Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nipigon Bridge Delays Slow $100 Million Of Goods Shipped Daily

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2016 01:23 PM
    TORONTO — The sudden closure and partial re-opening of the sole bridge connecting east and west travel in northern Ontario has raised concerns for the trucking industry that depends on the route to move $100 million worth of goods across Canada daily.
     
    About 1,300 trucks cross the Nipigon River Bridge, in Nipigon, Ont., every day, according to the Ontario Ministry of Transportation's 2012 commercial vehicle survey — amounting to about $100 million in cargo daily.
     
    "This is probably one of the most important transportation infrastructure points in the country," said Nipigon Mayor Richard Harvey.
     
    The Ontario Provincial Police closed the bridge Sunday afternoon after a winter storm damaged the structure's steel decking. The OPP has since opened one traffic-controlled lane and warned drivers to "expect delays."
     
    Cars and most trucks are crossing the bridge about 10 to 15 minutes slower than usual. 
     
    Oversized trucks, however, remain in limbo. Ministry staff decide on a "case-by-case basis" whether to allow trucks weighing more than 63,500 kilograms over the bridge, said Bob Nichols, a ministry spokesman, in an email.
     
    Prolonged weight and size restrictions would mean these types of vehicles — which often carry specialized, heavy equipment like wind turbines — would be left with few other options. Another complete bridge closure would leave much of the industry scrambling.
     
    "Then we could find ourselves in a very difficult situation again," said David Bradley, the president of the Canadian Trucking Alliance and Ontario Trucking Association.
     
    Truckers lack alternate routes in the area when the bridge is out of service.
     
     
    They could opt to travel through the United States, but that's become more difficult post 9-11, when the U.S. beefed up security measures at the border. Officials now consider Canadian cargo passing through to be the same as an international shipment, resulting in paperwork headaches for truckers.
     
    "The U.S. authorities basically choked off" that route for Canadian truckers, said Bradley.
     
    The Canada Border Services Agency and U.S. Customs and Border Protection have been working to overcome these hurdles for Canadian truckers, he said, but no industry-wide plan is in place yet.
     
    In the interim, CBSA and its trucking industry partners are trying "to develop temporary measures" to allow Canadian truckers easier passage through the states while the bridge remains partially closed, Esme Bailey, an agency spokeswoman, said in an email. She did not elaborate.
     
    It's unclear when the bridge will fully re-open or if it will have to be closed again for repairs.
     
    Crews are on-site, working to determine the cause, Patrick Searle, another Ontario transportation ministry spokesman, said in an email. The Ontario Minister of Transportation, Steven Del Duca, will be in Nipigon on Wednesday to provide an update on the situation, he said.
     
    If officials need to close the bridge again, Mayor Harvey said, the township's emergency plans include creating an alternate route.
     
    The $106-million bridge project replaced Nipigon's old two-lane structure with a four-lane one. It opened about two months ago.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics

    Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics
    Days before Toronto must decide whether to bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, critics are sounding the alarm over what they call unprecedented secrecy surrounding the process.

    Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics

    Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids

    Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids
    Lawyers for British Columbia's Criminal Justice Branch are in court this afternoon applying to have child killer Allan Schoenborn declared a "high-risk accused."

    Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls
    Sonia Singh, from Tasmania's capital Hobart, has won the Etsy Design Award for her project "Tree Change Dolls" by beating 52 other finalists selected by a panel 

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder
    Neil Snelson was found guilty in June of manslaughter for the killing of 19-year-old Jennifer Cusworth, who was beaten to death after leaving a Kelowna house party where the pair met.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder

    Union Says Ontario Nurses Can't Be Forced To Wear Masks In Flu Season

    Union Says Ontario Nurses Can't Be Forced To Wear Masks In Flu Season
    The Ontario Nurses Association says hospitals will no longer be allowed to shame health-care workers into getting a flu shot following an arbitrator's ruling striking down a "vaccinate or mask" policy.

    Union Says Ontario Nurses Can't Be Forced To Wear Masks In Flu Season

    NDP Would End Canada's Mission In Iraq, Syria; Harper Hints At Help For Refugees

    NDP Would End Canada's Mission In Iraq, Syria; Harper Hints At Help For Refugees
    Tom Mulcair says Canadian military personnel will immediately come home from Iraq and Syria this fall — months earlier than planned — if the NDP wins the Oct. 19 federal election.

    NDP Would End Canada's Mission In Iraq, Syria; Harper Hints At Help For Refugees