Posted Apr 16, 2024, 1:56 PM
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FYHA
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Houston - Wichita, KS
Posts: 3,218
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https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/a...officials-say/
Quote:
Accident like tragic Baltimore bridge incident unlikely to happen at Houston ports, officials say
The tragic incident has prompted questions about whether something like that could happen in the port of Houston, and whether there’s anything that port can do to help.
Ariel Worthy
Posted On March 29, 2024, 5:17 PM
The Port of Baltimore remains closed, likely for a while after this week’s deadly collision, causing the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
The tragic incident has prompted questions about whether something like that could happen in the port of Houston, and whether there’s anything that port can do to help.
Houston Matters' Michael Hagerty spoke to the executive director of the Port of Houston, Roger Guenther.
Port Houston’s chairman Ric Campo said on Tuesday during the Port Commission’s monthly meeting that Port Houston was ready to help Baltimore as much as it could. Guenther said he had reached out to the executive director of the Maryland ports but had not heard back yet.
"I’m sure they’re quite consumed, but all ports are important in the country, and you know there’s a lot of camaraderie amongst ports," Guenther said. "We all know each other and it’s usual you look at times of when ports have hurricanes and disasters, we’re all there to support one another. This is a little different, but we’ve reached out there to support any way that we can."
Guenther said ports in Maryland are an "economic driver" just as they are in the Houston area.
"All of a sudden it’s shutdown, jobs are certainly on hold for a long time because they're not working any cargo," he said. "It's very impactful to that community."
Guenther said re-routing traffic from the Maryland ports will likely not affect the Port of Houston.
"The cargo is scheduled to come and go. There’s other ports in that region. You know, that’s the main thing is the ocean carriers and the shippers are rapidly looking to go to places that are closer," he said, adding that areas like New York, Wilmington, and Norfolk are closer options for Maryland.
Guenther said the Baltimore bridge incident has caused conversations about how safety looks in Houston.
"We always are having risk management and safety at the top of our minds," Guenther said. "From what the pilots and the Coast Guard talk about, our bridge structures are pretty much isolated from something like that. But you know, we’ve got the busiest waterway in the nation and we’re putting a lot of effort into improving that Channel for safety."
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