. . . what Matty doesn't want us to see in a bridge inspection report that exceeds 700 pages.

Bill Shea is the first [[again) to report:
John Dingell is making a copy of a 2007 Ambassador Bridge inspection report available for media review at his Dearborn office on Thursday morning.

. . . “Congressman Dingell believes that this report and other inspection reports for privately-owned bridges should be available to the public in the same manner as reports for publicly-owned bridges.”
Reporters, who'll get a 17-page digest of "the most important information contained in the report” and can look at the whole thing, are asked to honor an embargo until 3 p.m.