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Biden in Portland Touts Public Works

President sees quake-resistant runway coming from infrastructure bill

President Joe Biden listens as he tours a construction area Thursday at Portland International Airport. The president was visiting the Pacific Northwest by focusing on improvements made possible by his infrastructure bill, including the airport’s planned quake-resistant runway and mass timber roof utilizing the latest technologies. (AP photo)


(AP) — President Joe Biden focused on improvements planned for the runway and roof at Portland International Airport Thursday where he landed Thursday to promote public works projects made possible by his infrastructure bill.


The airport lies on a tectonic plate fault line but is working on a series of modernizations, including a new, earthquake-resistant runway capable of accommodating jets coming and going even after a major natural disaster. The design is modeled after the runway of the Sendai airport in Japan, which Biden said he’d visited and which survived the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in that country.


The trip is Biden’s first as president to the Pacific Northwest and comes as he has increased travel across the U.S. to tout the $1 trillion, bipartisan infrastructure bill his administration backed and Congress approved last fall.


The president has been trying to promote the idea that he’s successfully advanced key policy goals — including providing badly needed funding for long-neglected public works projects around the country — despite Republicans in Congress opposing many of the White House’s priorities at every turn.

“We’ve fallen behind. We haven’t invested in ourselves,” Biden said in a speech during which he noted that the public works package includes $25 billion to modernize airports across America. “It bothers the heck out of me that there’s this belief that we can’t do big things anymore. We can.”


He added: “America invented modern aviation, but a lot of our airports are far behind our competitors.”


Before his remarks, Biden was attentive to the workers as they explained how the improvements would increase resiliency and energy efficiency. Officials are spending $2 billion on the airport revamp, including upgrades to the complex’s roof whose new sections will be primarily made of wood.


The roof is being disassembled into 20 sections and then pieced back together over the terminal, which Democratic Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley called “an incredible investment in mass timber.”


Among those on-hand was Oregon Democratic Rep. Peter DeFazio, who said, “I’ve been fighting my entire career for investments that will rebuild our nation’s crumbling infrastructure.” He said the U.S. continues to face systemic challenges, including “an economy that rewards wealth instead of work.”


Biden planned to attend two Democratic Party fundraisers Thursday evening in Portland before visiting Seattle on Friday. There, he’ll mark Earth Day by speaking about a need to bolster the nation’s resilience in the face of threats like wildfire, and a need to rapidly deploy clean energy, the White House said.


Biden called the infrastructure law “a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build on these actions and accelerate our nation’s ability to confront the environmental and climate challenges we face.”


“For the future of our planet, for our health, and for our children and grandchildren, we must act now,” the president said in a statement.

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