Community Corner

Colorado To Receive $225 Million For Bridge Repair

With 481 bridges in poor condition, Colorado will get millions of dollars over five years for repairs and upgrades.

Bridges in poor condition across the country are being targeted for repair under a multi-billion dollar federal program.
Bridges in poor condition across the country are being targeted for repair under a multi-billion dollar federal program. (Nicole Charky | Patch)

DENVER, CO — Colorado will receive $45 million in the current fiscal year and $225 million over the next five years, under a five-year, $27 billion program announced by the U.S. Department of Transportation.

About 15,000 bridges in poor condition across the country, including 481 in Colorado, are targeted for repair and improvement under the program.

The administration is releasing nearly $5.5 billion to states, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia and tribes this fiscal year to fund the program, which the administration said is “the single largest dedicated bridge investment” since the interstate highway system was authorized in the 1950s.

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Bridges in Colorado listed in poor condition include bridges on the interstate highway system, including Denver bridges over Rock Island Railroad and Goldsmith Gulch.

The funds earmarked by the Transportation Department cover only about a third of the 45,000 bridges nationwide identified as in poor condition in the $1 trillion infrastructure plan President Joe Biden signed into law in November. It authorized nearly $40 billion for repairs and upgrades.

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Nancy Singer, a spokeswoman from the Federal Highway Commission, told Patch the $27 billion is authorized under the dedicated Bridge Formula Program to replace or repair highway bridges. It is not the only pot of money available to states to fix bridges.

States receive the money according to a needs-based formula, and state transportation departments will decide how the money is used, whether for major highway bridges that are part of the federal highway system or bridges under local jurisdictions, Singer said.

The states are being notified how much they’ll receive over five years for planning purposes, the report said.

The funding in the infrastructure plan promised to reach almost every corner of the country with money earmarked for bridges, ports, rail transit, safe water, the power grid, broadband internet and other critical infrastructure.

The White House issued a fact sheet Friday detailing how the administration is distributing infrastructure funds 60 days after the plan was approved.

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