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  • Ohio Republican says a new highway bill can be worked out in 2010
  • Construction loses another 75,000 jobs in January
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  • Construction spending down 12.4% in 2009
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  • Only 4 cities added construction jobs in 2009
  • Highway funding could flat-line in FY 2010
  • Lake Champlain ferry begins commuting operations
  • Michigan in danger of losing 243 road and bridge jobs
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  • Tenn. politician wants work on I-69 to be a felony
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  • Eight years later, Wakota Bridge expansion nears completion
  • Forecast: Almost 90% of contractors say industry will not recover in 2010
  • Lawmakers: National Infrastructure Bank on its way
  • Debate on $1 billion roads, bridges plan to move into day two in Ala.
  • Missouri highway fatalities lowest since 1950
  • Oklahoma praised for allocation of stimulus funding on highway projects
  • N.Y., Vt. governors announce design for new Lake Champlain bridge
  • Ga. governor takes stand in transportation funding debate
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  • Construction employment declines in 324 out of 337 cities
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  • Iowa governor declares snow emergency
  • December snows exceed DelDOT’s snow-removal budget
  • Recovery Act funds 10,000th highway project
  • Revised rules for traffic devices
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  • Highway Users demands action from Congress
  • AGC: California can meet emission rules without retrofit

  • All Current News
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  • Rod snaps on Oakland Bay Bridge

    No injuries are reported, but span is closed indefinitely
    October 28, 2009

    The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge continues to give commuters and Caltrans trouble.

    A 3-ft-long rod snapped and fell on three cars traveling on the westbound lanes of the bridge on Oct. 27 during the peak of rush hour. One vehicle was damaged but no injuries were reported. Authorities closed the span indefinitely hours later.

    The damaged rod originated from the same place a truck crashed and overturned a few weeks ago. The snapped rod was part of the repairs executed after the accident. It was holding in place a saddle-like cap that had been installed over a cracked link.

    The San Francisco-Oakland Bridge was closed over the Labor Day weekend for a seismic upgrade when inspectors noticed a crack on the eastern span. Caltrans had the bridge back open before the start of the workweek.

    “If you look at the totality of the circumstances, you’ve got the 5:30 commute, you have a 5,000-lb piece of steel falling out of the sky. We are so fortunate that no one was injured or killed,” California Highway Patrol Trent Cross told KTVU-TV.

    Source: Associated Press, Yahoo   October 28, 2009





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