Chicago Sun-Times

America’s infrastruc­ture splurge should begin with Pullman and other Midwest national parks

- BY JOHN PLONSKI A volunteer for national parks, John Plonski is a former city manager and executive for Pennsylvan­ia’s state parks and forests.

President Joe Biden says he wants to invest an extra $579 billion in highways, bridges, railroads and alternativ­e energy as part of his massive infrastruc­ture renewal proposal.

Here’s where the president should start: In the cities of America’s heartland, such as Chicago, and their neighborin­g national parks. This is a region that has lagged behind when it comes to jobs creation and income growth. It could use the economic surge.

For northern industrial cities such as Chicago, Scranton and Gary that are gateways to national parks, an effective way to leverage new federal infrastruc­ture funding would be to link the needs of those towns with the deferred maintenanc­e projects of the nearby parks.

Our national parks have a $12 billion deferred maintenanc­e backlog. Dangerous roads and crumbling bridges are common in virtually all 423 national park sites, according to a recent National Park Service report. In response, Congress stepped up last year to restore the parks through The Great American Outdoors Act. So Biden already has money available to implement a major infrastruc­ture initiative — one for national parks.

Working hand in hand with this effort, the US. Department of Transporta­tion could aim initial infrastruc­ture upgrades at communitie­s that are gateways to national parks. By melding renewal programs for the parks with infrastruc­ture upgrades for the communitie­s that adjoin the parks, NPS and DOT could get more bang for the buck.

In Chicago, work to refurbish the Pullman National Monument requires more than $13 million in upgrades to buildings and grounds.

The first planned industrial community in the United States, Pullman was the site of two historic labor events that helped shape the union labor movement in the nation. Violent strikes over pay erupted in 1894, pitting the Pullman company, which manufactur­ed luxury railroad sleeping cars, against the American Railway Union.

Decades later, in 1937, the Brotherhoo­d of Sleeping Car Porters won the first major labor agreement in the United States that benefited African Americans. In an article written for an NPS publicatio­n, Alesha Cerny called this agreement “one of the most important markers since Reconstruc­tion toward African American independen­ce from racist paternalis­m.”

While the National Park Service pursues an eco-friendly restoratio­n of historic Pullman, perhaps the Department of Transporta­tion could fund a series of electric vehicle (EV) recharging stations along Interstate­s 94 and 57 and other roadways leading to Pullman. This action would attract EV drivers, who are always searching for refueling stations. Tourism on Chicago’s South Side, including at the Pullman National Monument, would get a boost, while air quality would be improved at the Pullman site and throughout the national park gateway community of greater Chicago.

Elsewhere in the Midwest, Indiana Dunes National Park requires $27.8 million to repair infrastruc­ture. Restoratio­n of NPS resources in the park might be complement­ed by federal transporta­tion aid for the Bike and Pedestrian Plan Project in Gary, Indiana. Improvemen­ts could reduce bicycle accidents and provide a nonpolluti­ng way around the city.

Looking forward, the DOT could encourage a bike trail extension from Gary to the Indiana Dunes National Park. This would give urban residents access to the park’s 15 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline. DOT Secretary Pete Buttigieg, an avid proponent of bike use and safety, might consider the Gary-to-National Park bike trail extension as a model for the rest of the country.

Why not launch President Biden’s infrastruc­ture initiative where it is needed most — in America’s industrial heartland? It could bring national parks and their gateway cities together to jump-start crucial environmen­tal, historical and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture renewal. It would also promote necessary investment in cleanenerg­y modes of transporta­tion such as rail, bicycle and electric vehicles.

A number of national parks might finally reach their full potential while disadvanta­ged communitie­s in parks’ gateway cities flex their rebuild muscles. In a post-COVID world, this plan’s winning formula could help our nation become vibrant and secure once again.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? The clock tower at Pullman National Monument, on Chicago’s South Side.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES The clock tower at Pullman National Monument, on Chicago’s South Side.

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