Thursday, October 11, 2007

Bridge to D-town (8:18 pm)

I love catching stories about Detroit! Tonight, the Times is reporting on the trouble brewing over the Ambassador Bridge, the busiest commercial border crossing in North America. This connector between SE Michigan and gamble-when-you’re-19 Windsor is pretty unique. More than $122 billion in goods roll over this baby a year, so it’s a big deal, and it’s privately owned.

In a remarkable arrangement for a crossing so major, Manuel J. Moroun, a reclusive billionaire from Detroit’s suburbs who oversees a trucking empire, owns the bridge, one of only two privately owned bridges along the entire northern border of the United States and by far the most economically significant privately owned bridge in the nation.


Considering that the amount of traffic may require the construction of a second, $1 billion crossing, that little fact (rightfully) freaks people out.


“This man is making billions of dollars on that bridge.” said Raymond E. Basham, a Michigan state senator and a Democrat, who said that only a public bridge could ensure the structural inspections and domestic security needed. “When it comes to dollars and cents, there is every incentive for him not to tell us if something is wrong. We have an obligation for the safety of people.”


The obvious conclusion is to assess the traffic patterns and finance a second bride publicly if necessary, right? Well in cash-strapped Michigan, that’s not likely to fly. Plus, residents of SW Detroit are deservedly pissed because more construction would knock down dozens of homes and businesses and add to the already high pollution levels on that side of town.

“Who needs another?” said Victor Abla, whose window in the Southwest Detroit neighborhood of Hubbard Farms looks out on the Ambassador Bridge. “With trucks backed up on the bridge that’s already here, the pollution is horrible in my neighborhood, and the asthma rates are sky high.”


I’m not sure how this will all play put, but if I was a betting man, I’d throw it all on Moroun making out just fine and the Detroiters getting screwed per usual. Moroun, however, would make for a great profile if an intrepid reporter could ever gain access.

Read the whole thing here.

posted by Adam Doster

Reader Comments

I’m a Detroit area native and have crossed that bridge a few times, although I prefer the tunnel.

The traffic across the bridge has gotten worse since 9/11, you know, terrorism and all that crap. A couple of months ago our family went to Toronto for a vacation. We crossed up in Port Huron across the Bluewater Bridge. Passing into Canada was a breeze, about a 15 minute wait. When we returned (both crossings were on a weekday in the early afternoon) it was two solid hours of stop and go traffic. A few weeks later I read a newspaper article that explained that on our side (America’s) it was all about the fear of terrorists.

Isn’t that interesting. Our country has the fear, so much so that we pretend to care at the border. I can tell you by the time I had finally reached the toll booth I was ready to blurt out “ I wasn’t a terrorist until I waited two hours to get across!” But, I played the game of “name, rank, and destination” with calm. I didn’t see one vehicle pulled over for inspection, no one is getting caught doing anything. If I was really a terrorist, they wouldn’t have stopped whatever plot I might have had. Why? Because terrorists aren’t the big fear we are blasted into believing by the Bushies and the media.

I’m so sick of being told to fear terrorism. And it has changed my life in little ways. Now, I’m less likely to venture to Canada because of the long wait to get back into my own country. I’m more likely to drive to a destination than fly because of all the extra crap to go through just to get on a plane.

9/11 changed everything, that’s what they say. It’s made our country fearful, irrational as the odds of getting killed by terrorists is far lower than a whole host of causes for death. We are willing to drive cars which kill nearly 3,000 people a month, but fear some imagined terrorist event.

I’m tired of being told to fear. I refuse to fear, but I will still be altered because I don’t want the hassles of unwarranted fear.

Anyway, take the tunnel, not the Ambassador Bridge.

posted by jon b on 10-15-07 at 9:43 PM

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