By ANDY KIRKALDY and JOHN S. McCRIGHT
ADDISON — Because of deteriorating steel trusses discovered in a June inspection, New York Department of Transportation officials were poised on Friday to limit traffic to one lane on the Lake Champlain Bridge that links Addison with Crown Point, N.Y.
Signals at either end of the span, a crucial link between Vermont and New York State used by up to 3,600 vehicles a day, will allow eastbound and westbound traffic to take turns crossing Lake Champlain. Work will last at least through the end of August and possibly longer, said NYDOT spokesman Peter Van Keuren.
Van Keuren said the inspection uncovered “several” areas seriously in need of attention, and officials decided it would be unsafe to wait any longer to reduce stress on the 2,184-foot span, which was built in 1929. People who had been briefed on the closure said there are at least 20 to 30 areas where primary and secondary structural members were to some degree compromised.
“By limiting the traffic to one lane, we limit the load to one lane, and that’s going to help the bridge out while we do these repairs,” Van Keuren said.
A lower weight limit per vehicle, 80,000 pounds compared to 100,000, was imposed on tractor-trailer trucks, and Van Keuren said “R permits” allowing heavier loads would no longer be valid. But he did not expect those rules to have a major impact on the trucking sector.
“A legally loaded tractor-trailer can still use the bridge,” he said.
But Van Keuren expected some motorists to be frustrated, especially this past holiday weekend.
“We do anticipate some traffic delays in that area,” he said, noting that during busy times some may choose to drive by way of Route 4 in Whitehall or use ferries in Shoreham or Charlotte.
The latest symptoms are part of a larger issue for the 80-year-old bridge, which is tentatively slated for a $40 million to $50 million replacement in 2013, with an 80 percent federal share.
“The general problem is that it is old,” Van Keuren said.
Rick Kehne, senior transportation planner with the Addison County Regional Planning Commission, estimated that 600 or 700 New Yorkers commute across the bridge to Vermont jobs, many to Porter Hospital and Middlebury College in Middlebury or Goodrich Corp. in Vergennes.
Kehne didn’t expect delays to result in job losses, unless low-wage workers decide it is too much of a hassle to wait in traffic at times in order to get to a minimum-wage job.
“The job issue will be a little bit of an inconvenience,” he said.
Many farm vehicles also use the bridge, but Kehne guessed that most of those would not exceed the weight limit.
Local officials agree the timing — the onset of a holiday weekend and at the beginning of a summer celebrating the 400th anniversary of the European discovery of the lake by Samuel de Champlain — is unfortunate, but inescapable.
Rep. Diane Lanpher, D-Vergennes, who sits on the Vermont House Transportation Committee, tried to find a silver lining.
“On the positive side, no one has been hurt,” she said. “And it definitely will bring pressure on many to move along the process of repairing or replacing the bridge.”
Comments
Mayors Need to Call in FEMA to Repair Crown Point Bridge
October 23, 2009 by Roberta M. Roy (not verified), 20 weeks 5 days ago
Comment id: 1819
The Crown Point Bridge crisis needs to be responded to immediately; everything from jobs, to livestock survival, to food and essential supplies, to medical well-being, and the already depressed general economy on both sides of Lake Champlain are at increased risk. Winter is coming. Longer commutes mean more driving on less safe roads. Yet what to do has yet to be done: a mayor, in fact, all the mayors of Vergennes, Middlebury, Ticondaroga, Port Henry, need to contact the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and request it recognize this interstate emergency as one that puts tens of thousands of people at risk.
Estimates suggest as many as 4,000 may cross the Crown Point Brdge daily for medical services, business, shopping, family, tourism, and earning a living. That stated it is easy to infer that thousands more must be indirectly affected.
Crown Point is not New Orleans, but the guidelines are the same: It takes a mayor to declare his or her village or city in an emergency situation. That said, at least one if not all of them need to contact FEMA and ask that a cadre of Army Civil Engineers and work crew be immediately dispatched to repair the Crown Point Bridge before winter and in the interim to erect a temporary, floating one such as they might do in time of war, to be used to permit people cross Lake Champlain at Crown Point as needed.
The mayors must not wait for the Governors to move. They must not wait for the Legislatures to move. They must not wait for the County Executives to move. They must do it themselves. Only a mayor or the mayors from the surrounding towns and villages can as they must, make the call and ask FEMA to declare the need to reconstruct the Crown Point Bridge a Federal Emergency as it directly affects not only their communities but the communities of two states in the union already having suffered severe economic losses in the current economy, those being Vermont and New York.
Think of it. What's to be lost? A single phone call from a mayor.
Please make the call. Do it now. If I'm wrong, who will know? But if I'm right . . .
Roberta M. Roy
Port Henry, NY
FEMA?
November 9, 2009 by Guest (not verified), 18 weeks 2 days ago
Comment id: 1881
Roberta, FEMA is the Federal Emergency MANAGEMENT Agency.... it just "manages" federal emergencies, it doesn't actually do any repairs. A closed bridge is hardly an "emergency" in the eyes of the feds, at any rate.
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