Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
California Lawmakers Aim to Reconnect Neighborhoods Torn Apart by Highways
gvw_calmatters
By CalMatters
Published 2 years ago on
March 4, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Lea este artículo en español.

A new select committee in the California Legislature will explore ways the state can reconnect neighborhoods that decades ago were torn apart by interstates and highways.


Wendy Fry
CalMatters

During the nation’s interstate highway construction boom in the 1950s and ’60s, numerous urban neighborhoods were sliced through, often isolating residential areas largely populated by minorities and low-income residents from surrounding communities — and from economic opportunity.

More than 1 million people lost their homes, researchers have estimated. Federal transportation officials noted that in the first 20 years after the 1957 Federal Highway Aid Act launched nationwide highway construction, more than 475,000 households were displaced.

Now local and state governments across the nation are exploring ways to undo some of that harm by finding ways to re-link some of those neighborhoods. Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon has appointed Assemblymember David Alvarez, a Democrat from San Diego, to chair a new Select Committee on Reconnecting Communities.

“Many communities, like Logan Heights and Sherman Heights, were devastated by the superhighway system,” Alvarez said in an interview, referring to San Diego neighborhoods. “I intend to focus the committee’s work on reconnecting neighbors and creating new opportunities, like park space and affordable housing.”

Roadways vs Neighborhoods

While the superhighway system connected cities and metro areas across the nation, allowing drivers and shippers to more efficiently traverse the country, communities of color and other under-resourced neighborhoods experienced fewer of the benefits from that system — such as interstate exits and transit hubs — while suffering the greatest harm, including isolation from job centers, more air pollution and the devastation of local business areas, experts say.

Gustavo Dallarda, Caltrans district director for San Diego and Imperial counties, said the state transportation agency is seeking new ways to make transportation part of the community “rather than something that runs through it.”

“Caltrans is evolving from prioritizing transportation efficiency to a people-first organization,” he said in an interview. “We have a heightened awareness of the impact our infrastructure has had on communities throughout the state …  including those in underserved neighborhoods.”

Federal money is on its way. U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla recently announced California will receive nearly $36 million from a pilot program aimed at reconnecting communities on a national level.

The federal program will fund planning, design, demolition, and reconstruction of street grids, parks, and other infrastructure to reconnect communities divided by transportation infrastructure.

Removing Barriers

Projects already slated for federal funding include:

  • $30 million for the City of Long Beach to reconfigure West Shoreline Drive to remove a roadway barrier and improve access and connectivity between Downtown Long Beach and a public open space
  •  $2 million to the City of Pasadena for future redevelopment of the I-710
  •  $2 million to the City of San Jose to convert Monterey Road from a motor highway to a “grand” boulevard with dedicated bike lanes and “urban greening.”
  • $680,000 for a Caltrans Project in Oakland to explore alternatives for reconnecting communities along the I-980 corridor
  •  $600,000 to the City of Fresno for a pedestrian bridge that would cross California State Route 99 and connect Parkway Drive and Roeding Park.

Across the nation, some cities are considering ripping up parts of aging highway systems to make room for open spaces to reconnect once-separated neighborhoods. In California, state officials said they are looking for ways to reconnect neighborhoods by building parks and community spaces along freeways.

Activists nationwide are urging that such plans include input from the community members most affected.

“The benefits unlocked by taking down an expressway must be channeled to the members of the current community. As more and more state and local agencies take up these projects, it is essential that they achieve the best possible outcomes,” according to Congress for the New Urbanism, a national nonprofit group.

In San Diego, a groundbreaking in early March will provide an example. The project will become a community space and park along Interstate 5 at Boston Avenue, in the Barrio Logan neighborhood. The mostly Latino community is already known for its extensive collection of large Chicano murals painted on pillars of the Coronado Bridge, which bisects a key community park.

In the coming months, the state’s new select committee will hold public informational hearings in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego to discuss how local and national actions damaged communities. The committee will use these hearings to develop legislative and budget proposals to address systemic injustices and inequality, according to Alvarez’s office.

About CalMatters

CalMatters is a nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom committed to explaining California policy and politics.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Seek Public’s Help in Star Pro Smog Burglary Investigation

DON'T MISS

SZA to Join Kendrick Lamar as a Guest During Super Bowl Halftime Performance

DON'T MISS

California Approves $2.5B for State Response to Los Angeles-Area Fires

DON'T MISS

Senate Confirms Ratcliffe to Lead the CIA, Giving Trump His Second Cabinet Member

DON'T MISS

Madera County Two-Vehicle Crash Claims Winton Woman’s Life

DON'T MISS

Is Matthew Stafford Retiring? Rams Coach Wants Answer ‘Sooner Than Later’

DON'T MISS

Stock Market Today: S&P 500 Drifts Higher Toward a Record

DON'T MISS

A Federal Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump’s Executive Order Ending Birthright Citizenship

DON'T MISS

Trump Says California Must Change Water Policies, Threatens to Withhold Disaster Aid

DON'T MISS

Selma Council Moves Forward, Makes It Easier to Remove Manager

UP NEXT

SZA to Join Kendrick Lamar as a Guest During Super Bowl Halftime Performance

UP NEXT

California Approves $2.5B for State Response to Los Angeles-Area Fires

UP NEXT

Senate Confirms Ratcliffe to Lead the CIA, Giving Trump His Second Cabinet Member

UP NEXT

Madera County Two-Vehicle Crash Claims Winton Woman’s Life

UP NEXT

Is Matthew Stafford Retiring? Rams Coach Wants Answer ‘Sooner Than Later’

UP NEXT

Stock Market Today: S&P 500 Drifts Higher Toward a Record

UP NEXT

A Federal Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump’s Executive Order Ending Birthright Citizenship

UP NEXT

Trump Says California Must Change Water Policies, Threatens to Withhold Disaster Aid

UP NEXT

Selma Council Moves Forward, Makes It Easier to Remove Manager

UP NEXT

Trump Is Already Making America Weaker and More Vulnerable

Senate Confirms Ratcliffe to Lead the CIA, Giving Trump His Second Cabinet Member

1 hour ago

Madera County Two-Vehicle Crash Claims Winton Woman’s Life

2 hours ago

Is Matthew Stafford Retiring? Rams Coach Wants Answer ‘Sooner Than Later’

2 hours ago

Stock Market Today: S&P 500 Drifts Higher Toward a Record

2 hours ago

A Federal Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump’s Executive Order Ending Birthright Citizenship

2 hours ago

Trump Says California Must Change Water Policies, Threatens to Withhold Disaster Aid

3 hours ago

Selma Council Moves Forward, Makes It Easier to Remove Manager

3 hours ago

Trump Is Already Making America Weaker and More Vulnerable

3 hours ago

Oscar Nominations Snubs and Surprises, From Daniel Craig to Selena Gomez

4 hours ago

A Bid to Block Trump’s Cancellation of Birthright Citizenship Is in Federal Court

4 hours ago

Fresno Police Seek Public’s Help in Star Pro Smog Burglary Investigation

Authorities are investigating a burglary at Star Pro Smog, located at 1606 N. West Avenue, the Fresno Police Department said in a statement....

5 minutes ago

5 minutes ago

Fresno Police Seek Public’s Help in Star Pro Smog Burglary Investigation

SZA poses in the press room at the iHeartRadio Music Awards on Monday, April 1, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP File)
48 minutes ago

SZA to Join Kendrick Lamar as a Guest During Super Bowl Halftime Performance

1 hour ago

California Approves $2.5B for State Response to Los Angeles-Area Fires

John Ratcliffe, President Donald Trump's choice to be the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, appears before the Senate Intelligence Committee for his confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP/John McDonnell)
1 hour ago

Senate Confirms Ratcliffe to Lead the CIA, Giving Trump His Second Cabinet Member

A Winton woman was killed near Firebaugh after failing to stop at a stop sign, resulting in a two-vehicle collision. (CHP)
2 hours ago

Madera County Two-Vehicle Crash Claims Winton Woman’s Life

Matt Stafford
2 hours ago

Is Matthew Stafford Retiring? Rams Coach Wants Answer ‘Sooner Than Later’

2 hours ago

Stock Market Today: S&P 500 Drifts Higher Toward a Record

President Donald Trump talks about drug prices during a visit to the Department of Health and Human Services in Washington, Oct. 25, 2018. HHS Secretary Alex Azar listens at right. (AP File)
2 hours ago

A Federal Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump’s Executive Order Ending Birthright Citizenship

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend