CITY, ALLENDALE RESIDENTS CONTINUE INTERSTATE 49 DEBATE
Debate has endured for years as to what should be done to bridge the gap that interrupts Interstate 49, and conversation has heated up again with a series of public comment sessions held in late January. Residents were invited to give their opinion on five possible routes, four of which will bring a direct inner city connection and a fifth that would focus on a loop.
While local organizations such as the Committee of One Hundred, the African American, Greater Shreveport and Bossier chambers of commerces, North Louisiana Economic Partnership and North Shreveport Business Association have endorsed one of the direct connections to bridge the gap, opponents of the inner city connector are against that plan because of the disruption it will cause to residents living in the path and the negative impacts they believe interstate highways cause.
Conversation about I-49 has also become protracted at meetings of the Shreveport City Council and Caddo Parish Commission, which have both considered passing resolutions that establish support for an inner city connector.
The city council’s potential resolution, brought by Councilman Willie Bradford, states, “the only feasible route for this remaining segment of I-49 is the direct route running within a 3.5-mile corridor between the existing intersection
with Interstate 20 and the intersection with Interstate 220 presently
under construction.”
Bradford’s
resolution also states, “the completion of I-49 through Shreveport is
vital to the economic development of Northwest Louisiana, as it will
attract new businesses and industries to this area and open new markets
to existing business and industry.”
“Nobody
wants to live by an interstate or up under one,” said Dorothy Wiley, a
resident of the Allendale neighborhood who would be impacted by an inner
city connector, at the Feb. 4 meeting of the parish commission. “I am
only speaking from experience.”
Wiley
is the head of Loop-It, a group that has endorsed the alternative of
looping the connection for I-49 around the city utilizing La. 3132 and
I-220. Wiley also voiced support for the idea of a business boulevard
instead of the inner city connector.
“Other
cities worldwide are tearing down existing limited access expressways,
and they are blocking newly-proposed ones,” Wiley said.
The
Rev. Elenora Cushenberry, pastor of St. Paul’s United Methodist Church,
emphasized to the commission if Shreveport were to build the connector,
it would be doing the opposite of what she said many other cities are
doing for their transportation needs.
“Instability
is a major factor in some of our social ills – the instability of
families, the instability of children, the instability of
neighborhoods,” she said. “Consider other alternatives than destroying
lives. How can we build up rather than tear down?” Some residents who
would be relocated if the inner city connector is approved and built
question where they would go and what their lives would be like if
forced to move. Anthony Morgan, an Allendale resident who spoke to the
commission, said he felt the neighborhood was being sent a message that
it didn’t mean very much.
“At
one time, Allendale was, you might say, out there – it might have been a
blight on the community with what was going on over there,” Morgan
said. “But then through organizations like the Fuller Center,
Shreveport-Bossier Community Renewal, the churches and the caring people
who did want to say, ‘This is our home,’ we reclaimed that area.
“The
families are what reclaimed it along with the combination of some city
councilmen, elected officials. I guess what I’m getting to is that if we
can be packaged and [moved] off as if we don’t matter, then what does
matter?” Ultimately, the commission passed the resolution supporting the
inner city connector 9-3, though President Matthew Linn expressed
dismay.
“This parish
and this city doesn’t have half a billion dollars to build that road,
and we don’t even have the 20 percent match that it’s going to take to
match the federal government, but we are willing to take these citizens
and basically de-value the primary investment that they have, and we’re
willing to do that without all of the information in front of us?” Linn
said. “Shame on us.”
Representatives
of the Committee of One Hundred, a nonprofit organization representing
members of the local business community, said the connector will bring
about revitalization for the entire area and will only result in positive impacts for the residents of Allendale.
“In
the Committee of One Hundred’s early discussions, everyone recognized
the benefits of having the inner city connector done but was not
ignorant or oblivious to the fact that there will be people affected by
it,” board member John Peak said. “So it was a critical thing for us to
be sure those residents would be treated very fairly.”
Access for the community, Peak said, is the key.
“You
give access to that community, and it will all of a sudden make
residential living there more attractive – I can get in, I can get out, I
have access to jobs, healthcare and all that, and you have one
interchange or exit in the path of it,” he said. “You look at just about
any other interstate exit, and you’re going to see hotels, gasoline
stations, restaurants, businesses. It won’t happen necessarily
immediately, but you’ve created that access near downtown, near the
casinos.”
Board member
Robert Mills said the federal government will provide assistance to
those who have to relocate at no cost to the residents.
“Something
good’s got to happen to Allendale, and this is going to put millions
and millions and millions of dollars into Allendale,” he said. “All the
money saved, access to downtown, security for this area – it’s a win-win
for the Allendale community, the business community and the residents.”
As for the connector itself, Mills said a direct connection provides the benefits of time, money and economic development.
“It
gives us a direct access to downtown from the northwest, and so there’s
no question it takes traffic off the Lake Street/Spring Street exit,
the worst intersection in the whole city, the highest number of
accidents per year,” he said. “It’s going to push development to enlarge
this whole western edge of downtown that you hear about all the time,
the arts district, everything – it gives us substantially better access
to downtown as well as to Allendale.”
Mills
said an estimated average of $350 million in economic stimulus is
expected to be generated per year due to the connection being completed.
Ross
Barrett, president of the Committee of One Hundred, said the loop
option is not realistic due to the cost and environmental concerns.
“It goes over the water source for the city and Barksdale Air Force Base,” he said.
Barrett
said after a formal designation of which route will be used is made by
the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development, at that
point no more building can be done in that pathway. Barrett said the
project becomes more expensive the longer it takes to determine a
solution.
“Every day that this is delayed, the cost of materials goes up,” he said.
Committee
of One Hundred Past President Linda Biernacki said she has heard the
best case scenario for finishing the connection, once it is approved, is
seven to 10 years.
“This
is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to revitalize that whole entire
area,” she said. “This is by far the most important economic decision
our community can ever make.”
JOIN THE CONVERSATION
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