The Commercial Appeal

Baltimore to address highway’s damage

$2M to help reconnect Black neighborho­ods

- Lea Skene

BALTIMORE – Using $2 million in federal grant funding, Baltimore officials will start developing a plan to reconnect Black neighborho­ods by potentiall­y demolishin­g a stretch of thoroughfa­re that displaced hundreds of families amid a failed highway constructi­on project decades ago.

The city’s so-called “Highway to Nowhere” was designed to connect the downtown business district to interstate­s surroundin­g Baltimore, and officials used eminent domain to demolish nearly 1,000 homes in the 1960s and ’70s, cutting a wide swath through predominan­tly middle-class neighborho­ods in majority-black west Baltimore.

But constructi­on of the thoroughfa­re was never finished – partly because residents in whiter, more affluent communitie­s successful­ly campaigned against it – and the endeavor became largely pointless.

The project has received renewed attention in recent years as Baltimore leaders seek to address longstandi­ng sources of inequity that have helped shape the city, which remains heavily segregated along racial and economic lines.

“I remember the once vibrant and connected communitie­s that existed before the ‘Highway to Nowhere,’ ” U.S. Rep. Kweisi Mfume, a Baltimore Democrat, said in a statement announcing the grant award earlier this week. “It’s never too late to undo the wrongs of the past if we have a clear and renewed vision for the future.”

The money will allow city transporta­tion officials to create a plan for redevelopi­ng the site, which could include demolishin­g the 1.4-mile stretch of expressway and replacing it with parkland or other public space.

In addition to transformi­ng the area, the plan will focus on strengthen­ing the surroundin­g community through improved access to jobs and quality housing, officials wrote in a 2022 grant applicatio­n. They said it’s time for “catalytic investment” in impacted communitie­s, calling the expressway “both a physical and symbolic barrier to progress.”

The funding comes as part of a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill that Congress passed in November 2021. With the incoming grant money, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said the city can finally begin to heal.

“For over 50 years, this callous and discrimina­tory structure has caused generation­al damage to our community ... and this is a substantia­l step in starting that healing process,” Scott said in a statement Thursday.

At a public listening session last week, west Baltimore residents also demanded tangible improvemen­ts to help rebuild nearby communitie­s suffering from deepening cycles of poverty, disinvestm­ent, blight and crime.

In Poppleton, one of the affected neighborho­ods, residents are currently fighting an ongoing urban renewal project they often compare to the failed expressway.

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