Diadon Enterprises © 2018

FHWA offers $729M for storm-damaged infrastructure | Dump Trucks Charlotte NC

Aerial view shows a road stretching through water with heavy damage in the middle.
The Sanibel Causeway bridge collapsed in places after Hurricane Ian passed through the area on Sept. 29, 2022 in Sanibel, Florida. The FHWA is funding infrastructure repairs to lingering damage from that natural disaster and others across the country. Joe Raedle via Getty Images
This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Columbus Ohio Dump Truck Company Brief:

  • The Federal Highway Administration is providing $729.4 million to help states rebuild roads and bridges following natural disasters, the agency announced Jan. 23. 
  • Hurricanes, flooding, mudslides and other events declared major disasters will receive reimbursement funding under the FHWA’s Emergency Relief program. The program is part of the DOT and Biden administration’s effort to respond to climate change.
  • Along with repairs, funding will also enable resiliency improvements in order to protect the traveling public from further damages from extreme weather. 

Dump Trucks Columbus OH Insight:

As natural disasters driven by climate change ramp up, every sector is grappling with resilience, said Jill Kurth, AECOM’s Los Angeles Metro executive, in an interview with Construction Dive. Jurisdictions are responding to climate breakdown in a variety of ways, from undergrounding utilities for wildfire prevention to building seawalls and reconfiguring roads and bridges to mitigate flooding.

“Climate readiness is now being seen as a public safety issue,” said Kurth. 

The Emergency Relief program funding is heading to 34 states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. The money will fund continued repairs from the 2022 flooding in and around Yellowstone National Park; damage from hurricanes Ian, Fiona, and Nicole in 2022; flooding and mudslides in Vermont in 2023; and other natural disasters across the country. 

The Emergency Relief Program does not cover all rebuilding costs, but rather supplements federal, state, local and tribal transportation agencies’ repair programs. The program got a funding boost from the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

“Climate change is devastating communities across the U.S., in every state,” said FHWA Administrator Shailen Bhatt in the release. “Our transportation system was not designed to handle the climate impacts we are seeing in the 21st century.” 

Construction Dive news delivered to your inbox

Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts

Daily Dive newsletter example

Editors' picks

  • An overhead view of two people in construction gear looking over plans on a table.
    Image attribution tooltip
    AzmanJaka via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    5 of the biggest OSHA fines of Q3 2023

    One contractor faced citations across four jobsites with initial fines reaching over half a million dollars.

    By Zachary Phillips • Oct. 26, 2023
  • A project engineer talks to a computer operator who points to screens showing AI and machine learning enhanced tools. Explore the Trendline
    Image attribution tooltip
    gorodenkoff/iStock/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Trendline

    Preconstruction

    Preconstruction collaboration is key to a successful project, experts say.

    By Construction Dive staff