fuel. you get six miles a gallon. if you have to go 15 miles out of your way, that adds up quickly. especially if you do it two or three times a day. suzanne: delegate norton says this is about the infrastructure throughout the country. she says it s time for congress to fund long-term transportation measure. if you needed a poignant similarrable of the infrastructure similarrable of the infrastructure crisis we have one now. suzanne: a $3 million project will get underway and will be estimated to six to nine months. they will open all six lanes but only to the automotive traffic. weight restrictions will stay in place indefinitely. reporting live suzanne kennedy, abc7 news. alison: the last major inspection of the bridge started in february 2013. two months later, the bridge was at the end of the lifecycle. we ll probably need to ban truck and bus action unless drastic action is taken. rebecca cooper has more on the bridge s history. rebecca? rebecca: memorial bridge
well, we will see those weekend plans affected especially on sunday. but today, we have the potential for some pop up thunderstorms, very similar to yesterday where we have the heat and humidity building. and then without a sufficient trigger to actually get the thunderstorms to bubble up and move, we ll just see isolated thunderstorms develop and then not move very much. so on 9 futurecast you can see a few of them in the mountains there but then starting to develop around the time you d be getting the kids off the bus and maybe starting to make those plans for dinner. and notice they don t move very far at all. this is three hours later still raining in the same areas. now are these storms going to develop exactly here in western fauquier county and up into northern montgomery county? maybe, maybe not. it s very hard to predict exactly where those storms are going to bubble up. but suffice it to say we will see isolated threat for thunderstorms through the rest of today.
spoke with the survivor. reporter: miguel rodriguez is out of the hospital and said the tragic chain of events was a result of road rage. they were leaving for work going into the district from virginia when life changed forever. with a bullet lodged in his jaw an emotional miguel rodriguez cries for the loss of his brother-in-law 50-year-old pedro alvarado. the two men drove together every day to work at a construction site, but yesterday they would never make it to work. their commute ended abruptly on 295 northbound in d.c. in a hail of bullets. alvarado s life ended there. miguel who was the passenger survived. he said it was road rage and they were being followed before the barrage of bullets. in this interview you ll see first on 9 he says there was no confrontational encounter before. the violence was all on their side. neither one of us he says did anything violent. he says he only saw a hispanic man between 20 to 25 years old with short hair, but he says he was ben
survival story. how did american newlyweds manage to stay alive as a volcano erupted around them? plus cbs news flies over the danger zone tonight as fears grow it could erupt again. just look at that plume. this is the closest we can get to the volcano. o donnell: suing over safety. a little girl dies after falling from her grandfather s arms. tonight her grieving parents file suit, saying the cruise line is to blame. and profiles in service. from afghanistan to the ivy league, a former navy seal s new mission and the partner he says makes it possible. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell. reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening. thank you so much for joining us. police in new jersey say they found a pipe bomb at the scene of that deadly shootout in new jersey tuesday. newly released surveillance video suggests the shooters, a man and woman, targeted a kosher
market, wielding rifles as people on the street took off running. before it wa
third place in north carolina. we can see on the ground there is a ton of excitement and a great ground game, and i spent a lot of time in both states, so my campaign is doing really well. i m about to show america that i can pull it together with a diverse coalition of democrats, not just win the nomination, but to beat donald trump in the fa fall. bill: first thing is first, will you be on the stage tuesday night in south carolina? yes or no? yes. bill: you have spent upwards of $267 million? so michael bloomberg is outpacing you by $409 million. how much when money are you willing to spend? look, bill, my opinion about the race and the reason i got into the race is i believe it is absolutely critical for america to take back our government from the corporations that bought it. i believe we are in a crossroads. it cannot be more important. you are asking me about money, and i am answering you about commitment. i would not be in this race if i did not think it was cr