Delaware River

$4 toll? It's a bargain

Motorists irate about tolls possibly rising to $4 on the Ben Franklin and other Delaware River Port Authority bridges should consider the round-trip cost when the Franklin bridge opened in July 1926: 50 cents, or $6.12 in today’s dollars.

Using three or more horses with your carriage cost 80 cents, or the equivalent of $9.79 today. The toll for leading your horse, mule, cow, hog or sheep was 40 cents, or $4.90.

The Delaware River Bridge, as it was called, was a joint project between Pennsylvania and New Jersey. New Jersey favored tolls, while Pennsylvania and Philadelphia wanted the bridge “to remain forever free.” To get the bridge built, Pennsylvania relented.  read more »


Rendell Vows to Honor Dredging Deal

Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell is seeking to reassure New Jersey Governor Corzine that he’s not reneging on a deal between the two states that enables dredging of the Delaware River to proceed.

The ink was barely dry on an agreement between the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority and the Army Corps of Engineers when fresh controversy erupted over the dredging project. The Army Corps said it was not bound by a key element of a deal that broke a deadlock between New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and said it might dump dredged material at federally-approved sites in New Jersey. Governor Rendell says he understands why Governor Corzine is upset:  read more »


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