The William F. Cribari Memorial Bridge, a swing span built in 1884, carries state Route 136, or Bridge Street, over the Saugatuck River. / Photo by John Schwing

By John Schwing

WESTPORT — The public can comment this month on regional planners’ recommendation to restore funding for the final phase of design work to replace or rehabilitate the William F. Cribari Memorial Bridge in Saugatuck.

In-person and online meetings, hosted by the South Western Region Metropolitan Planning Organization, will take place next week. And comments can be filed until noon April 1 with that agency’s support group, the Western Connecticut Council of Governments.

Last month, the SWRMPO endorsed $4.1 million sought by the state Department of Transportation for the right-of-way and final design phase for the Cribari bridge’s rehabilitation or replacement in its updated statewide transportation improvement plan, or “TIP.”

The future of the 140-year-old swing bridge — carrying state Route 136, known locally as Bridge Street — over the Saugatuck River has been a flashpoint of controversy for decades.

Most recently, the DOT in 2015 classified the span as “severely deficient” and in need of extensive repairs or perhaps complete replacement. But after several years of debate, then-First Selectman Jim Marpe in 2017 asked regional planners to delete a request for rehab/replacement funds from the DOT until that agency completed an environmental assessment of various options, as well as seeking more local input about issues like traffic impact and the bridge’s historic value.

With completion of that assessment, at a Feb. 15 of WestCOG/SWRMPO, the DOT’s request to restore the design money was endorsed — with the proviso that before a final decision on the Cribari bridge’s future is made, the process would be open to public review and comments as plans evolve.

Read the draft version of the SWRMPO transportation improvement plan for 2025-28 by clicking here.

First Selectwoman Jennifer Tooker, who attended the WestCOG/SWRMPO meeting to underscore that point, said the DOT cannot release its environmental survey without the “administrative action” restoring design funds to the TIP.

The first selectwoman also took pains to emphasize the funding will pay only for design options, and not for actual work to repair or replace the bridge.

  • An in-person public information meeting on the draft SWRMPO 2025-28 transportation plans, including the Cribari bridge, will take place at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 12, in the Ferguson Library, 1 Public Library Plaza, Stamford.
  • An online meeting, via Zoom, is planned at noon Thursday, March 14. The Zoom meeting ID is: 835 3614 6030.
  • People planning to speak at either meeting are asked to register in advance, by contacting plan@westcog.org. Speakers should provide their names, as well as the subject they plan to comment on.
  • Comments on the Cribari bridge project also can be filed with WestCOG, until noon April 1, by mail at Western Connecticut Council of Governments, 1 Riverside Road, Sandy Hook, CT 06482; by email at plan@westcog.org, or by telephone at 475-323-2071.

The SWRMPO is expected to act on its updated transportation improvement plan at an April 18 meeting.