Biden Promises Feds Will Pay for Entire Cost of Repairing Off-Interstate Bridges

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President Joe Biden said Friday that the federal government would finance "100 percent of the cost" for rebuilding off-interstate bridges in small towns and rural areas, doing away with a previous requirement that communities share the cost.

The president said $5.5 billion would go toward a program that will make these bridges "safer and more useful." Making the bridges more functional, Biden added, would provide communities with greater economic opportunities.

"These are the bridges that are often overlooked when decisions are being made, but they are essential for small towns, rural towns, farmers to get their products to market, [to] small businesses to be able to serve customers," he said.

"With this investment, we're sending the message to those communities and the people who call them home: You matter. We're building back and building back better with you," he added.

The decision to remove the requirement that communities share in the cost was made because in many of these areas "budgets are stretched thin already," Biden noted.

US President Joe Biden Visited New Hampshire
President Joe Biden on Friday announced a new program to repair and replace the nation's bridges. Above, Biden delivers a speech on infrastructure at a bridge spanning the Pemigewasset River in Woodstock, New Hampshire, on... Photo by John Tully/Getty Images

While investing in these bridges may not have much impact for users of the Interstate Highway System, Biden said, rural communities will see a noticeable difference. Their bridges are often the ones that, when forced to close, "shut off deliveries and routes to school, work and home" and "create longer delays for first responders."

Professor Shana Gadarian, chair of the political science department at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, told Newsweek that these improvements could improve relations between the federal government and rural communities that have long felt left behind as economic opportunities dwindle. As people see tangible benefits coming from the federal government, like a new bridge in their community, they may begin to see Washington in a new light.

However, Gadarian emphasized that the federal government must ensure that a community's residents understand that the infrastructure improvements came from Washington and not locally or from the state.

"People need to make the connection between what they are getting and have it made very clear that the benefits that they're getting can be tied to government," Gadarian said.

"There's a reason that, during the New Deal, all of the bridges and the art programs and everything were labeled that they came from the federal government. And I think that's to the good. If you are trying to claim credit for benefiting people's lives, you have to put your name up in lights."

About the writer

Alex J. Rouhandeh serves as a special correspondent for Newsweek and is currently working toward his Master of Arts within the politics concentration at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism where he serves as the school's student representative in the University Senate and the Student Leadership Advisory Council of the Columbia Alumni Association.

Previously, he served as Newsweek's congressional correspondent, reporting from Capitol Hill and the campaign trail. Over his tenure with Newsweek, Alex has covered the speakership of Mike Johnson, the ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, the midterm elections of 2022, the Russo-Ukrainian War, and other key congressional stories of the Biden presidency.

Alex additionally provides coverage of Newsweek ownership and has produced investigative reporting on legal troubles facing the Olivet Assembly, a religious entity to which Newsweek's two owners formerly held ties.

Prior to covering Congress, Alex reported on matters of U.S. national security, holding press credentials for both the U.S. Capitol and the Department of Defense. Before joining Newsweek, Alex wrote for The American Prospect, Vice News, WDIV-TV NBC Local 4 News in Detroit, and other regional outlets.

His entry into the media industry began at Syracuse University where he majored in magazine journalism and produced award-winning coverage of the U.S.-Mexico border. At Syracuse, Alex also completed majors in policy studies as well as citizenship & civic engagement and was recognized as a Remembrance Scholar, one of the university's highest honors.

Alex was selected by the National Press Foundation to serve as a Paul Miller Washington Reporting fellow in 2024. He holds memberships with the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), and the Investigative Reporters & Editors (IRE) organization.

Contact Alex with tips and feedback at a.rouhandeh@newsweek.com, and stay updated on his reporting by following him on social media at @AlexRouhandeh.


Alex J. Rouhandeh serves as a special correspondent for Newsweek and is currently working toward his Master of Arts within ... Read more