[Baltimore Sun] Work continues on Key Bridge on April 2, 2024 | PHOTOS

Read Time:6 Minute, 2 Second

April 2, 2024: The bow of the container ship Dali is seen in the wreckage of Francis Scott Key Bridge a week after it hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic bridge collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A hole is seen in the hull of the container ship Dali adjacent to the destroyed pier of the Francis Scott Key Bridge.. A week ago the ship hit the structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

April 2, 2024: The container ship Dali is seen in the wreckage of Francis Scott Key Bridge a week after it hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic bridge collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A 250-ton piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge sits on a barge after being cut from the wreckage. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: Pieces of roadway from the Francis Scott Key Bridge are seen in the fog on the Patapsco River. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

Apr 2, 2024: A 250-ton piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge sits on a barge after being cut from the wreckage. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A pair of salvage experts prepare to use a cutting torch on a piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a subsequent collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge sticks up from the Patapsco River after salvage experts cut a large section away. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

Apr 2, 2024: Pieces of the Francis Scott Key Bridge are seen in the fog on the Patapsco River. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: Pieces of the Francis Scott Key Bridge stick up from the Patapsco River after salvage experts cut a large section away. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A divers’s helmet sits on the deck of a barge as a salvage crew prepares to enter the water over the wreckage of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. A week ago the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

Apr 2, 2024: A light pole stands in the water among the wreckage of the Francis Scott Key Bridge a week after the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a catastrophic collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A pair of salvage experts use a cutting torch on a piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge a week after the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a subsequent collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
Apr 2, 2024: A pair of salvage experts use a cutting torch on a piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge a week after the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a subsequent collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

Apr 2, 2024: A pair of salvage experts use a cutting torch on a piece of the Francis Scott Key Bridge a week after the container ship Dali hit a structural pier causing a subsequent collapse. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)
April 2, 2024: Wreckage from the collapse of the Francis Scott Bridge washed up in Stoney Creek near Bay Drive on Friday, according to a resident of Riviera Beach. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)
April 2, 2024: Ernie Dimler, a resident of Sunset Beach, discovered a life preserver and fire extinguisher in Stoney Creek near his home on Monday. Dimler surmises these items may have come from the Dali, the container ship that crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge, because in his 30 years living here, he has never seen either item wash up before. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)

April 2, 2024: A fragment from what appears to be a pallet washes up in Stoney Creek. Ernie Dimler, a nearby resident of Sunset Beach who spotted the piece of wood, notes that the shiny nail visible on the base of the pallet is not rusted, indicating that it may be from the container ship Dali, which crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge last Monday. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)
Apr. 2, 2024: Finance Committee chair listens as Pamela Beidle listens as Senate President Bill Ferguson speaks about the Maryland Protecting Opportunities and Regional Trade (PORT) Act he and Sen. Johnny Ray Salling are sponsoring. The emergency bill would provide temporary economic relief to workers and businesses impacted by the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge and closure of the port. The bridge fell in Ferguson’s district in Baltimore City and Salling’s Baltimore County district. (Kim Hairston/Staff)
Apr. 2, 2024: Sen. Johnny Ray Salling and Senate President Bill Ferguson before a Finance Committee hearing on the Maryland Protecting Opportunities and Regional Trade (PORT) Act on Tuesday. The emergency bill would provide temporary economic relief to workers and businesses impacted by the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge and closure of the port. The bridge fell in Ferguson’s district in Baltimore City and Salling’s Baltimore County district. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

Apr. 2, 2024: Senate President Bill Ferguson listens as Sen. Johnny Ray Salling speaks about the Maryland Protecting Opportunities and Regional Trade (PORT) Act they are sponsoring. The emergency bill would provide temporary economic relief to workers and businesses impacted by the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge and closure of the port. The bridge fell in Ferguson’s district in Baltimore City and Salling’s Baltimore County district. (Kim Hairston/Staff)
Apr. 2, 2024: Sen. Clarence Lam listens as Senate President Bill Ferguson answers his question during a Finance Committee hearing on the Maryland Protecting Opportunities and Regional Trade (PORT) Act on Tuesday. Ferguson and Sen. Johnny Ray Salling are sponsoring the emergency bill to provide temporary economic relief to workers and businesses impacted by the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge and closure of the port. The bridge fell in Ferguson’s district in Baltimore City and Salling’s Baltimore County district. (Kim Hairston/Staff)
April 2, 2024: Gov. Wes Moore gestures at a rendering of the bridge collapse while explaining the depth of two temporary channels opened to get smaller vessels around the bridge collapse at a Tuesday news conference in Dundalk. (Dan Belson/Staff)

April 2, 2024: Gov. Wes Moore talks with Glenda Ellison as he meets personnel at the Small Business Administration’s Business Recovery Center in East Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)
April 2, 2024: Senator Ben Cardin, Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller and Gov. Wes Moore visit the Small Business Administration’s Business Recovery Center in East Baltimore. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)
April 2, 2024: Gov. Wes Moore visits representatives at the Small Business Administration’s Business Recovery Center. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

Read More 

About Post Author

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %