Video: Sen. Fetterman struggles with words, wears hoodie, shorts to I-95 rebuilding event with President Biden

Video: Sen. Fetterman struggles with words, wears hoodie, shorts to I-95 rebuilding event with President Biden



Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), wearing a hoodie, shorts, and sneakers, repeatedly stumbled over words as he delivered a short speech alongside President Biden and other elected officials Saturday.

"[President Biden] is here to commit to work with the governor and the delegadation [sic] to make sure that we get this fixed quick, fast, as well, too," Sen. Fetterman said, referring to efforts underway to repair a portion of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia that collapsed Sunday.

At the beginning of roughly 85-second speech, he noted he had stood beside President Biden "a little over a year ago" when a different structure, Fern Hollow Bridge, collapsed in the western portion of the Keystone State in January 2022.

"That bridge was built in less than a year, well well in front of time."

"This is a president that is committed to infrucsure [sic], yeah, and then on then top of that the jewel kind of uh, uh law," he said, apparently struggling to pronounce "infrastructure." It is unclear what he meant by "jewel."

"The infration [sic] infruc [sic] yeah infration [sic] bill that is gonna make sure that there's gonna be bridges all across like this all across America getting rebuilt," he said, possibly referring to the infrastructure bill signed in 2021 or the Inflation Reduction Act signed in December 2022.

He ended the very short address by introducing "my friend Congressman Boya Bile [sic]," at which point Rep. Brendan Boyle took the podium.

Reps. Boyle, Casey, and Fetterman announced $3 million in emergency funding for the I-95 collapse Thursday.

Sen. Fetterman suffered a stroke in May 2022. He was hospitalized February 15 for depression, and received treatment at Walter Reed Medical Center for roughly six weeks. Fetterman returned to the Senate April 17.

Sen. Fetterman was wearing a steel blue Carhartt hoodie, athletic shorts, and sneakers to Saturday's "Rebuilding I-95" event. The other members of the delegation were dressed more formally, in suits, with some foregoing ties. Fetterman has regularly been seen in wearing outfits similar to the one he wore today while on the job in Washington, D.C.

A portion of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia collapsed Sunday, as TheBlaze reported. The crucial interstate will be reopened within the next two weeks, Gov. Shapiro said during the event.

Watch the press conference below during which Sen. Fetterman (D-Pa.) appears in a hoodie, basketball shorts, and sneakers alongside President Biden, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro (D), and other officials to discuss efforts to rebuild portions of Interstate 95 that collapsed Sunday. Sen. Fetterman's portion begins at 11:50.



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Breaking: Portion of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia collapses as tanker burns beneath overpass



A portion of Interstate 95 collapsed Sunday morning as a tanker burned beneath an overpass in northeast Philadelphia, WPVI reported.

"This morning, a large tanker truck fire under I-95 near the Cottman Avenue exit in Northeast Philadelphia caused a portion of the highway to collapse. Pennsylvania State Police closed I-95 in both directions around the area," Sarah Peterson, Communications Director for Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney's office told TheBlaze in a statement Sunday morning.

"The fire is under control and City and state agencies are responding to address impacts to residents in the area and travelers affected by the road closure. We will share more details as they become available."

All lanes were closed on both the northbound and southbound sides of I-95, Pennsylvania's Department of Transportation announced in separate tweets around 6:40 a.m.

A photo shared by Fox 29 on Twitter shows a knot of vehicles stopped just ahead of a massive plume of smoke on the northbound side of I-95 near the Cottman and Academy Road exits.

\u201cHAPPENING NOW: Huge tanker truck fire underneath of I-95 near Cottman and Academy Rd exits causes highway to partially collapse on the northbound side. I-95 is currently closed in both directions. Avoid the area and use alternate routes.\u201d
— FOX 29 (@FOX 29) 1686482536

"SkyFox over the section of northbound I-95 that has collapsed in Philadelphia near the Cottman Ave. exit. A tanker truck in the underpass beneath 95 caused the North lanes to collapse & South have buckled down, too," wrote Fox 29 Philadelphia reporter Steve Keeley on Twitter.

Keeley appended overhead footage showing the collapsed section of highway with smoke and flames arising from beneath it.

\u201cVIDEO/BREAKING: SkyFOX over the section of northbound I-95 that has collapsed in Philadelphia near the Cottman Ave exit. A tanker truck in the underpass beneath 95 caused the North lanes above to collapse & South have buckled down too.\u201d
— Steve Keeley (@Steve Keeley) 1686487656

Details on injuries and a potential timeline for repair of the major thoroughfare are currently unknown.

Interstate 95 runs along the East Coast of the United States from Miami, Florida to Houlton, Maine, near Canada. It parallels the Delaware River though Philadelphia.

Philadelphia's Mayor Jim Kenney retweeted Philadelphia's Office of Emergency Management advising drivers to avoid the area and to expect delays.

The fire was out as of 7:30 a.m. and crews were assessing the damage, CBS News reported.

TheBlaze has reached out to Philadelphia Mayor Kenney for comment on this breaking story.

Watch coverage below from WPVI of the partial collapse of Interstate 95 as a truck burns beneath an overpass outside Philadelphia.



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'One of the kindest moments I have ever witnessed': Couple and bakery come to the aid of stranded I-95 drivers



Drivers along a 50-mile stretch of Interstate 95 in Virginia became trapped earlier this week because of ice and as much as a foot of snow that caused numerous vehicle wipeouts, including an accident involving six tractor-trailers. Hundreds of motorists were stranded on the highway overnight and were left high and dry without any food in below-freezing temperatures. Thanks to a perspicacious couple from Maryland and a generous bakery, dozens of deserted drivers were able to get some nourishment in a time of need.

Casey Holihan and her husband, John Noe, were stranded on I-95 in Virginia for nearly 21 hours after leaving their Ellicott City home on a trip to North Carolina to visit Noe's family. The trip was important since the couple departs for Germany next week as part of his job in the Air Force. It was the last chance to see his family for what could be years.

"It was definitely a very scary situation and we had no idea how long we would be there for," the 24-year-old Noe told WBAL-TV. "We went to bed that night in the car because we just couldn't go anywhere, we were exhausted from driving all day and being so stressed."

On Monday night, the couple slept in their car. The next morning there was no progress and no end in sight to the nightmare traffic dilemma. Holihan could hear crying children in nearby cars on I-95.

"Many of the people stuck out here had small children, were elderly, had pets in the car, and hadn’t eaten in almost a whole day," Holihan wrote in a Facebook post.

Holihan, 23, noticed that there was a delivery truck for Baltimore's Schmidt Baking Company in front of their vehicle, which sparked a long-shot idea.

"We stared at it for a long time fantasizing about bread," Holihan told the Baltimore Sun.

"(On) kind of on a whim, I just called the customer service line of Schmidt's Bread. I kind of begged them to open the back of the truck and just give us a couple loaves of bread so we could share with the people around us," Holihan told WBAL-TV.

After speaking to a customer service representative for 20 minutes, Holihan got the phone number for Chuck Paterakis – co-owner of the H&S Bakery, which owns Schmidt Baking Company. H&S Bakery is the nation’s largest privately owned bakery – selling bread to McDonald's and Popeyes as well as stores from Maine to Virginia.

Inside the truck were 8,000 loaves of bread and driver Ron Hill.

The 60-year-old Hill – who has been an independent truck driver for 14 years – said he has never seen anything like this week's I-95 backup.

"It was just different," Hill said. "I’m a veteran so I’m pretty much prepared for anything."

During the night, he slept in two-hour shifts – just enough to keep warm as the outside temperatures dipped into the teens, while still conserving diesel fuel to eventually drive the truck. However, the dire situation even caught up with Hill when there was no help the following morning.

"Tears started rolling down my eyes," Hill revealed, adding that he went into the back of his truck to pray.

That was when Hill heard a knock on his truck's door.

He saw Holihan, who gave him the message to "call Chuck." Hill recalled, "It was Chuck Paterakis. ... He said to pass out the bread."

Hill and the couple "passed out bread to more than 50 cars who were all incredibly thankful."

Paterakis said giving back to the community "is something that’s in our company values and it’s in our culture."

"If you don’t give back to the community … you as a company are not going to be able to succeed," he added.

Holihan thanked the bakery company for its "humanity and compassion."

"This was one of the kindest moments I have ever witnessed," Holihan concluded.