ReportWire

Tag: Infrastructure

  • Lawmakers approve plan to rope in federal funding

    Lawmakers approve plan to rope in federal funding

    BOSTON — Massachusetts wants to rope in billions of dollars in federal infrastructure funds to fix crumbling roads and bridges and transition to clean energy, but the state needs to pony up some of its own money to get it.

    That will happen under a proposal, approved by the state Legislature on Thursday, that calls for leveraging state funds to go after billions of dollars in competitive federal grants that will be made available through President Joe Biden’s jobs and infrastructure law and other programs.

    The plan, filed last year by Gov. Maura Healey, will divert interest from the state’s reserve funds to create a “pay-as-you-go” capital fund to pursue a much larger pool of federal funds for infrastructure projects.

    Healey officials say the so-called rainy day fund, which is approaching $9 billion, generates an estimated $250 million in interest a year.

    “Remaining competitive, equitable, and affordable as a commonwealth means thinking creatively about our state’s finances and seizing opportunities,” Senate President Karen Spilka, D-Ashland, said in a prepared statement.

    “We have been fiscally prudent in building up the largest rainy day fund in Massachusetts’ history, which allows us to leverage our robust interest earnings to compete for federal dollars that will help us strengthen our infrastructure,” she said.

    If Healey signs the bill, as expected, it will require the state Comptroller to transfer interest from state reserves to the Commonwealth Federal Matching and Debt Reduction Fund when amounts exceed 10% of budgeted revenues of the previous fiscal year, provided that the balance of the fund hasn’t decreased in the previous year.

    Backers of the plan said it will pump up to $800 million into the capital fund over the next three years.

    Healey’s federal infrastructure czar, Quentin Palfrey, has pointed to more than $17.5 billion available from federal grant programs which he says provides an “unprecedented opportunity” to tap into federal funds to address some of the state’s most pressing infrastructure needs.

    The money would come from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, a $1.2-trillion spending bill signed by Biden in 2021. Federal infrastructure money is also available through the CHIPS and Science Act and the Inflation Reduction Act.

    Overall, Massachusetts stands to get $9.3 billion from the infrastructure law over the next five years, including at least $4.2 billion for roadway upgrades and $1.1 billion for bridge repairs, according to the Biden administration.

    At least $1.1 billion will be directed to improving water and sewer infrastructure and address outfalls that spew sewage into the Merrimack River, while at least $100 million will provide broadband internet coverage to rural communities.

    The state will also get $2.5 billion for upgrades on its public transit system. Other funding would be devoted to airport upgrades and incentives for drivers to switch to electric vehicles.

    It’s also slated to get $147 million to help expand high-speed broadband internet service to underserved regions of the state.

    But the state is also chasing after more than $17.5 billion in competitive grants made available through the infrastructure law for local governments to fix potholes and crumbling bridges, upgrade water and sewer systems and other needs.

    Healey officials say they will need to ante up at least $3 billion in state matching funds to be competitive in that process. The state has already earmarked $2 billion, they say.

    Money from the federal laws is already flowing into the state, including $108 million from the U.S. Department of Transportation to improve rail service in western and central Massachusetts.

    The state is also getting $1 billion in federal funding from the infrastructure law to help cover the cost of replacing two Cape Cod bridges.

    Republicans have expressed concerns about the Democratic governor controlling billions of dollars in federal funding and have sought to put guardrails on use of the money.

    Data provided by the Biden administration shows only about 25% of Massachusetts’ 5,229 bridges are in good condition. About 9% are considered structurally deficient.

    Besides structurally deficient bridges, many of the state’s roadways are in major disrepair, according to the White House.

    The Biden administration’s Infrastructure Report Card gave the state a grade of C-, saying there are at least 1,194 miles of highway in poor condition.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Teachers union blasts use of ‘millionaires tax’ money

    Teachers union blasts use of ‘millionaires tax’ money

    BOSTON — Backers of the state’s “millionaires tax” are accusing the Healey administration of defying the will of voters by tapping into proceeds from the tax to close out the previous fiscal year budget.

    A supplemental budget filed by Gov. Maura Healey aimed at closing out the previous fiscal year budget calls for spending $225 million in “millionaires tax” proceeds to cover costs for grants to child care programs, universal free school meals, transportation service expansions and other items.

    But the Massachusetts Teachers Association, a chief proponent of the tax, is blasting the proposal to use the money this way, saying the funding needs should have been covered by other revenue sources.

    “Fair Share funds must be used to build upon the existing spending for public education and transportation, and not become dollars lost on balance sheets,” MTA President Max Page said in a statement. “Gov. Healey’s supplemental budget proposal defies the will of the voters and the spirit of Fair Share, which is raising money to grow our public education and transportation systems.”

    Voters approved the so-called Fair Share proposal in the 2022 elections, setting a new 4% surtax on people with incomes above $1 million a year. The state collected more than $2.1 billion from the tax in the previous year, exceeding projections by budget writers.

    A spokesman for the state’s Executive Office of Administration and Finance defended the governor’s proposal, saying the spending is in line with the intent of the voter-approved tax and the state budget.

    “Our administration has consistently demonstrated our commitment to fulfilling the will of the voters who approved the Fair Share surtax to support our education and transportation systems,” the agency said in a statement. “The supplemental budget filed by the Governor maintains that commitment by proposing to use a limited amount of surplus surtax for education and transportation programs like universal school meals and child care provider grants.”

    The approach, the agency said, “aligns with how surtax revenue was budgeted in Fiscal Year 2025 and is necessary to close Fiscal Year 2024 in balance.”

    Healey’s $714 million supplemental spending plan, which requires legislative approval, seeks to close funding gaps for public health, substance use treatment and education, and fund collective bargaining agreements with labor unions.

    It also calls for overhauling how Massachusetts approves renewable energy infrastructure projects, which has also drawn criticism from lawmakers who view it as an end-run around a stalled clean energy bill.

    The issue of how billions of dollars in proceeds from the tax will be spent by the state government was a key issue in the debate over the proposal.

    A chief criticism was claims by tax proponents that the money will be devoted exclusively to transportation and education spending were misleading.

    A 2022 report by Tufts University’s Center for State Policy Analysis ahead of the tax’s approval by voters warned that while the plan clearly stated the money must be devoted to education and transportation, not all the surtax revenue is likely to be spent in those areas.

    “The problem is fungibility, or the ease with which lawmakers can shift money between programs,” the report’s authors wrote. “There is nothing illegal or untoward about this approach; it’s a common part of legislative horse-trading.”

    The report estimates that for every dollar raised by the surtax, spending on the stated earmarks is likely to increase by 30 cents to 70 cents, with the remainder being “diverted to other areas of the budget,” they wrote.

    It also noted that revenue from the tax would be “highly volatile” and is likely to rise or fall sharply, depending on the economic conditions. The number of people paying the tax will increase gradually over time, the report noted.

    Supporters say taxing the rich means more money to improve neglected public schools, expand child care options, and fix potholed roads and crumbling bridges.

    Opponents argue the tax is hurting businesses and driving away corporate investment and job creators, while putting a drag on the state’s economy as it recovers from residual impacts of the pandemic.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • What Cancún’s Tourists Don’t See Is a Sprawling Concrete Jungle

    What Cancún’s Tourists Don’t See Is a Sprawling Concrete Jungle

    This story originally appeared on WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.

    The wide mowed lawns and leafy trees, the sports fields shining under their illuminated lights, the bouncy castles in the children’s play areas—especially the bouncy castles—are what Celia Pérez Godínez envies. These are the trappings of the wealthy neighborhood she travels to every day as a domestic worker in Cancún. Pérez envies the rich.

    She tells me this sitting on a rotten wooden bench one August afternoon, her 7-year-old son getting his scooter stuck on the broken path here many miles away in the north of the city, in a tiny park. Full of garbage and wild vegetation, it’s a short distance from where Pérez lives, close to the city outskirts. As we talk, a homeless person in the background shouts and laughs as if at a joke only he understands.

    Pérez is a 33-year-old single mother from San Marcos, Guatemala. She migrated in 2013 to Cancún, Mexico’s over-promoted and hugely popular tourist destination. She rarely has enough time and money to go to the beach and cannot find green areas or decent, safe public spaces for her son to play, having to make do with the few parks, like this, that are available. This is not the life she expected. “You hear that Cancún is wonderful, but when you get here … it’s a disappointment.”

    At 54 years old, Cancún is the youngest city in Mexico. It was designed from scratch in the 1970s as a new holiday destination in the country. In this respect, it’s been a wild success. But as an urban project, it is a failure. Designed for 200,000 people, the population of its urban sprawl now exceeds 1 million. Before, much of this area was jungle; today there are hundreds of hotels. Accelerated real-estate development has bitten into the surrounding vegetation year after year.

    This growth has been an environmental nightmare but also a social one, giving vastly unequal benefits to the city’s richer and poorer inhabitants. According to recent research by Christine McCoy, an academic at the University of the Caribbean, most people in Cancún live without the minimum green areas or public spaces needed for proper recreation, leisure, rest, or socializing. This is especially true in those regions where the most vulnerable live.

    Click play to see Cancún’s urban development from 1984 to 2022.

    This inequality has evolved despite Cancún’s rapid expansion consuming huge amounts of green space. Between 2001 and 2021, the surrounding region lost at least 30,000 hectares of jungle, according to data from Mexico’s National Forestry Commission. On the land ripped from the jungle there are now residential and hotel projects. And according to data seen by WIRED, plenty more developents are on the way. At the federal level, since 2018 the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources has received 40 requests for further land use change in the area. If approved, 650 more hectares of jungle will disappear.

    Data obtained through freedom of information shows what urban development projects have been processed over this period, these ranging from 2,247 tiny, popular housing units on the one hand to a 20-story, 429-room all-inclusive luxury hotel. Crucially, none of these include applications for public parks or green areas to be developed or improved, in a city that is already bursting at the seams, having exceeded its tourist carrying capacity for more than a decade.

    Ricardo Hernández

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  • That’s hot: Needles dethrones Phoenix as hottest U.S. city in July

    That’s hot: Needles dethrones Phoenix as hottest U.S. city in July

    A town of 5,200 just inside the California border along Route 66 now boasts a scorching new record — the hottest monthly average temperature in the country.

    Needles averaged 103.2 degrees in July, surpassing Phoenix‘s highest average temperature last July of 102.7 degrees, according to the Arizona State Climate Office. In an X post, the department ceded the unfortunate title to Needles.

    The post also referenced two other cities, Palm Springs and Blythe, and welcomed them to the club of cities with average temperatures of at least three digits for an entire month.

    “Welcome?” the post said.

    Jan Jernigan, the mayor of Needles, was not surprised by her town’s achievement, saying: “We probably did [beat the record], quite easily.”

    The heat is a part of the town’s culture. When the City Council hosts meetings, it offers guests a basket of Red Hots candy with a sign that reads, “Needles is Red Hot,” Jernigan said.

    The heat is ingrained in Needles’ culture. City officials offer Red Hots candy at public meetings, with a sign reading “Needles is Red Hot.”

    (Courtey of Jan Jernigan)

    Needles has learned to hold city events early in the morning to avoid the worst of the heat, Jernigan said. A food distribution event this morning started around 5 a.m. and lasted only until 8 a.m., she said, before temperatures became oppressive.

    The town, also known for references in the “Peanuts” comics as the home of Snoopy’s brother Spike, still draws tourists and residents alike to its three beaches on the Colorado River where they can try to beat the summer heat, said City Manager Patrick Martinez. The city has spent $8.4 million in grants to improve infrastructure, including updating parks, he said.

    “You’ve [got to] be waist-deep in the Colorado River” to stay cool in Needles, he said.

    In late June, the region’s intense heat was partly to blame for an unusual brush fire that broke out near Needles, burning 70 acres and destroying one structure. It crossed into Arizona and burned 143 acres there. Martinez said the infrastructure upgrades included beach cleanups that will help reduce the risk of future wildfires, especially during a wildfire-prone summer. This year’s hot weather has contributed to fires burning 30 times as many acres statewide as last year.

    To fight the heat, the town operates a senior center that provides water and a cool place for people to gather. It is equipped with a generator and can be opened during an emergency if power outages put residents in danger of overheating, Martinez said.

    Jernigan said the most recent improvements to Needles’ infrastructure aren’t the end of the story. “We still have a long way to go,” she said.

    Sandra McDonald

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  • Blue Earth County officials weigh future of Rapidan Dam after devastating flooding led to partial failure, compromised nearby bridge

    Blue Earth County officials weigh future of Rapidan Dam after devastating flooding led to partial failure, compromised nearby bridge

    MANKATO, Minn. — Should it stay or should it go?

    Blue Earth County officials are discussing the future of the Rapidan Dam after devastating flooding last month led to its partial failure and impacted a nearby bridge, which is closed indefinitely due to safety concerns. That may mean removing the 114-year-old structure, which once powered electricity in the area, altogether. 

    Ryan Thilges, public works director, said the county could choose to remove the dam, leave it in place as is, repair it or replace it. The latter two options would be challenging because repairing the dam could reignite the same problems — it was determined to be in disrepair before the recent flooding occurred — and the Department of Natural Resources is unlikely to grant the permit to replace it, he explained. 

    The bridge will need to be replaced and not repaired, too, he said, because the fixes to the current one would “really exceed what would be reasonable to put into a 40-year-old bridge.”

    But both the bridge and dam’s futures are linked. 

    “The decisions on the dam are going to be highly impactful to the decisions on the bridge and vice versa,” he told the county board during a meeting Tuesday. 

    The panel heard Thilges’ report but did not take any action during the work session. Board chair Kevin Paap, whose district includes the dam, told WCCO he’s heard from residents concerned about the bridge’s closure, like farmers who rely on it. He hopes to make a decision quickly. 

    “What I’ve heard is people need a bridge there. And we need that bridge restored and I probably will lean into doing something to get the best bridge built we can for the community,” Paap said Wednesday in an interview. If the county chooses to remove the dam, a new bridge could be built in its place.

    Roads leading to the County Road 9 bridge by the dam are closed off and fences barricade it. Thilges said it is “very dangerous” and applauded the sheriff’s office for issuing tickets for trespassers to the area. During the flooding, rapid erosion from the roaring waters caused a home to collapse into the river.

    It is not clear when the bridge will reopen and Paap said FEMA still needs to do more work assessing the cost of the damage, though at this point Thilges told the board it appears the federal disaster agency will pay for restoring it to pre-existing conditions.

    The board will receive more details and discuss funding options for repairs at its next meeting on Aug. 13.

    Caroline Cummings

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  • Saboteurs Cut Internet Cables in Latest Disruption During Paris Olympics

    Saboteurs Cut Internet Cables in Latest Disruption During Paris Olympics

    Long-distance internet cables in France have been cut in an act of sabotage, causing disruption to internet services across the country. This is the second disruption during the Olympic Games in Paris, after high-speed train lines were targeted in a series of arson attacks hours before the Games kicked off.

    Marina Ferrari, France’s junior minister for digital affairs, said on X that in the early hours of Monday morning, multiple locations around France were affected by several “damages” that impacted telecommunications providers and have resulted in “localized consequences” to fiber optic services as well mobile internet connectivity. Internet companies confirmed the damage.

    The French Ministry of the Interior, which oversees policing agencies in the country, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. French cybersecurity agency ANSSI told WIRED the problems are not linked to a cybersecurity incident.

    At the time of writing, nobody has claimed responsibility for either attack. Officials have yet to identify any suspects involved in the cable-cutting sabotage, but they believe the disruption to train services could have been committed by people with “ultra-left” political leanings.

    The incidents around the Olympics come at a time when Russia has been blamed for a string of disinformation targeting France and has also been linked to a series of potential sabotage attacks in Europe.

    The second largest French telecoms company, SFR, appeared to be one of the most impacted by the vandalism. “Our long-distance fiber network was sabotaged between 1 am and 3 am last night in five different locations,” a spokesperson from SFR told WIRED. SFR says its maintenance teams are working on repairing the damage and said the impact on its customers was “limited.”

    “Also, between three and eight other operators are impacted since they use our long-distance network,” the spokesperson said.

    Nicolas Guillaume, the CEO of telecom firm Nasca Group, which owns the ISP company Netalis, told WIRED he believed the damage was “deliberate” and that ISPs serving both customers and businesses have been impacted. Several of the damaged cables, according to images shared on X by the CEO, appear to have clean cuts across them. Guillaume says it is likely that people opened the ducts where cables are stored and cut them. Internet company Free 1337 also confirmed it was working on fixing the damage.

    While billions of people around the world use wireless connections, the underlying internet backbone is made up of cables traversing across countries and under seas. This infrastructure, which is able to automatically reroute traffic to limit outages, can be fragile and vulnerable to attack or disruption. EU politicians have called for internet infrastructure security to be improved.

    But the sabotage is not the first time that internet cables in France have been damaged in potentially deliberate acts. At the end of April 2022, crucial long-distance internet cables around Paris were deliberately cut and damaged—causing outages that impacted around 10 internet and infrastructure companies.

    In that instance, according to photographs published by telecoms companies, the cables appeared to have been surgically cut, all at around the same time, in three locations, to the north, south, and east of Paris. Thousands of people around Paris—and also some farther away from the French capital—were plunged into a temporary internet blackout as network operators rerouted traffic. “It is the work of professionals,” Guillaume said at the time.

    Arthur PB Laudrain, a postdoctoral research associate in cyber diplomacy at King’s College London, says the most recent incident seems “less serious” than the 2022 outages. “Such actions are within the capabilities of ultra-left or ecologist and anarchist groups, especially if they benefited from insider assistance or knowledge (current or former rail or network workers),” Laudrain says. “However, we cannot rule out the fact that a state actor is encouraging, supporting, or directing such domestic groups to create plausible deniability of their involvement.”

    Matt Burgess

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  • Britain’s Brewing Battle Over Data Centers

    Britain’s Brewing Battle Over Data Centers

    As mayor of Newham, Rokhsana Fiaz has plenty of problems to reckon with. Her London borough is wrestling with entrenched poverty and the capital’s highest rate of residents stuck in temporary housing. But midway through her second term, Fiaz has a new plan to turn things around. She believes that AI could provide a multimillion-pound boost to economic growth, and she’s campaigning for Newham to get a share. “We want to be able to seize the opportunities of the data economy,” she says, “and data centers are a core part of that.”

    Fiaz’s support for the server farms reflects the enthusiasm of a new generation of Labour politicians expecting to be voted into power in the UK election later this week. After 14 years of center-right Conservative rule, polls predict that voters will endorse the center-left Labour Party’s pledges to kick-start economic growth and grasp the potential of AI—in part by making it easier to build more data centers across the country.

    Last month, Newham approved the nation’s latest data center, on a patch of industrial land overlooking the River Thames. The plan was welcomed by some residents, who had fiercely campaigned against a new lorry depot destined for the same site. “Everyone breathed a sigh of relief,” says Sam Parsons of the Royal Wharf Residents Association, which represents 1,600 people who live in a nearby housing development. Personally, however, Parsons is still worried—mostly about the noise the data center could make once building-work has finished. “There’s a place in America where residents had a terrible time with this humming sound,” he says, referring to reports out of Virginia last year. On a Thursday morning in Newham, the handful of people that spoke to WIRED as they were passing London City Hall near to the data center site said they did not know about the plans. Most local residents seemed disinterested in how the 210-megawatt infrastructure would impact the already hugely built-up area, but one resident, Paul, who refused to give a surname, summed up the general sentiment: “We have zero need for it,” he says.

    If Labour does get elected to power this week, ministers will have to convince people across the UK, already Europe’s biggest market for data centers, why they need even more and decide where to put them.

    Discontent is brewing across the country, with opposition particularly strong in areas known as the “green belt,” swaths of countryside designated to prevent urban sprawl. Labour is well-aware the party’s plan to make it easier to build data centers risks causing conflict between developers and locals, according to two people with knowledge of internal party discussions. Residents in Amsterdam, Frankfurt, and Dublin have clashed with data center developers, complaining of the buildings’ insatiable appetite for power and water. All three cities have since imposed restrictions on new developments.

    “The question for national politicians, rather than poor little us, is: What does the country value most?” says Jane Griffin, spokesperson for the Colne Valley Regional Park, a stretch of farmland, woodland and lakes on the outskirts of London where there have been six applications to build new data centers. “Green spaces with trees and lakes? Or do we want a massive, great data center?”

    Morgan Meaker

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  • New Denver International Airport concourse train cars hit the rails

    New Denver International Airport concourse train cars hit the rails

    The first batch of new Denver International Airport concourse train cars transported passengers on Monday, with 20 more set to hit the rails through 2025.

    The 26 new train cars are expected to increase the number of passengers that can be moved to gates, shorten the time between train arrivals and improve energy efficiency, DIA officials said in a news release.

    Katie Langford

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  • St. Pete resident says pump cleared floodwater on Shore Acres street

    St. Pete resident says pump cleared floodwater on Shore Acres street

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Longtime Shore Acres resident Eric Lanctot, 49, said for the first time in decades he did not see standing water on his street after a heavy rainstorm thanks to a temporary pump which St. Petersburg public works deployed earlier this month.


    What You Need To Know

    • Public works has deployed temporary pumps for 3 storms so far this year
    • Administrator Claude Tankersley said they’re experimenting to find the best locations
    • Shore Acres resident Eric Lanctot said thanks to a pump his street was dry after a storm on June 11 
    • The city plans to install a permanent pump in Shore Acres in 2026


    “That was a first for me to see that theory, that application, work,” he said. “It kept the three intersections that were on the that storm line dry.”

    For the past 21 years, Lanctot has lived in a home at the entrance of Ponderosa Shores located at the intersection of 54th Avenue NE and Denver Street NE. The commercial general contractor said on June 11, while driving home after a heavy rain storm he was surprised to see 54th Avenue NE was dry.

    “My intersection was dry and that is unusual,” he said. “I pulled in my driveway and backed out because I just didn’t understand why the intersection was dry. I drove down the street and I noticed the intersection to the east was also dry.”

    Lanctot said 54th Avenue NE, which turns into North Dakota Avenue NE, was dry all the way east until it dead ends at Dover Street NE, where he saw a temporary pump set up by public works.

    “It was pumping water out of the inlet… and it was discharging on the canal side of the backflow preventer,” he said. “For the first time, in a long time, I’m seeing some positive steps in the right direction.”


    Public works administrator Claude Tankersley said earlier this year the city began experimenting with 5 portable trailer-mounted pumps to find locations for optimum efficiency and effectiveness.

    “It takes pre-planning to deploy the pumps,” he stated. “Therefore, we can only deploy them if we have advanced warning of impending heavy rain.”

    The pumps are intended to reduce rainfall-derived flooding, not tidal or sunny day flooding and would not be effective against a storm that dumps more than seven inches of water, according to Tankersley. So far this year, the temporary pumps have been deployed 3 times on January 9, April 11 and June 11.

    “They can only be deployed in the street in front of a home,” stated Tankersley. “Therefore, we acknowledge that they are unattractive and may be noisy for a short period of time. However, we believe their benefits will justify the inconvenience.”

    Lanctot said the temporary fix gives residents who live in the lowest lying neighborhood in the city some hope and he called public works to give them his feedback.

    “They were thrilled to hear from me. They appreciated it,” he said. “This isn’t the final solution by any means but it is letting the people that are trying know that that particular thing that they tried worked.”

    Tankersley said it’s still an experiment to see if the process will work and he appreciated the feedback from residents.

    “We are pleased to hear that our residents see benefits from this experimental program,” he stated. “We hope it will lead to a permanent program once we iron out all the kinks.”

    In March, the St. Petersburg city council approved a $7.8 million grant that will cover half the cost of a permanent stormwater pump which public works hopes to install in Shore Acres by 2026.

    Josh Rojas

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  • Haverhill to borrow $12.4M to reduce CS0s, upgrade water lines

    Haverhill to borrow $12.4M to reduce CS0s, upgrade water lines

    HAVERHILL — The city will borrow $12.4 million for a project aimed at reducing the amount of combined sewer overflows reaching the Merrimack River.

    The City Council this week unanimously approved borrowing $12.4 million for a project intended to reduce CSOs pouring into the Little River and into the Merrimack River while also improving the water distribution system in the Locke Street area.

    In his request for the funding, DPW Director Robert Ward told the council the amount of the loan order increased by about $2 million since the original request passed about a year ago.

    He said the project was deferred a year due to permitting issues hit by cost increases.

    He said a number of things, including the need for additional quantities of items such as 18-inch diameter pipes, the creation of additional stormwater outfalls not in the original cost estimates, the need to rehabilitate some stormwater drain pipes, additional roadway restoration costs and other items.

    The council was provided with documents explaining the project, which will play out in three phases over the next 10 years.

    In his letter to the council, Ward noted that in 2016 the city entered into a consent decree with the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) requiring the city to reduce CSOs.

    Ward said that before the 1960s, sewage and stormwater were commonly collected in the same pipe. These combined sewers were designed and built to overflow into nearby waterways to prevent excessive flooding during rain storms from backing up into basements, streets, parking lots and other areas.

    Ward said the Locke Street area is the city’s biggest contributor to CSO overflows into the Merrimack River.

    This Locke Street Phase 1 combined sewer overflow (CSO) separation and water system improvements project will involve separating the combined sewer system in that area into separate wastewater and stormwater systems, thereby reducing excessive stormwater entering the sewer system during rain events.

    Ward noted that Phase 1 separates about 3,500 feet of combined sewers in the Locke Street area by installing new stormwater pipes, disconnecting catch basins from them, and connecting them to the separate stormwater lines. The project also involves upsizing existing storm drains, installing new outfalls to increase capacity of the existing storm drain system, and rehabilitating existing sewers and manholes.

    In conjunction with the sewer and drain work, old, undersized water mains in the Phase 1 area will be replaced and upsized. Ward said it makes sense to upgrade water lines in that area rather than return at a future date and having to dig up the streets again.

    The average household’s sewer rate impact from this project will be less than $21 annually, Ward stated in his letter. The water rate impact will add about $8 to the annual bill for an average size household, he said.

    The loan order funds Phase 1 of three phases over the next 10 years or so. Phases 2 and 3 will be in other areas, including Primrose, Main Street and Lawrence Street, which also discharge into Little River and to the CSO outlet behind the downtown bus station.

    “We’re paying for the sins of the past,” Ward said.

    By Mike LaBella | mlabella@eagletribune.com

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  • Baltimore shipping channel closed after Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse finally fully reopens

    Baltimore shipping channel closed after Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse finally fully reopens

    The main shipping channel into Baltimore’s port has fully reopened to its original depth and width following the March 26 collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge, which blocked most maritime traffic into the harbor.

    Officials announced the full reopening in a news release Monday evening. It comes after a massive cleanup effort as crews removed an estimated 50,000 tons of steel and concrete from the Patapsco River.

    The channel was blocked by wreckage of the fallen bridge, which collapsed after a container ship lost power and crashed into one of its supporting columns, sending six members of a roadwork crew plunging to their deaths. All of the victims were Latino immigrants working an overnight shift to fill potholes on the bridge.

    The Port of Baltimore, which processes more cars and farm equipment than any other in the country, was effectively closed for several weeks while the wreckage was removed. Crews were able to reopen portions of the deep-draft channel in phases, restoring some commercial traffic in recent weeks.

    On May 20, the wayward cargo ship Dali was refloated and guided back to port. The vessel had been stuck amid the wreckage for almost two months, with a massive steel truss draped across its damaged bow.

    After the Dali was moved, crews opened a channel that was 50 feet (15 meters) deep and 400 feet (122 meters) wide. The full federal shipping channel is 700 feet (213 meters) wide, which means two-way traffic can resume, officials said. They said other additional safety requirements have also been lifted because of the increased width.

    Thousands of longshoremen, truckers and small business owners have seen their jobs impacted by the collapse, prompting local and state officials to prioritize reopening the port and restoring its traffic to normal capacity in hopes of easing the economic ripple effects.

    The announcement Monday means the commerce that depends on the busy port can begin ramping back up.

    Officials said a total of 56 federal, state and local agencies participated in the salvage operations, including about 500 specialists from around the world who operated a fleet of 18 barges, 22 tugboats, 13 floating cranes, 10 excavators and four survey boats.

    “I cannot overstate how proud I am of our team,” said Col. Estee Pinchasin, Baltimore district commander for the Army Corps of Engineers. “It was incredible seeing so many people from different parts of our government, from around our country and all over the world, come together in the Unified Command and accomplish so much in this amount of time.”

    In a statement Monday, Pinchasin also acknowledged the loss of the victims’ families.

    “Not a day went by that we didn’t think about all of them, and that kept us going,” she said.

    The Dali lost power shortly after leaving Baltimore for Sri Lanka in the early hours of March 26. A National Transportation Safety Board investigation found it experienced power outages before starting its voyage, but the exact causes of the electrical issues have yet to be determined. The FBI is also conducting a criminal investigation into the circumstances leading up to the collapse.

    Officials have said they hope to rebuild the bridge by 2028.

    Subscribe to the CFO Daily newsletter to keep up with the trends, issues, and executives shaping corporate finance. Sign up for free.

    Lea Skene, The Associated Press

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  • Partisan border wars

    Partisan border wars

    In this week’s The Reason Roundtable, editors Matt Welch, Katherine Mangu-Ward, Nick Gillespie, and Peter Suderman scrutinize President Joe Biden’s executive order updating asylum restrictions at the U.S.-Mexico border in response to illegal border crossings.

    01:32—Biden’s new asylum restrictions

    21:38—The prosecution of political opponents: former President Donald Trump, Hunter Biden, and Steve Bannon

    33:25—Weekly Listener Question

    39:56—No one is reading The Washington Post

    48:09—This week’s cultural recommendations

    Mentioned in this podcast:

    Biden Announces Sweeping Asylum Restrictions at U.S.-Mexico Border” by Fiona Harrigan

    Biden’s New Asylum Policy is Both Harmful and Illegal” by Ilya Somin

    Travel Ban, Redux” by Josh Blackman

    Immigration Fueled America’s Stunning Cricket Upset Over Pakistan” by Eric Boehm

    Libertarian Candidate Chase Oliver Wants To Bring Back ‘Ellis Island Style’ Immigration Processing” by Fiona Harrigan

    Donald Trump and Hunter Biden Face the Illogical Consequences of an Arbitrary Gun Law” by Jacob Sullum

    Hunter Biden’s Trial Highlights a Widely Flouted, Haphazardly Enforced, and Constitutionally Dubious Gun Law” by Jacob Sullum

    Hunter Biden’s Multiplying Charges Exemplify a Profound Threat to Trial by Jury” by Jacob Sullum

    The Conviction Effect” by Liz Wolfe

    Laurence Tribe Bizarrely Claims Trump Won the 2016 Election by Falsifying Business Records in 2017” by Jacob Sullum

    A Jumble of Legal Theories Failed To Give Trump ‘Fair Notice’ of the New York Charges Against Him” by Jacob Sullum

    Does Donald Trump’s Conviction in New York Make Us Banana Republicans?” by J.D. Tuccille

    The Myth of the Federal Private Nondelegation Doctrine, Part 1” by Sasha Volokh

    Federal Court Condemns Congress for Giving Unconstitutional Regulatory Powers to Amtrak” by Damon Root

    Make Amtrak Safer and Privatize It” by Ira Stoll

    Biden Threatens To Veto GOP Spending Bill That Would ‘Cut’ Amtrak Funding to Double Pre-Pandemic Levels” by Christian Britschgi

    This Company Is Running a High-Speed Train in Florida—Without Subsidies” by Natalie Dowzicky

    Do Not Under Any Circumstances Nationalize Greyhound” by Christian Britschgi

    With Ride or Die, the Bad Boys Movies Become Referendums on Masculinity” by Peter Suderman

    D.C. Water Spent Nearly $4,000 On Its Wendy the Water Drop Mascot” by Christian Britschgi

    Upcoming Reason Events:

    Reason Speakeasy: Corey DeAngelis on June 11 in New York City

    Send your questions to roundtable@reason.com. Be sure to include your social media handle and the correct pronunciation of your name.

    Today’s sponsor:

    • We all carry around different stressors—big and small. When we keep them bottled up, it can start to affect us negatively. Therapy is a safe space to get things off your chest—and to figure out how to work through whatever’s weighing you down. If you’re thinking of starting therapy, give BetterHelp a try. It’s entirely online. Designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist, and switch therapists any time for no additional charge. Get it off your chest, with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com/roundtable today to get 10 percent off your first month.

    Audio production by Justin Zuckerman and John Carter

    Assistant production by Luke Allen and Hunt Beaty

    Music: “Angeline” by The Brothers Steve


    Matt Welch

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  • NYC’s Congestion Pricing Should Have Been the Future

    NYC’s Congestion Pricing Should Have Been the Future

    On Wednesday, New York governor Kathy Hochul shocked the state and the country when she announced she would indefinitely shelve New York City’s long-in-development congestion pricing scheme. The policy, in the works since 2007 and set to begin in just three weeks, was designed to relieve car traffic, curb road deaths, and send a billion dollars in annual funding to the city’s transit system by charging drivers up to $15 a day to enter the busiest parts of Manhattan, with rates highest at “peak hours.” (Truck drivers and some bus drivers could have paid more than $36 daily.) At heart, the idea is straightforward, if controversial: Make people pay for the roads they use.

    But congestion pricing was also set to become one of the most ambitious American climate projects, maybe ever. It was meant to coax people out of their gas-guzzling vehicles, which are alone responsible for some 22 percent of US greenhouse gas emissions, and onto subways, buses, bicycles, and their feet. Policymakers, researchers, and environment nerds the world over have concluded that, even if the transition to electric vehicles were to happen at lightning speed, avoiding the worst of climate change is going to require fewer cars overall.

    Now, the movement has seen a serious setback, in a country where decades of car-centric planning decisions mean many can only imagine getting around in one very specific way. Just a few years ago, cities from Los Angeles to San Francisco to Chicago began to study what pricing roads might look like. “Cities were watching to see what would happen in New York,” says Sarah Kaufman, who directs the NYU Rudin Center for Transportation. “Now they can call it a ‘failure’ because it didn’t go through.”

    On Wednesday, Hochul said her about-face had to do with concerns about the city’s post-pandemic recovery. The congestion pricing plan faced lawsuits from New Jersey, where commuters argue they would face unfair financial burdens. Cameras and gantries, acquired and positioned to charge drivers while entering the zone, have already been installed in Manhattan, to the tune of some $500 million.

    Kaufman, who says she was “flabbergasted” by Governor Hochul’s sudden announcement, says she is not sure where the policy goes from here. “If we can’t make courageous, and potentially less popular, moves in a city that has transit readily accessible, then I’m wondering where this can happen,” she says.

    Other global cities have seen success with congestion schemes. London’s program, implemented in 2003, is still controversial among residents, but the government reports it has cut traffic in the targeted zone by a third. One 2020 study suggests the program has reduced pollutants, though exemptions for diesel buses have blunted its emissions effects. Stockholm’s program, launched in 2006, upped the city’s transit ridership, reduced the number of total miles locals traveled by car, and decreased emissions between 10 and 14 percent.

    But in New York, the future of the program is unclear, and local politicians are currently scrambling to figure out how to cover the transit budget hole that would result from a last-minute nixing of the fee scheme. The city’s transit system is huge and sprawling: Five million people ride the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s buses and subways, almost double the number that fly every day in the US.

    In New York, drivers entering the zone below Manhattan’s 60th Street would have been charged peak pricing of $15, but would have only faced the charge once a day. They would have paid $3.75 for off-peak hours. Taxi and ride-hail trips in the zone would have seen extra fees. After years of controversy and public debate, the state had carved out some congestion charge exemptions: some vehicles carrying people with disabilities would not have been charged, lower-income residents of the zone would have received a tax credit for their tolls; and low-income drivers would have been eligible for a 50 percent discount.

    Aarian Marshall

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  • For U.S. schools in disrepair, federal infrastructure dollars can’t come soon enough

    For U.S. schools in disrepair, federal infrastructure dollars can’t come soon enough

    At Baker Heights Elementary, everything seems to be coming apart, and it’s Timothy Scott’s job to try to patch whatever’s broken — whether it be falling ceiling tiles or a water fountain falling off the wall.

    “It could be fixed, it could be repaired, but we’re pulling funding from the classroom,” Scott said.

    Baker, Louisiana, just outside Baton Rouge, is home to roughly 12,000 people. Money is tight, and the population and tax base are shrinking. The infrastructure, including five school buildings that were all built in the 1950s, is crumbling.

    Across the U.S., the average public school building is now nearly half a century old, and communities like Baker are facing a lot of repairs. Although Congress allocated more than $1 trillion to rebuild America’s infrastructure in 2021, many schools across the country are growing desperate to fund the much-needed repairs.

    To date, the infrastructure law has funded more than 40,000 projects across the country. But in many cases, the money reaches communities like Baker too slowly.  

    Baker Superintendent J.T. Stroder says declining enrollment means “it’s tough to do anything.” The problems with infrastructure are not limited to the city’s schools, he says.

    “You can drive around the community and you’ll see how those kind of match,” Stroder said.

    “The way a student feels about their surroundings and their atmosphere affects how they perform academically,” he added.

    Overall, America’s infrastructure — from roads to bridges to drinking water — has a grade of C-minus, according to the last “report card” from the American Society of Civil Engineers. The investment needed just to bring American schools up to par is $870 billion, according to the 21st Century School Fund.

    Baker Mayor Darnell Waites knows Baker’s challenges firsthand.

    “Everything that I do is infrastructure,” Waites said. But despite knowing what the problems are, “it takes money” to fix them.

    “There’s a lot of other things that’s going on at the same time,” Waites said. “You want infrastructure, but you want to be safe… so 50% of my budget is public safety and everything else goes toward infrastructure.”

    Much of that funding comes from state and federal funding, Waites said.

    Louisiana Republican Senator Bill Cassidy was instrumental in negotiating the 2021 infrastructure law. 

    “During the COVID epidemic, billions were sent to state and local educational authorities,” Cassidy said. “But oftentimes when the federal government puts up dollars, the state and local pull back and the net sum remains constant.”

    Many of these infrastructure issues existed long before the pandemic broke out.

    In 2016, a flood closed the local high school. Ever since, students have had classes in the middle school building.

    “I would say, I do feel forgotten about,” one student said. “Kind of ashamed to say what school you go to.”

    The water-damaged high school will reopen this fall — 8 years after the flood.

    “We don’t have that experience, like a bigger environment for us to grow in and flourish in, but I’m hopeful for the future,” another student said.

    In many American communities, that’s something else that has been slow to rebuild: hope.

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  • How Many Charging Stations Would We Need to Totally Replace Gas Stations?

    How Many Charging Stations Would We Need to Totally Replace Gas Stations?

    Buyers curious about making the switch to electric vehicles have made it clear in survey after survey after survey: Charging kind of freaks them out.

    In many ways, drivers report, owning an EV is the same if not better than owning a gas-powered car. But fueling an electric vehicle is different, and can be inconvenient depending on where you live, and is therefore sometimes scary to even those interested in buying electric.

    The majority of today’s American EV owners charge at home, but more than 20 percent of US households don’t have access to consistent off-street parking where they can plug in overnight. The public charging network, meanwhile, can be spotty, and drivers have complained that chargers aren’t always well maintained or even functioning.

    The good news is that automakers, governments, and other policy players realize the US has a charging problem. They want more people in electric cars. Automakers are scaling up EV production and want people to buy them, and legislators realize that nixing gas-powered cars in favor of zero-emissions electrics will be an important part of staving off the worst effects of climate change.

    As a result of the early efforts to make the switch to EVs, the US currently has 188,600 public and private charging ports, and 67,900 charging stations, according to data collected by the US Department of Energy—figures that have more than doubled since 2020. Another 240 stations are currently planned. Compare that to today’s gas infrastructure: The country has about 145,000 gas fueling stations, according to the American Petroleum Institute.

    At WIRED, the whole situation got us interested in a thought experiment: If we could magically snap our fingers and turn every auto electric, how many charging stations would the US need to add?

    Number-crunchers at Coltura, an alternative fuel research and advocacy group, crunched the numbers:

    The upshot? The nation needs to build lots and lots more chargers before it gets to full electrification, a point experts suggest should come in the 2040s. But the task may not be as insurmountable as it looks.

    The number of public chargers will have to grow by a factor of six, as estimated by Matthew Metz, Coltura’s executive director, and Ron Barzilay, its data and policy associate. “We’re not necessarily off-track,” says Metz.

    Aarian Marshall

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  • Blyncsy to Release Map of U.S. 35+ MPH Roadway System Featuring FHWA Retroreflectivity Minimum Standards

    Blyncsy to Release Map of U.S. 35+ MPH Roadway System Featuring FHWA Retroreflectivity Minimum Standards

    Blyncsy, a Bentley Systems company, has released a public map of United States public roads rated at 35 miles per hour and faster, along with paint retroreflectivity scores for roads within all 50 state capitals. This new tool is available to support all state and local departments of transportation as they prepare to meet new Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) minimum levels of retroreflectivity for pavement markings, which goes into effect in 2026. Using its nationwide network of crowdsourced imagery and AI, Blyncsy was able to capture over 3,200 centerline miles of paint retroreflectivity detections in just four days.

    In 2022, the FHWA released a final rule to update the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) that establishes minimum retroreflectivity levels for longitudinal pavement markings on all roads open to public travel with speed limits of 35 mph or greater. The final rule requires applicable agencies or officials to implement a method for maintaining pavement marking retroreflectivity at or above minimum levels. States and counties must adopt a method for maintaining pavement marking retroreflectivity by September 2026. 

    “Bentley has always focused on safety and efficiency across the globe from day one,” said Mike Schellhase, VP, Asset Analytics for Bentley Systems. “With this new technology from Blyncsy, we’re now able to support every state in building and maintaining a safer and more equitable road network. It’s exciting to be able to share this data with agencies looking for cost-effective and forward-thinking ways to meet the new federal minimum standards.”

    Blyncsy leverages the power of artificial intelligence and crowdsourced visual imagery to provide automated roadway condition and asset inventory assessments. This technology collects street-level imagery from over 800,000 vehicles nationwide and assesses the condition of assets in the images in as little as 60 seconds of a vehicle passing. Blyncsy uses AI to detect and assess the condition of roadway features such as paint line visibility, allowing local and state governments to access the data needed for roadway striping operations and federal reporting requirements. This technology reduces the costs and burdens for paint line inspections by over 90% and supports safer driving for human and automated drivers. 

    “AI is enabling a revolution,” said Mark Pittman, Blyncsy CEO and Bentley’s Director of Transportation AI. “We’re making sure our public servants benefit from this revolution as well. With today’s launch we can ensure that our public works and maintenance crews across the nation can identify where and when to paint new lines on the roads, improve safety, reduce operational costs, and comply with the new FHWA requirements.”

    About Blyncsy

    Blyncsy is the industry leader in providing intelligent roadway insights, automated asset management and a near real-time status of road infrastructure to local governments and state departments of transportation. Blyncsy is the only company that utilizes crowdsourced imagery from over 800,000 vehicles already on the roads, machine learning and artificial intelligence to make roadways smarter, safer, more equitable and more efficient. Blyncsy provides organizations and Departments of Transportation with the data they need to make better decisions when it comes to traffic, safety, and health. Clients include Hawaii Department of Transportation, North Central Texas Council of Governments, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, City of Plano Texas, and many others. Blyncsy is part of Bentley Systems, Inc.

    About Bentley Systems

    Bentley Systems (Nasdaq: BSY) is the infrastructure engineering software company. We provide innovative software to advance the world’s infrastructure — sustaining both the global economy and environment. Our industry-leading software solutions are used by professionals, and organizations of every size, for the design, construction, and operations of roads and bridges, rail and transit, water and wastewater, public works and utilities, buildings and campuses, mining, and industrial facilities. Our offerings, powered by the iTwin Platform for infrastructure digital twins, include MicroStation and Bentley Open applications for modeling and simulation, Seequent’s software for geoprofessionals, and Bentley Infrastructure Cloud encompassing ProjectWise for project delivery, SYNCHRO for construction management, and AssetWise for asset operations. Bentley Systems’ 5,200 colleagues generate annual revenues of more than $1 billion in 194 countries. www.bentley.com

    © 2024 Bentley Systems, Incorporated. Bentley, the Bentley logo, AssetWise, Bentley Infrastructure Cloud, Bentley Open, Blyncsy, iTwin, MicroStation, ProjectWise, Seequent, and SYNCHRO are either registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of Bentley Systems, Incorporated or one of its direct or indirect wholly owned subsidiaries.

    Source: Blyncsy

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  • ITRCC Announces Spring 2024 Pavement Improvement Construction Program

    ITRCC Announces Spring 2024 Pavement Improvement Construction Program

    Indiana Toll Road to commence pavement improvements on both the east and west ends of the corridor

    ITR Concession Co. LLC (ITRCC), the operator of the Indiana Toll Road (ITR), is releasing its schedule for the Spring 2024 Pavement Rehabilitation Mill and Fill Project at locations on the western (mile marker 10 – 20) and eastern (mile marker 123 – 157) segments of the ITR. These projects will deliver improved pavement conditions within the regions that were most impacted by the severe winter freeze/thaw cycle in early 2024. 

    The project is scheduled to commence in early May and is expected to be largely completed prior to the Memorial Day holiday. Where possible, construction will be performed during non-peak travel times (8 p.m. to 8 a.m. ET) to limit customer inconvenience and delays. Motorists are encouraged to exercise caution and obey construction signage and posted speed limit reduction.

    “Whilst road construction is necessary to ensure that our pavement conditions meet customer expectations, we also look to execute the work in a manner that minimizes motorist disruption and delays,” said Rick Fedder, Chief Operating Officer of ITRCC. 

    Additional pavement and bridge rehabilitation projects are currently under design within these regions, with construction expected to be completed in late 2024 and 2025. 

    About the Indiana Toll Road

    Established in 2006, ITR Concession Company LLC (ITRCC) responsibilities are detailed in the Concession and Lease Agreement with the Indiana Finance Authority, such as the construction, maintenance, repair, and operation of the 157-mile Indiana Toll Road. Headquartered in Elkhart, the Toll Road spans northern Indiana, linking Chicago with the Eastern Seaboard. Designated as part of Interstate 80/90, the Toll Road serves as a vital transportation link in the Midwest.

    For current traffic and construction updates, visit www.indianatollroad.org or follow @IndianaTollRoad on Facebook or X (Twitter).

    Source: ITR Concession Company LLC

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  • As Questions Swirl Around Tesla’s Superchargers, the Race Is On to Fill the Power Gap

    As Questions Swirl Around Tesla’s Superchargers, the Race Is On to Fill the Power Gap

    Familiar says Revel is less concerned about the material effects of the Tesla layoff than the “cultural impact, tacking onto pessimism around EVs recently.”

    New York City officials seem confident someone will fill in the Tesla-sized charging gap. City programs ensure “that any provider doing business in NYC has a reliable, growing customer base, and one provider backing out of a lease is a great opportunity for another to snap it up, especially if that site is power-ready,” a spokesperson for the NYC Taxi and Limousine Commission, Jason Kersten, said in a statement.

    In Maspeth, Gordon says he’s already heard from several charging companies interested in leasing the land once intended for Superchargers.

    Power Puzzler

    In recent months, the Tesla Supercharger network has been cited as a bright spot in a company troubled by new competition from Chinese car companies and legacy automakers, questions around the slackening electric vehicle market, falling revenues, and most recently, a series of rolling layoffs. Tesla customers have said the company’s public charging stations are generally reliable and well maintained, and a huge selling point for Tesla-curious buyers. Last summer, the energy research organization BloombergNEF predicted that Tesla could bring in $7.4 billion in charging revenue by the end of the decade, constituting some $740 million in profit—not a shabby side hustle for an auto manufacturer.

    At the time of the reported layoffs, Tesla’s charging team had just pulled off a decisive coup by convincing the entire US auto industry to use its plug. In return, Tesla dangled to other automakers—and their customers—a public charging network that’s remarkably reliable and well developed, especially when compared to the shoddier records of their closest charging rivals.

    In financial filings submitted just last week, Tesla previewed its expansion plans for its charging network. As other automakers adopt the Tesla plug, “we must correspondingly expand our network in order to ensure adequate availability to meet customer demands,” the company wrote.

    Tesla last fall officially handed over work on the plug standard to the Society of Automotive Engineers, a global standards organization. Jeff Laskowski, a spokesman for the group, said that work to finish that plug standard was “well underway” and expected to wrap up by the end of this year.

    It is not unusual for companies given government grants to change direction or give them back, sources involved in government grantmaking told WIRED. In statements and interviews, those involved in building, selling, and developing electric vehicle charging said that Tesla’s sudden about-face on charging might affect the short-term future of public charging infrastructure, but not the long-term electric transition.

    A spokesperson for the federal Joint Office of Energy and Transportation, the authority overseeing electric vehicle infrastructure in the US, said that, because each individual state runs a competitive process to choose who will build charging networks, “we don’t expect individual business decisions to impact EV charging projects funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law,” the 2021 federal legislation that earmarked money for the charging infrastructure.

    Industry players said that while Tesla’s move was very unexpected, it could signal that the automaker believes other charging firms have caught up to it and are ready to take on the responsibility—and the capital costs—of building out the network that will make electric cars go.

    Competitors said the abrupt shift might even be an opportunity. In a statement, Sara Rafalson, the executive vice president of policy and external affairs at the charging company EVgo, said her company would soon begin to build Tesla plugs onto its chargers. “We welcome the opportunity to serve more Tesla vehicles and remain steadfast in our commitment to serve all electric vehicle models,” she said.

    UPDATE 5/1/2024 9:30 PM ET: This story has been updated to clarify the status of Revel’s lease talks in New York City.

    Aarian Marshall

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  • Esta llamada al 911 fue creada con inteligencia artificial

    Esta llamada al 911 fue creada con inteligencia artificial

    Videos en redes sociales comparten el audio de una supuesta llamada al 911 de un sobreviviente del derrumbe del puente Francis Scott Key en Baltimore el 26 de marzo. Pero está llamada no es real. 

    “Llamada de emergencia, situación del accidente del barco,” dice el subtítulo de la publicación en Facebook del 27 de marzo. El video además de mostrar imágenes del puente Francis Scott Key y del barquero chocando contra la estructura, también muestra la imagen del supuesto sobreviviente hablando con la operadora del 911. 

    Pero el hombre de la imagen no está relacionado con el suceso. Él es Donald Sahota, un policía que murió al ser disparado por otro oficial que trataba de detener al sospechoso de un robo en Vancouver, Washington, en 2022. 

    La publicación fue marcada como parte del esfuerzo de Meta para combatir las noticias falsas y la desinformación en su plataforma. (Lea más sobre nuestra colaboración con Meta, propietaria de Facebook e Instagram).

    El video en Facebook fue originalmente publicado en TikTok en inglés por el usuario @thedramatik, el video tiene más de 10 millones de vistas. Otros videos similares también fueron publicados en TikTok con subtítulos en español.

    Expertos nos dijeron que el audio en las publicaciones fue generado con inteligencia artificial. 

    En una parte del audio se escucha al hombre diciendo en inglés que su carro se está llenando de agua y que va a romper su ventana porque no puede salir. En ese momento se escuchan sonidos de agua supuestamente entrando al vehículo y de la ventana rompiéndose, pero estos sonidos son fabricados, dijo Valerie Wirtschafter, experta de Brookings Institution, una organización sin ánimo de lucro centrada en política pública.

    “Para mi, es bastante claro que (el audio) fue generado”, porque la cadencia del habla parece fuera de lugar y hay poco sonido de fondo cuando se escucha al hombre supuestamente romper la ventana y el agua entrar, dijo Wirtschafter. 

    Hafiz Malik, un profesor en el departamento de ingeniería eléctrica y computación en la University of Michigan-Dearborn le dijo a PolitiFact que luego de examinar el audio de forma forense, él encontró que fue generado con inteligencia artificial. Específicamente dijo que este es conocido como audio sintético generado con algún algoritmo.

    (Captura de pantalla de publicacion en Facebook).

    Malik dijo que la voz de la mujer en la llamada suena muy perfecta para ser de una persona real y que el audio de fondo en la conversación suena muy limpio, ya que normalmente cuando hay una conversación telefónica de dos personas se puede escuchar más ruido de fondo. Él también explicó que aunque el audio fue generado con IA, este luego fue editado por un humano para agregar ruido de fondo y filtrar la frecuencia del audio para que sonara como una llamada telefónica. 

    Los profesores de la Universidad de Northwestern, Marco Postiglione y V.S. Subrahmanian, nos dijeron que según su análisis, el audio es un “deepfake”, un audio falso creado por computadora con inteligencia artificial.

    Ellos explicaron que cuando el hombre en el audio dice “Hola, dios mío”, él no suena como si estuviera en pánico, ni tampoco se escucha su pánico en el resto del audio. 

    También notaron que pasaron pocos segundos entre cuando el sujeto supuestamente rompió la ventana, salió y habló de nuevo con la operadora del 911. Esta es una respuesta muy rápida dada las circunstancias, ya que no es probable que alguien que estaba tratando de sobrevivir en el agua pudiera hablar por tanto tiempo, dijeron los expertos. 

    Por último, dijeron que la voz de la operadora suena muy artificial y guionizada.

    La publicación fue compartida el 27 de marzo, el mismo día en que la Guardia Costera de Estados Unidos y la Policía Estatal de Maryland  suspendieron la búsqueda de víctimas, ya que habían estado desaparecidos por mucho tiempo para estar vivos. 

    En el puente habían ocho trabajadores cuando el buque lo chocó.Solo dos personas sobrevivieron al ser rescatados del río. Uno de ellos es un mexicano de 35 años, Julio Cervantes. Pero PolitiFact no encontró reportes verídicos de medios de comunicación ni de oficiales sobre la supuesta llamada de un sobreviviente al 911.

    Nuestro veredicto

    Un video en Facebook alega presentar audio de una llamada de emergencia de un hombre que sobrevivió el derrumbe del puente Francis Scott Key en Baltimore.

    Pero eso no es cierto. Expertos nos dijeron que el audio de la supuesta llamada al 911 fue generado con inteligencia artificial. 

    La imagen incluida en la publicación de la supuesta víctima en realidad es de un policía que murió en Vancouver, Washington, en 2022.

    Por eso, calificamos la publicación como Ridícula y Falsa.

    Lee más reportes de PolitiFact en Español.


    Debido a limitaciones técnicas, partes de nuestra página web aparecen en inglés. Estamos trabajando en mejorar la presentación.

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  • The Baltimore collapse focused attention on vital bridges. Thousands are in poor shape across the US

    The Baltimore collapse focused attention on vital bridges. Thousands are in poor shape across the US

    After a yearlong closure, a bridge over the Puyallup River reopened in 2019 with a sturdy new span and a brand new name. It even won a national award.But today, the Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge is closed again after federal officials raised concerns about a vintage section of the nearly century-old bridge that carried about 15,000 vehicles a day. It has no timetable to reopen because the city of Tacoma, Washington, first must raise millions of dollars to clean and inspect it.”It’s frustrating — and hard to comprehend how we got here,” said Ed Wallace, whose Harley-Davidson motorcycle store has lost customers since the nearby bridge was shuttered.Bridges fulfill a vital function that often goes overlooked until lives are lost or disrupted by a closure or collapse, like that of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore early Tuesday. That bridge crumpled when struck by a cargo ship, not because of poor maintenance. But thousands of others stand in worse shape. About 42,400 U.S. bridges are in poor condition, yet they carry about 167 million vehicles each day, according to the federal government. Four-fifths of them have problems with the legs holding them up or the arms supporting their load. And more than 15,800 of those bridges also were in poor shape a decade ago, according to an Associated Press analysis.One of those persistently poor bridges — carrying about 96,000 westbound vehicles daily on Interstate 195 over the Seekonk River in Rhode Island — was suddenly shut to traffic late last year, resulting in long delays as drivers diverted to new routes. In March, the governor announced that the bridge must be demolished and replaced. That could cost up to $300 million and take at least two years to complete.These closures illustrate a nationwide issue.”We have not maintained our infrastructure at the rate that we should for many, many years, and now we’re trying to play catch-up,” said Marsia Geldert-Murphey, president of the American Society of Civil Engineers.When an old bridge gets closed because of safety concerns, it disrupts daily commutes, business supply chains and emergency response times by police, firefighters and medical personnel. Yet many bridges still await replacement or repairs because the costs can reach millions or even billions of dollars. A massive infrastructure law signed by President Joe Biden in 2021 directed $40 billion to bridges over five years — the largest dedicated bridge investment since construction of the interstate highway system, which began nearly 70 years ago. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said that law already is funding over 7,800 bridge projects. One of the most notable is a $3.6 billion project in Cincinnati to build a long-awaited new bridge carrying traffic on Interstates 71 and 75 over the Ohio River at the Kentucky border.But funding from the infrastructure law will make only a dent in an estimated $319 billion of needed bridge repairs nationwide, according to the American Road & Transportation Builders Association. “The bottom line is that America’s bridges need a lot of work,” Buttigieg told the AP after visiting the closed Rhode Island bridge. He added: “The sooner we can address those significant bridges, the less likely they will be abruptly taken out of service, or worse, experience the risk of a collapse.”Inspectors rate bridges using a 0-9 scale, with 7 or above considered “good.” A “poor” rating reflects a 4 or below. A mid-range rating is considered “fair.” The nation’s poor bridges are on average 70 years old.Even before the federal funding infusion, the number of bridges in poor condition declined 22% over the past decade as structures were repaired, replaced or permanently closed, according to the AP’s analysis. But in recent years, more bridges also slipped from good to fair condition. Though potholes on bridges can jar cars, many of the most concerning problems are below the surface. Chipping concrete and rusting steel can weaken the piers and beams that keep a bridge upright. When the condition of substructures or superstructures deteriorates too much, a bridge typically is closed out of public safety concerns.Though rare, bad bridges can eventually collapse. Design flaws contributed to the evening rush hour collapse of an Interstate 35 bridge over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis in 2007. The collapse killed 13 people and injured 145 others. It also was costly financially. A state analysis estimated Minnesota’s economy lost $60 million in 2007-2008 due to increased travel time and operating costs for commuters and businesses.In January 2022, a bridge carrying a bus and several cars collapsed over Fern Hollow Creek in Pittsburgh, causing injuries but no deaths. Federal investigators determined the steel legs had corroded to the point of having visible holes, yet inspectors failed to calculate the severity of the problem and the city failed to follow repeated recommendations. “This bridge didn’t collapse just by an act of God. It collapsed because of a lack of maintenance and repair,” National Transportation Safety Board member Michael Graham said. Video below: Small businesses face shipping delays after bridge collapse Iowa has the most poor bridges, followed by Pennsylvania, Illinois and Missouri. The twin Burlington Street bridges in Iowa City, Iowa, exemplify the financial challenges facing old bridges. The state owns the southbound span carrying vehicles over the Iowa River while the city owns the northbound span of what’s also known as state Highway 1. The city’s part, constructed in 1915, was rated in poor condition in the 2023 and 2013 National Bridge Inventory. Inspection reports show numerous cracks and structural deficiencies in the concrete bridge. The state’s side, built in 1968, is in much better condition. Although the federal infrastructure law provided a grant to analyze the bridges, the split ownership has made it difficult to fund the more than $30 million estimated cost of a replacement.”It’s not something we can just fund in a year and say: ‘Here we go, let’s do it quick,’” said city engineer Jason Havel. “It takes years of planning, years of working through dedicated funding.” In Rhode Island, problems had been mounting for the I-195 Washington Bridge connecting Providence to East Providence. It closed after an engineer in December noticed the failure of multiple steel tie rods in concrete beams at two piers. A subsequent examination found widespread structural problems. Joseph McHugh, an engineer with 40 years of experience in bridge and road construction, reviewed a draft engineering report compiled after the bridge’s closure along with inspection reports from July 2022 and July 2023.”This failure didn’t occur overnight,” McHugh told the AP. “To me, it should have been caught by an inspection, not by a contractor or whomever was looking at what was going on.”The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating allegations that false payment claims for the bridge’s construction, inspection or repair were submitted to the federal government.Marco Pacheco, who owns a liquor store along a main road in a Portuguese neighborhood of East Providence, said he believes “mismanagement,” “negligence” and “incompetence” caused the closure. His business revenue is down 20% since the bridge closed. But he’s even more concerned about the long-term consequences. “That traffic doesn’t instantly come back. Folks have reshaped their patterns, their thought processes and so on,” Pacheco said.Business owners in Washington share similar concerns about the indefinite closure of the Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge, in an industrial area near the Port of Tacoma. Several years ago, the city spent $42 million to replace a span leading up to the river. But the bridge was abruptly closed again last October after the Federal Highway Administration raised concerns that debris had prevented the inspection of potentially corroded steel connection points. To clean and inspect the bridge, the city first must encapsulate it to protect debris from falling into the river. But the city lacks the more than $6 million needed for the project. It also has no means of paying for a potential $280 million replacement.A nearby Interstate 5 bridge provides a good alternative but that means many motorists zoom right past an exit ramp without thinking about the Harley-Davidson store or other nearby businesses. At least one shop already has closed.Wallace, the Harley-Davidson store owner, wishes the city could re-open the bridge, at least temporarily. “Is there a peril that exists?” Wallace asks rhetorically. “Yeah, absolutely, a very serious one for me as a business owner.”___ Associated Press data reporter Kavish Harjai contributed. Harjai is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

    After a yearlong closure, a bridge over the Puyallup River reopened in 2019 with a sturdy new span and a brand new name. It even won a national award.

    But today, the Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge is closed again after federal officials raised concerns about a vintage section of the nearly century-old bridge that carried about 15,000 vehicles a day. It has no timetable to reopen because the city of Tacoma, Washington, first must raise millions of dollars to clean and inspect it.

    “It’s frustrating — and hard to comprehend how we got here,” said Ed Wallace, whose Harley-Davidson motorcycle store has lost customers since the nearby bridge was shuttered.

    Bridges fulfill a vital function that often goes overlooked until lives are lost or disrupted by a closure or collapse, like that of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore early Tuesday. That bridge crumpled when struck by a cargo ship, not because of poor maintenance. But thousands of others stand in worse shape.

    About 42,400 U.S. bridges are in poor condition, yet they carry about 167 million vehicles each day, according to the federal government. Four-fifths of them have problems with the legs holding them up or the arms supporting their load. And more than 15,800 of those bridges also were in poor shape a decade ago, according to an Associated Press analysis.

    One of those persistently poor bridges — carrying about 96,000 westbound vehicles daily on Interstate 195 over the Seekonk River in Rhode Island — was suddenly shut to traffic late last year, resulting in long delays as drivers diverted to new routes. In March, the governor announced that the bridge must be demolished and replaced. That could cost up to $300 million and take at least two years to complete.

    These closures illustrate a nationwide issue.

    “We have not maintained our infrastructure at the rate that we should for many, many years, and now we’re trying to play catch-up,” said Marsia Geldert-Murphey, president of the American Society of Civil Engineers.

    When an old bridge gets closed because of safety concerns, it disrupts daily commutes, business supply chains and emergency response times by police, firefighters and medical personnel. Yet many bridges still await replacement or repairs because the costs can reach millions or even billions of dollars.

    A massive infrastructure law signed by President Joe Biden in 2021 directed $40 billion to bridges over five years — the largest dedicated bridge investment since construction of the interstate highway system, which began nearly 70 years ago.

    Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said that law already is funding over 7,800 bridge projects. One of the most notable is a $3.6 billion project in Cincinnati to build a long-awaited new bridge carrying traffic on Interstates 71 and 75 over the Ohio River at the Kentucky border.

    But funding from the infrastructure law will make only a dent in an estimated $319 billion of needed bridge repairs nationwide, according to the American Road & Transportation Builders Association.

    “The bottom line is that America’s bridges need a lot of work,” Buttigieg told the AP after visiting the closed Rhode Island bridge. He added: “The sooner we can address those significant bridges, the less likely they will be abruptly taken out of service, or worse, experience the risk of a collapse.”

    Inspectors rate bridges using a 0-9 scale, with 7 or above considered “good.” A “poor” rating reflects a 4 or below. A mid-range rating is considered “fair.” The nation’s poor bridges are on average 70 years old.

    Even before the federal funding infusion, the number of bridges in poor condition declined 22% over the past decade as structures were repaired, replaced or permanently closed, according to the AP’s analysis. But in recent years, more bridges also slipped from good to fair condition.

    Though potholes on bridges can jar cars, many of the most concerning problems are below the surface. Chipping concrete and rusting steel can weaken the piers and beams that keep a bridge upright. When the condition of substructures or superstructures deteriorates too much, a bridge typically is closed out of public safety concerns.

    Though rare, bad bridges can eventually collapse.

    Design flaws contributed to the evening rush hour collapse of an Interstate 35 bridge over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis in 2007. The collapse killed 13 people and injured 145 others. It also was costly financially. A state analysis estimated Minnesota’s economy lost $60 million in 2007-2008 due to increased travel time and operating costs for commuters and businesses.

    In January 2022, a bridge carrying a bus and several cars collapsed over Fern Hollow Creek in Pittsburgh, causing injuries but no deaths. Federal investigators determined the steel legs had corroded to the point of having visible holes, yet inspectors failed to calculate the severity of the problem and the city failed to follow repeated recommendations.

    “This bridge didn’t collapse just by an act of God. It collapsed because of a lack of maintenance and repair,” National Transportation Safety Board member Michael Graham said.

    Video below: Small businesses face shipping delays after bridge collapse

    Iowa has the most poor bridges, followed by Pennsylvania, Illinois and Missouri. The twin Burlington Street bridges in Iowa City, Iowa, exemplify the financial challenges facing old bridges. The state owns the southbound span carrying vehicles over the Iowa River while the city owns the northbound span of what’s also known as state Highway 1.

    The city’s part, constructed in 1915, was rated in poor condition in the 2023 and 2013 National Bridge Inventory. Inspection reports show numerous cracks and structural deficiencies in the concrete bridge. The state’s side, built in 1968, is in much better condition.

    Although the federal infrastructure law provided a grant to analyze the bridges, the split ownership has made it difficult to fund the more than $30 million estimated cost of a replacement.

    “It’s not something we can just fund in a year and say: ‘Here we go, let’s do it quick,’” said city engineer Jason Havel. “It takes years of planning, years of working through dedicated funding.”

    In Rhode Island, problems had been mounting for the I-195 Washington Bridge connecting Providence to East Providence. It closed after an engineer in December noticed the failure of multiple steel tie rods in concrete beams at two piers. A subsequent examination found widespread structural problems.

    Joseph McHugh, an engineer with 40 years of experience in bridge and road construction, reviewed a draft engineering report compiled after the bridge’s closure along with inspection reports from July 2022 and July 2023.

    “This failure didn’t occur overnight,” McHugh told the AP. “To me, it should have been caught by an inspection, not by a contractor or whomever was looking at what was going on.”

    The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating allegations that false payment claims for the bridge’s construction, inspection or repair were submitted to the federal government.

    Marco Pacheco, who owns a liquor store along a main road in a Portuguese neighborhood of East Providence, said he believes “mismanagement,” “negligence” and “incompetence” caused the closure. His business revenue is down 20% since the bridge closed. But he’s even more concerned about the long-term consequences.

    “That traffic doesn’t instantly come back. Folks have reshaped their patterns, their thought processes and so on,” Pacheco said.

    Business owners in Washington share similar concerns about the indefinite closure of the Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge, in an industrial area near the Port of Tacoma. Several years ago, the city spent $42 million to replace a span leading up to the river. But the bridge was abruptly closed again last October after the Federal Highway Administration raised concerns that debris had prevented the inspection of potentially corroded steel connection points.

    To clean and inspect the bridge, the city first must encapsulate it to protect debris from falling into the river. But the city lacks the more than $6 million needed for the project. It also has no means of paying for a potential $280 million replacement.

    A nearby Interstate 5 bridge provides a good alternative but that means many motorists zoom right past an exit ramp without thinking about the Harley-Davidson store or other nearby businesses. At least one shop already has closed.

    Wallace, the Harley-Davidson store owner, wishes the city could re-open the bridge, at least temporarily.

    “Is there a peril that exists?” Wallace asks rhetorically. “Yeah, absolutely, a very serious one for me as a business owner.”

    ___

    Associated Press data reporter Kavish Harjai contributed. Harjai is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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