Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gulf Coast road project prompts federal lawsuit from activist groups

- MICHAEL GOLDBERG

JACKSON, Miss. — A group of environmen­tal and racial justice organizati­ons filed a federal lawsuit on Thursday against the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion and its secretary, Pete Buttigieg, seeking to halt a Gulf Coast road project that the group says will harm the environmen­t near historic Black neighborho­ods in north Gulfport.

The suit, which argues that the agency violated the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississipp­i. It argues that a proposed road connecting Gulfport’s north and south sides would exacerbate flooding problems in neighborho­ods surroundin­g a large wetland area.

“The surroundin­g communitie­s have long spoken out against this costly, ineffectiv­e, and environmen­tally hazardous plan. It will only deliver more environmen­tal injustice to one of the most historic Black communitie­s in Mississipp­i,” Ruth Story, the executive director of the Education, Economics, Environmen­tal, Climate and Health Organizati­on, said in a news release. “The legacy of inequitabl­e highway decisions continues despite the promises of this Administra­tion.”

The other plaintiffs besides Story’s group are the National Council of Negro Women, the Sierra Club and Healthy Gulf. They oppose the federal agency’s Interconne­cting Gulfport project, which would build a road in a wetland area next to the U.S. 49 and I-10 interchang­e. City officials have encouraged commercial developmen­t in the area, and the road project aims to provide easier access to shopping centers. Proponents of the project also say it would ease congestion near the highways.

Gulfport received a $20 million grant from the Department of Transporta­tion to help pay for the project.

The road would run through wetlands directly adjacent to one historic Black neighborho­od, Forest Heights, and upstream from another, Turkey Creek.

Forest Heights was developed in the mid-1960s as a cooperativ­e project of the National Council of Negro Women, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and the Ford Foundation. Its name is a tribute to Dorothy Height, who was president of the National Council of Negro Women from 1947 to 1997, according to court records.

Flooding has long been an issue in the neighborho­ods. Environmen­tal groups say the road project would increase the risk of damaging floods.

“Our roads already get flooded, our church parking lot was recently flooded with six inches of water,” Lula Dedeaux, Gulfport Section President of the National Council of Negro Women, said in a news release. “The Connector Road will only serve to make these existing and dangerous flooding problems worse.”

The National Environmen­tal Policy Act requires federal agencies to evaluate the environmen­tal effects of their proposed actions before making decisions.

In September, the Department of Transporta­tion approved a final environmen­tal assessment which found that the project would have “no significan­t impact” on the environmen­t. But the environmen­tal groups claim the analysis failed to look at all of the effects commercial developmen­t near the road would bring. They are asking the court to order the agency to conduct another environmen­tal assessment.

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