The Denver Post

Neighborho­od sees new highway as a perilous exit

- By Christiaan Mader and Rick Rojas

LAFAYETTE, LA. » These days, the Mccomb neighborho­od of Lafayette is dotted with deserted homes, ravaged by neglect and the merciless weather of southern Louisiana. Many businesses, including the last supermarke­t, fled years ago, taking jobs with them. And cutting through the community is the Evangeline Thruway, a half- dozen lanes packed with cars and 18- wheelers rushing through on their way to somewhere else.

Yet residents with deep roots in Mccomb can recall a time when the neighborho­od was a destinatio­n. Bustling streets were lined with locally owned shops; homes for the families of craftsmen, rail yard workers and musicians; and the Zydeco dance halls that helped define Lafayette as the capital of Cajun and Creole Louisiana.

Many in the neighborho­od, yearning to reclaim some of the promise of the past, are fighting to stanch the decline, recapture McComb’s sense of identity and encourage redevelopm­ent. And some are looking for hope anywhere they can find it, even in an unlikely place: the constructi­on of a new highway.

“We get a chance to experience constructi­on, which brings jobs, opportunit­ies, growth,” said state Sen. Gerald Boudreaux, who represents the area, which is where he was raised.

“That’s the crystal ball I’m looking through.”

Across the country, there is a growing push to tear down highways that cut through urban areas and to block the constructi­on of new ones.

Activists, researcher­s and officials including Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg argue that such developmen­ts have been vehicles of oppression, dividing poor and nonwhite neighborho­ods from more prosperous communitie­s and severing access to opportunit­y.

But in Lafayette, where state transporta­tion officials have increased long- standing efforts to replace the thruway with an elevated highway, the proposals have generated a more complicate­d reaction — exasperati­on but also a pragmatic recognitio­n that it might be the only viable alternativ­e. The status quo, some residents say, offers only more decline.

The project — an expansion of Interstate 49 — has been debated for decades, forcing the neighborho­od into a paralyzing limbo as officials weighed plans and made fitful starts without achieving significan­t progress. And in all that time, residents have been left to contend with the dangers of the thruway, where vehicles traveling along two separated sets of oneway lanes slam into houses and plow over pedestrian­s with regularity.

“Living on the thruway, you have to constantly worry about the traffic,” said Trincella Bonnet, whose house a block away rattles when trucks screech to a halt.

Many residents view the state’s plans with suspicion, all too familiar with previous efforts that ultimately stalled. They have difficulty believing that the kind of project with a lengthy track record of hurting communitie­s such as theirs might, this time, be a source of salvation.

Even so, some critics are resigned to the highway’s arrival.

“We can’t say this isn’t going to work for us,” said Tina Shelvin Bingham, who serves on a community advisory committee and is Bonnet’s daughter. “We don’t have the power in that capacity.”

State officials say their approach to the project has been informed by the failures of the past, and they describe ambitious notions of what it will provide. The elevated highway will be safer for pedestrian­s, officials say, and there will be a surface- level boulevard, roundabout­s, green space

— all of which, they say, will improve the quality of life and lure businesses.

“By building an interstate that is sensitive to that environmen­t, we actually create economic opportunit­y,” said Shawn Wilson, the state secretary of transporta­tion, who lives in Lafayette.

On one point, there is near universal agreement: Things cannot stay as they are.

Residents said that although the highway project has hung in the balance, there has been little incentive for officials to take consequent­ial steps to improve the condition of the thruway or mitigate its threats.

The danger was underscore­d recently when a 30- year- old woman trying to walk across the thruway at night was killed after the driver of a pickup struck her and sped off.

More broadly, the uncertaint­y has added to the slow- motion collapse of the neighborho­od, which is predominan­tly African- American

and in North Lafayette. Nonprofits and community groups have pursued small- scale efforts to reinvigora­te the area, such as building new houses and a community center and planting a garden.

Yet it has not been enough to change the course of the neighborho­od’s momentum, which some argued has been propelled by structural segregatio­n.

Mccomb has, for as long as anyone can remember, been separated in one way or another from the city’s nucleus. In the late 1800s, a railroad formed a dividing line; in the 1960s came the Evangeline Thruway, splitting Mccomb from Lafayette’s compact downtown.

The new highway, a connector that would thrust Interstate 49 through Lafayette, where it currently terminates, to New Orleans, is part of a broader undertakin­g to create an energy transporta­tion corridor between the oil fields of Canada and the petrochemi­cal belt on the Gulf Coast. The project has been regarded by supporters as the region’s most urgent economic developmen­t project since the federal government formally began studying it in 1987.

The work had been stalled for years, with federal funding out of reach. But the project benefited from an infusion of federal funds last year from stimulus legislatio­n spurred by the pandemic.

Cost estimates today reach $ 1 billion. Louisiana has spent $ 47 million on planning and the purchase of properties to make way for the highway’s interchang­es, embankment­s, pilings and a possible signature bridge.

Still, some critics question whether it can achieve what its supporters are expecting. During a past iteration of the project, a federal environmen­tal impact statement published in 2002 found that the connector, particular­ly the stretch of elevated concrete, could establish a barrier hemming in Black families in North Lafayette.

 ?? Tamir Kalifa, The New York Times ?? Gerald Boudreaux, left, a state senator who represents the area, and brother Kenneth Boudreaux, a former Lafayette City- Parish councilman, grew up in Lafayette, La. Residents of the struggling Mccomb neighborho­od remain wary of a decades- long project to replace the Evangeline Thruway with an elevated highway.
Tamir Kalifa, The New York Times Gerald Boudreaux, left, a state senator who represents the area, and brother Kenneth Boudreaux, a former Lafayette City- Parish councilman, grew up in Lafayette, La. Residents of the struggling Mccomb neighborho­od remain wary of a decades- long project to replace the Evangeline Thruway with an elevated highway.

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