Canada has offered to cover Michigan's share of a new bridge over the Detroit River
Gov. Jennifer Granholm announced on Thursday that Canada has offered to cover Michigan's share of a new bridge over the Detroit River to Ontario.
Canwest News Service has reported that Granholm, testifying at a state House of Representatives hearing in Lansing, said Michigan would not have to put up any money for the proposed Detroit River International Crossing. She received a letter from Transportation Minister John Baird offering $550 million U. S.
It was further reported that the rest of the funding would come from the U. S. government and other sources. The Canadian money would be used to connect the bridge to Interstate 75 and to build a plaza at the U. S. end.
The transportation committee is considering the project.
The Detroit Free Press has reported that Dan Stamper, president of the Detroit International Bridge Co., which owns the existing crossing, the Ambassador Bridge, said a new bridge is not necessary because auto traffic between Michigan and Ontario is declining.
It was also reported that he argued that most of the jobs created by the bridge would be in Canada and that the crossing, once completed, would draw away about 75 percent of the traffic on the Ambassador Bridge. (With Inputs from Agencies)