State Officials Say Eastbound Washington Bridge Remains Safe

The latest inspection report was completed in November

Gov. McKee, RIDOT Director Peter Alviti and McKee adviser T. Joseph Almond.
Gov. McKee, RIDOT Director Peter Alviti and McKee adviser T. Joseph Almond.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
Share
Gov. McKee, RIDOT Director Peter Alviti and McKee adviser T. Joseph Almond.
Gov. McKee, RIDOT Director Peter Alviti and McKee adviser T. Joseph Almond.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
State Officials Say Eastbound Washington Bridge Remains Safe
Copy

State officials said Monday the eastbound Washington Bridge has not experienced any significant deterioration despite carrying twice the normal traffic since it was pressed into an expanded role last year.

The eastbound bridge was reconfigured to accommodate six lanes of traffic, three in each direction, after the westbound bridge was closed on an emergency basis in December 2023.

During a Statehouse news conference on Monday, Gov. Dan McKee said a monitoring report completed in November showed the need for what he described as routine “improvements, refreshes and minor repairs” to the eastbound bridge.

“It’s important to understand that none of the conditions we’re addressing in our maintenance affect the capacity of this bridge or its structural integrity to carry the six lanes we have on it,” said Peter Alviti, director of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation.

Alviti said the state has built redundancy into its assessment of the bridge and that reviewing it every six months is a standard set by the Federal Highway Administration.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The Ocean State is one of just three states that still prohibit most retail on Thanksgiving — a throwback to centuries-old blue laws that continue to shape when Rhode Islanders can (and can’t) shop
Researchers at URI and the state Department of Environmental Management to spend five years on a comprehensive study of Rhode Island’s wild turkey population
November 28 - January 2, 2026
Will the Rhode Island Senate remain divided? Plus, Helena Foulkes leans on a big name to raise more campaign cash
From restaurants to bakeries to dance studios, local business owners describe customer losses, creative pivots, and the hard-earned resilience they’ve needed to keep going since the westbound bridge shut down in late 2023
The closures are the latest in what is expected to be a wave of parish consolidations across Rhode Island