August 5, 2004
Ambassador Bridge owners seek 2nd span to ease
Ontario-Michigan border congestion
The following article is excerpted from the “National
Post” on 5 August 2004.
The owners of the Ambassador Bridge have asked U.S.
and Canadian authorities for permission to build a second, $300 million
US ($394 Million Canadian) bridge to ease congestion at the two nations'
busiest border crossing.
The Detroit International Bridge Co…. filed permit
applications about 10 days ago for a second span, parallel to the bridge
that links Detroit and Windsor, Ont. …
The Detroit-Windsor crossings account for about a
quarter of the $400 billion ($526 billion) in goods that travel each
year between the United States and Canada, the world's top two trade
partners. Each year, 3.25 million trucks cross the bridge annually.
The permits are the first concrete step toward a
second bridge, following years of rhetoric, hand-wringing and studies
about the need for another crossing. They're also sure to heat up the
fierce scramble among three private companies vying for the job.
"Everybody's been sitting around saying, 'We'll
do this, we'll do that if we can get taxpayers' money,"' said
bridge president Dan Stamper. "We can do this ourselves. We have an
obligation to do this to protect the region and industry."
A bridge would take at least five years to complete.
Also vying to add another Detroit-Windsor link is the Detroit River
Tunnel Partnership, which proposes to retrofit and widen an existing
train tunnel under the river to accommodate trucks. A third group, Mich-Can,
proposes building a bridge near Zug Island on Detroit's south side.
Each would cost about $400 million to $600 million
($526 million to $789 million). A committee of U.S. and Canadian
transportation officials has warned that continued congestion would
cause Michigan and Ontario to lose 48,000 jobs by 2020. The annual
effect on both nations would be more than $10 billion (13 billion) a
year, it says.
“The border is huge. It's a very important piece of
the economy, and it's in everyone's best interest to keep the flow of
goods and people moving as smoothly as possible," said Carmine
Palombo, transportation director of the Southeast Michigan Council of
Governments.
Stamper said he is petitioning to build another
four-lane span with a potential to add two more lanes. The bridge would
either be next to the current one, which was built in 1929, or added on
to it.
The petitions were filed with the U.S. Coast Guard,
Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, Ontario Ministry of
Environment and Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency. …