PennDot Allocates $25 Million To Replace Collapsed Bridge That Would Have Cost $1.5 Million To Repair Before Disaster – IOTW Report

PennDot Allocates $25 Million To Replace Collapsed Bridge That Would Have Cost $1.5 Million To Repair Before Disaster

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As the investigation intensifies into the Fern Hollow collapse that injured ten people, PennDOT confirms $25 million has been secured to fix the bridge. More

Report from cbs2 Pittsburgh claims the bridge had been tagged for $1.5 million years ago. Here

16 Comments on PennDot Allocates $25 Million To Replace Collapsed Bridge That Would Have Cost $1.5 Million To Repair Before Disaster

  1. Wasting that kind of money usually involves surrendering to your enemy in a foreign land and leaving all your equipment behind.

    Is Pete Buttigieg the absolute worst cabinet pick in the history of cabinet picks?

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  2. I gotta cousin that hangs sheetrock, he’s been working under the table on huge HUD job converting old houses into Section 5 crap apartments. I can’t believe how many times these projects are sub-contracted down with everybody taking a cut along the way. Grease the skids I guess.

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  3. @ Wild Bill FEBRUARY 5, 2022 AT 10:59 PM

    Tacoma WA hatched a scheme back in the mid 1990s called Visualize Tacoma. Strip the neighborhoods bare of services, let the infrastructure crumble and pour money into the downtown redevelopment zone. We are going to defer maintenance on our infrastructure for a short term and invest in downtown and before long new A-list businesses will move in and well healed residents will be moving into high end condominium units. Before long the new taxes generated will be more than enough to make up for what we invest and bla, bla, bla and yada, yada, yada and there was one lone voice calling them out. His initials are JDH

    In the last two and a half decades EVERY A-list business in the zone has moved out, only to be replaced by government offices and non-profits that contribute nothing in property taxes and the only residents moving in are moving into subsidized housing or low cost apartments.

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