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Washington bridge collapse a major break in trade corridor

A boat cruises past the scene of a bridge collapse on Interstate 5 on May 23, 2013 near Mt. Vernon, Washington. 1-5 connects Seattle, Washington to Vancouver, B.C., Canada. Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

SEATTLE – For farmers, business owners and government officials up and down the West Coast, Washington’s bridge collapse on Interstate 5 represents much more than a close brush with tragedy. As much as $20 billion in freight travels to and from Canada and along the busy north-south corridor each year.

People in Canada won’t go hungry if they have to go without Washington apples being trucked to them. But the director of the Border Policy Research Institute at Western Washington University says American apple farmers may feel a pinch.

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Don Alper says the economic impact from the bridge collapse will spread farther than Western Washington.

The Canadian border north of Bellingham is the nation’s fourth busiest land border ports of entry to the north.

Many of the goods crossing that border stay in Washington state, and some stop before the collapsed bridge. But Alper says close to $10 billion in freight involves business as far away as California and Mexico.

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