there are a number of detours. this morning transportation secretary pete buttigieg spoke about the repairs and his commitment to making sure that this roadway is repaired as soon as possible. take a listen. we ve got this emergency relief funding, and we can fund and reimburse the activity that are going on to swiftly get that road back to normal, but just to be clear, swiftly is not going to be overnight. definitely not days, if it s weeks, we re not talking about a couple of weeks here. reporter: jose, as you mentioned, governor josh shapiro expected to issue that declaration for the emergency funding to get down here as quickly as possible to begin these repairs. the city has a pretty good plan in place to get people to and from. you know with the summer months approaching, you know this is going to be a traffic nightmare for weeks if not months. jose. oh, my gosh, george solis in philadelphia, thank you so very much. this morning former italian prime minister and media mogul
emergency crews are still trying to identify if anyone else was caught in the collapse. but as of right now, no injuries or fatalities are reported. transportation secretary pete buttigieg saying he wants to get federal dollars in the right hands. we ve got this emergency relief funding and we fund and reimburse the activities to swiftly get that road whack back to normal. we are talking about major structural work. demolition efforts are underway. demolition on the southbound lanes is supposed to begin monday and take from 4 to 5 days. governor josh shapiro saying an early timeline indicates it will take a number of months to get things repaired. back to you, sandra. sandra: it is going to take some time. c.b., thank you so much. john: and that happened not long after the big fire in connecticut as well along i-95.
The Custer Gallatin National Forest has submitted a request for $5.7 million in emergency funds from the Federal Highway Administration to repair "critical" access routes. Two fishing access sites on
In the wake of record-setting flooding in mid-June, an initial assessment has estimated damage to roads, bridges and recreation facilities and campgrounds on the Custer Gallatin National Forest at $20