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Code · BILL · 117th Congress · H.R. 3684 (EAS) — 117 HR 3684 EAS: Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act · Sec. 11106

Sec. 11106. Emergency relief

321 words·~1 min read·/bill/117/hr/3684/eas/section-11106·

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Section 125 of title 23, United States Code, is amended— in subsection (a)(1), by inserting wildfire, after severe storm, ; by striking subsection
(b)and inserting the following: Funds under this section shall not be used for the repair or reconstruction of a bridge that has been permanently closed to all vehicular traffic by the State or responsible local official because of imminent danger of collapse due to a structural deficiency or physical deterioration. ; and in subsection (d)— in paragraph (2)(A)— by striking the period at the end and inserting ; and ; by striking a facility that meets the current and inserting the following: “a facility that— meets the current ; and by adding at the end the following: incorporates economically justifiable improvements that will mitigate the risk of recurring damage from extreme weather, flooding, and other natural disasters. ; by redesignating paragraph
(3)as paragraph (4); and by inserting after paragraph
(2)the following: The cost of an improvement that is part of a project under this section shall be an eligible expense under this section if the improvement is a protective feature that will mitigate the risk of recurring damage or the cost of future repair from extreme weather, flooding, and other natural disasters. A protective feature referred to in subparagraph
(A)includes— raising roadway grades; relocating roadways in a floodplain to higher ground above projected flood elevation levels or away from slide prone areas; stabilizing slide areas; stabilizing slopes; lengthening or raising bridges to increase waterway openings; increasing the size or number of drainage structures; replacing culverts with bridges or upsizing culverts; installing seismic retrofits on bridges; adding scour protection at bridges, installing riprap, or adding other scour, stream stability, coastal, or other hydraulic countermeasures, including spur dikes; and the use of natural infrastructure to mitigate the risk of recurring damage or the cost of future repair from extreme weather, flooding, and other natural disasters. .
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