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Courtney, Joe | Congressman

Rep. Courtney and First Selectman Hanson Highlight Upcoming Repairs to the Forge Hill Road Bridge, Funded by the IIJA

Connecticut

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NORWICH, CT — Today, Congressman  Joe Courtney (CT-02) and First Selectman Tracey Hanson (Voluntown) met  up to highlight the announcement of a long-awaited local infrastructure  project: repairs and upgrades to the 101-year-old Fort Hill Road Bridge in Voluntown.  The bridge was recently slated for repair work thanks to newly  increased infrastructure funding for Connecticut under the federal  Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). The Forge Hill Road  Bridge is currently considered a “non-conforming” bridge by the CT  Department of Transportation (DOT), putting it at risk for total  closure.  Although the repair project has long been on the CT DOT’s  “to-do” list, a lack of funding at the state and local levels has kept  the project from moving forward—until now.

Rep. Courtney voted to  pass the IIJA in November 2021, and it’s supplying the State of  Connecticut with increased infrastructure funding over the next 4 years  to help complete a wide range of projects—including more than $112  million for bridge repair in 2022. With IIJA funding now in place, work  on the Forge Hill Road Bridge is expected to begin in 2024. The total  estimated cost of the project is approximately $2.6 million, with  federal IIJA funding covering 80% of the total cost, and state funding  covering the remaining 20%.

“The Forge Hill Bridge might look small, but the cost of replacing it was a large burden for our small town,” said First Selectman Tracey Hanson. “The  80% federal, and 20% state funding we are receiving relieves our  residents of a tax burden that could have been felt for years.”

“I  voted to pass the new Infrastructure Law last November, and over the  course of 2022 we’ve seen work in eastern Connecticut getting seriously  dialed-up,” said Rep. Courtney. “Some are big,  high-profile projects like the Gold Star Bridge in Groton-New London, or  the Swing Bridge in East Haddam, but for small towns like Voluntown,  repairs to the ‘non-conforming’ 100-year-old Forge Hill Bridge are the  sort of long-term investments that really pay dividends for our towns  and our local economy. We rely on infrastructure like this for all sorts  of commerce and movement of goods and people, but when our oldest  bridges are in need of repair it can often prove too costly for our  towns to take on by themselves. That was the case with  the Forge Hill Road Bridge project—it’s been on the ‘to-do’ list for a  long time, and it was coming close to closure due to needed repair work.  Thanks to the IIJA, that’s not going to happen. The Infrastructure bill  is now fueling 80% of this project, resulting in real local jobs, a  serious investment in our local economy, and now at no cost to the Town  of Voluntown. It’s great to see our region continuing to thrive.”

Originally  built in 1921, the 101-year-old Forge Hill Road Bridge is currently  considered “non-conforming” by CT DOT, putting it at risk for total  closure. A lack of funding has kept the project out of reach for the  Town of Voluntown and for CT DOT, until Rep. Courtney and the U.S.  Congress voted to pass the IIJA. Now, with plussed up infrastructure  funding—including $112 million for bridge repair this year in  2022—long-awaited repairs to the Forge Hill Road Bridge are slated to  take place from 2024-2025.

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Transportation & InfrastructureInfrastructure Investment and Jobs Act

Original source can be found here.

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