States Navy, capping off his career as the Commanding Officer of Norfolk Naval Station, the world’s largest naval base. For more information visit www.hazonsolutions.com.

    ###

    Media Contact:
    Ed Hine
    Vice President – Marketing and BD
    ed@hazonsolutions.com
    757-962-9000 o

    Source: HAZON Solutions, LLC

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