As a Bridge Street resident, Werner Liepolt has followed the Cribari Bridge project closely. He writes:
Many people in Westport wonder: Could this project change the kind of traffic that moves through our neighborhood — especially trucks?
It’s a legitimate question. And it’s more important than it might seem, because the answer is not just a matter of opinion or preference. It is supposed to be part of a federal review process.
Westport has been here before. From the construction of I-95 to earlier debates over the bridge itself, residents have long wrestled with how large infrastructure decisions affect the character of their neighborhoods. Past leaders have emphasized the importance of seeing full information and hearing public input before major decisions are made.

The Cribari Bridge. (Photo/Wendy Crowther)
That expectation — that process should be clear, transparent and responsive — remains just as important today.
Four key groups are involved in the process.
The Connecticut Department of Transportation (CTDOT) designs the project and prepares the Environmental Assessment, and identifies potential impacts (traffic, right-of-way, neighborhood effects).
The State Historic Preservation Office reviews impacts on historic properties and districts, and participates in Section 106 consultation.
The Federal Highway Administration ensures compliance with federal law; oversees environmental and public review, and must consider and respond to public comments before decisions are made.
The public (residents and consulting parties) provides comments and local knowledge; raises concerns, and becomes part of the official record agencies must consider.
Each of these roles matters. The process works best when every part is carried out fully and transparently.

One way to make sense of the process is to translate the terminology into plain language.
A federal law (the National Environmental Policy Act)requires that before a project is approved, agencies must look carefully not just at what will be built, but at what may change because it is built.
That includes traffic patterns, safety, noise, and how a place is experienced over time.
So when residents ask whether a new bridge might change traffic — possibly including truck patterns — that is not outside the process. It is the kind of question the process is supposed to answer.

When there is an issue on I-95, traffic backs up on Bridge Street. (Photo/Werner Liepolt)
At the March 19 public hearing, another issue brought the question of process into sharper focus.
It surprised many to hear that approximately 10 properties and a dock may be affected by right-of-way acquisition. Yet no map or specific identification of those properties was presented.
Moments like that can be unsettling — not because projects never have impacts, but because understanding those impacts is essential to meaningful public participation.
When information emerges late or without clear context, residents may wonder whether they are seeing the full picture, or how their own property or neighborhood might be affected.
That too is part of what the review process is intended to address: ensuring that potential impacts are clearly identified and available for public understanding before decisions are finalized.
Because Cribari sits within the Bridge Street Historic District, another federal requirement also applies: Section 106.

Bridge Street is part of a Historic District.
This part of the process asks a different but related question: How might a project affect not just a structure, but the character of a historic place?
To answer that, agencies define an Area of Potential Effects — the area where the project could reasonably have an impact.
If a project could change traffic patterns beyond the immediate footprint of the bridge, it is reasonable to ask whether the area being studied should also be broader.
If right-of-way acquisition is under consideration, it may also be appropriate to consider whether those properties should be clearly identified and included in the analysis.
There is also a sequence to how these decisions are supposed to be made. The process is not decide → build → address concerns later.
Instead, it is meant to proceed in this order:
- Avoid impacts where possible.
- Minimize impacts where they cannot be avoided.
- Mitigate impacts as a last step.
If that sounds like common sense, it is. It is also federal regulation.
At a December 18 meeting, discussion appeared to move quickly toward potential mitigation measures associated with a replacement bridge. Options such as relocating the existing structure were raised, and demolition was referenced as an alternative.
While mitigation is an important part of the process, it is intended to follow a full consideration of ways to avoid or minimize impacts. When the conversation centers on mitigation before those earlier steps are clearly resolved, it can give the impression that key outcomes are already taking shape, rather than remaining open to evaluation.

The Cribari Bridge is 143 years old. (Photo/Robbie Guimond)
A petition requesting federal oversight of this process has gathered about 1,500 signatures in a matter of weeks.
The purpose of that petition is sometimes misunderstood. It is not asking that a particular outcome be imposed, nor is it opposing infrastructure improvement.
Rather, it reflects a shared concern that potential impacts — especially those that extend beyond the bridge itself — be fully and transparently evaluated before decisions are made.
It is a request that the existing federal review process be applied as intended.
As the Cribari Bridge project has evolved, the design has become more defined and more aligned with current engineering standards. That is a natural and expected part of any infrastructure project.
At the same time, some residents are asking whether the analysis of potential impacts — particularly indirect effects like changes in traffic — has evolved at the same pace.

That is not an argument against the project. It is a question about whether the process is keeping up with the project.
It is also understandable that some residents feel the process can be difficult to follow, or that decisions may be moving ahead of public understanding.
At the beginning of the March 19 public comment session, attendees were directed to provide comments at tables for transcription. As the session unfolded, speakers instead came forward to the podium to offer comments directly.
Moments like this can add to uncertainty about how best to participate. Clarity in how public input is received is an important part of ensuring that residents feel their voices are heard — and that their comments become part of the official record.
The public comment period exists for exactly this reason. It is one of the few points at which residents can ask that questions be fully addressed before decisions are finalized, rather than after.

Home page of the Connecticut Department of Transportation Cribari Bridge website.
The comments residents submit become part of the official record that federal agencies are required to review and respond to.
That is how the process is designed to work. It works best when people use it.
You do not need to master the terminology, and you do not need to agree with your neighbor on every point.
But if you are concerned about how this project could affect traffic, safety or the character of the neighborhood, there is a simple and meaningful way to participate: Ask that the impacts be fully studied before decisions are made.
Even a short, clear and respectful comment helps ensure that those concerns are considered as part of the process. Comments become part of the official record that federal agencies must review and respond to before moving forward
In the end, this is not only about a bridge. It is about how decisions are made, how places are understood, and how communities participate in shaping what comes next.
That participation does not require expertise — only a willingness to ask the right questions at the right time.
Public comment on the Cribari Bridge project (#0158-0214) is open through April 17. Comments can be made online (click here); by email (James.Barrows@ct.gov); voicemail (860-594-2020), or mail (James Barrows, 2800 Berlin Turnpike, Newington, CT 06131).
To learn more about the Cribari Bridge project, click here.
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