Finalists Announced to Replace Westbound Washington Bridge

Gov. Mckee cites progress on the anniversary of the emergency closing

Gov. McKee addresses reporters at the Statehouse.
Gov. McKee addresses reporters at the Statehouse.
Share
Gov. McKee addresses reporters at the Statehouse.
Gov. McKee addresses reporters at the Statehouse.
Finalists Announced to Replace Westbound Washington Bridge
Copy

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee marked the one-year anniversary of the emergency closing of the westbound side of the Washington Bridge by announcing two finalists to replace the structure and by asserting that things are going in the right direction after some initial missteps.

“It has been a difficult year for everyone impacted by the closure,” McKee said Tuesday, a day ahead of the anniversary, during a Statehouse news conference. “I know that, and I’m sorry we’ve had to go through this, but it was necessary. Like you, I certainly wish I had known sooner than December 11th that the bridge had serious issues.”

While it was not known until March 14 that the westbound Washington Bridge was beyond repair, McKee said, “Our goal has remained clear: build a new bridge, build it safely and build it right.”

The governor identified the finalists as the Walsh Group of Chicago and a joint venture between the American Bridge Company of Pennsylvania and MLJ Contracting Corp. of New York. Plans call for the finalist to be selected in June.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Despite the closure of roughly 70 beds, Butler Hospital president and chief operating officer Mary Marran says her facility continues to provide quality psychiatric services to its patients
The proposed service reductions would affect 58 bus routes in total, eliminating 17 of those routes entirely
Unionized staff at Women & Infants Hospital accuse Care New England of retaliation, illegal tactics, and contract violations as tensions rise alongside the state’s longest hospital strike at Butler
Rhode Island’s bus agency has already scheduled public hearings on service changes. It just hasn’t outlined what the proposed changes are yet
Mack Blackie spent over a month jailed for a crime he didn’t commit; federal civil rights suit alleged Woonsocket police violated his constitutional rights with false statements and no photo ID lineup
New Bedford’s Portuguese-language library branch will remain open to the public, New Bedford’s mayor said yesterday in a press release