PITTSBURGH — Nearly three months after a Port Authority bus was partially swallowed by a sinkhole in Downtown Pittsburgh, the city is getting its first bills for the damage.
[ PREVIOUS STORY: Unexpected damage halts repairs to massive downtown sinkhole that swallowed PAT bus ]
Pittsburgh City Council began consideration Tuesday on an $88,150 bill from Allegheny Crane Rental for the emergency removal of the bus on 10th Street in October. Council members are expected to approve the bill in the coming weeks, and they know this is just the beginning.
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City and PWSA officials say they have no estimate on what the final total will be.
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It took less than 24 hours to pull the bus out of the sinkhole, and costs continue to pile up as work remains at a standstill.
“We’re doing all of our best to fix it as expeditiously as possible, but there’s a lot of repair to be done,” said councilman Dan Lavelle.
[ Timeline: Downtown Pittsburgh sinkhole repairs ]
The city is still waiting on repairs to an underground tunnel that provides steam to heat downtown businesses before they can continue to fix the street. That will take until early February, at which point the city will determine if 10th Street is ready for paving.
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