
North -American transport staff finished 529 “Return” grant agreements of 3,200 prizes that the Secretary of Transport, Sean Duffy, said that it had not been signed by the start of the Trump administration. Since the start of the push to review the aid, Dot’s staff has now erased 1,065 agreements, about a third of the total, along with almost $ 10 billion, the agency announced on June 10.
The Department has deleted the grant awards “Refoking the Department on Basic Infrastructure,” Duffy said in a statement. Dot’s staff have been eliminating the requirements of non -onalized subsidies that revolve around elements such as environmental justice and diversity, equity and inclusion, which had previously been included as a Biden administration policy, but not included in Congress as requirements when it financed programs.
“With one third of the unprecedented backlogs of the last administration, we will continue to drag the red tape locks to get the dirt move,” said Duffy.
The prizes come from various grant programs administered by the different dowry agencies, including the Federal Road Administration, the Federal Railway Administration (FRA) and others. According to records, the highest agreement of the latter batch to be completed is $ 200 million to Chicago’s Traffic Authority to replace the railways.
The largest involved in construction is a multimodal projects of goods and multimodal roads of $ 127.1 million in the city of Cincinnati for its project to replace Western Hills viaducts. The grant, which Dot officials granted by 2022, will help the city to replace an aging bridge that crosses a large railway garden to connect the center and west side of the city with an extradited bridge immediately south of the existing structure. City officials already selected Ty Lin International as designer and Walkosing Joint Venture as responsible for risk construction. It is expected that the work of the new bridge will begin next year to end in 2030.
Most of the recently completed prizes – 337 of 529 – have a value less than $ 1 million.
Duffy previously spoke to legislators about the challenges of reviewing all the grant awards during a congressional hearing last month. He said Dot uses 14 systems to keep track of different aid, but that officials worked to consolidate them on a control board to improve ease and transparency.
Dot has also moved to cancel some subsidies. In April, Duffy announced that FRind terminated a $ 63.9 million grant in Amtrak to explore the viability of a high -speed railway line proposed in Texas. And earlier this month, FRA also proposed to terminate $ 4 billion in High Speed Railway Aid in California.
