Could it really cost $1 billion to replace the 562 foot Walk railroad bridge in South Norwalk? Or is there a cheaper alternative that CDOT
is hiding from us.
We all know the woes of this 120 year old swing bridge
that sometimes refuses to close, stranding thousands of Metro-North and Amtrak
riders. But the plan to replace it
(using $161 million in Federal Sandy relief money) has ballooned from $600
million to $1 billion thanks to added rail yards and such.
Many in Norwalk are opposed because of the cost, others
because they will lose their land by eminent domain. And everyone’s concerned about the years of
construction and mess. The Norwalk
Hour’s ace reporter Robert Koch even discovered that the Maritime Aquarium IMAX
Theater may have to be demolished!
The CDOT has considered all sorts of new bridge designs… truss,
lift, bascule, counter-weight and even an elevated fly-over. But I think I’ve found one design
conspicuously missing that might be cheaper.
TRANSPARENCY
First, the good news.
The CDOT is doing a great job of making this project open and
inclusive. They have a website,
they Tweet updates (@WalkBridgeCT), and host public meetings galore. They even have translated all their plans
into Haitian
Creole.
Unlike the horrendous Stamford rail station garage
project, mired for three years in secrecy and rumors of political payoffs, the
Walk Bridge project is certainly more transparent than the murky waters that
flow under its tracks.
But that doesn’t mean people are having any luck slowing
this juggernaut down. Until now. Because now we find that CDOT has been hiding
a simpler solution.
WHY
NOT A FIXED BRIDGE ?
Why not just “close the river” and replace the old bridge
with a new, fixed bridge?
That option is not even discussed in the voluminous Environmental Assessment
Report. Why? I think
I’ve found the answer… or at least an excuse.
Blame the US Coast Guard and Army Corps of Engineers. They want to keep the mighty Norwalk River,
all two miles of it, open and navigable.
But do they really have that much power?
Isn’t it possible to force those Federal agencies to, in effect, close
the river to boat and barge traffic by edict or a bill put through Congress?
Couldn’t the few companies still on the river… a concrete
company, an idle asphalt plant and a small marina… be bought-out with money
saved by building a cheaper fixed bridge that doesn’t raise or lower?
And most telling of all… why isn’t this alternative even discussed
in the crucial Environmental
Impact Study (still open to public comment, now extended
until November). Why?
A
CHAT WITH THE COMMISSIONER
At the recent Metro-North fare increase hearings I
cornered CDOT Commissioner Jim Redeker and asked him. (Spoiler alert: critics of the bridge plan won’t like his
answers.)
The Commissioner says that CDOT did ask the USG and ACE
about a fixed bridge that would close the river and were told “no way”… though
critics say such concessions have precedents.
More telling, Commissioner Redeker says whether fixed
bridge or movable, construction will still disrupt the neighbors just as much
and for just as long. And, says the
Commissioner, the cost savings for going to a smaller, simpler fixed bridge
would only be 10 – 12%. Really? Hard to believe.
But I know Commissioner Redeker and trust his word…
though many Norwalkers and environmental activists do not. There is only one way to resolve this debate,
get the bridge fixed and keep the trains rolling and that’s face-to-face talks.
‘Til then, it’s all just rumor, speculation and
misinformation feeding on itself. And the old bridge just keeps getting older.
Republished with permission of Hearst CT Media.
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