Current:Home > reviewsPlans for I-55 Expansion in Chicago Raise Concerns Over Air Quality and Community Health -Wealth Pursuit Network
Plans for I-55 Expansion in Chicago Raise Concerns Over Air Quality and Community Health
View
Date:2025-04-11 13:56:00
Lea este artículo en español.
Having spent most of her life in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood, Sara Cortes learned to live with bad-smelling air that created a haze in the summer.
About a year ago, Cortes, 38, was diagnosed with an untreatable lung condition that makes her tired and leaves her short of breath.
So she was shocked when she learned of a fast-moving plan in Springfield to expand the nearby Stevenson Expressway, part of Interstate 55, with additional lanes, bringing more traffic and more pollution.
“It’s definitely a concern for me,” said Cortes. “The air quality in Little Village has been bad for a long time.”
Introduced at the tail end of the Illinois legislative session, a pair of measures that promote private funding of road projects are moving through quickly as state lawmakers try to wrap up their session this week. One is a resolution that would allow state transportation officials to find private funding for the Stevenson expansion, which runs through Little Village and other communities, and it is in the Senate after moving quickly through the House Chamber. The other is an even more expansive rewriting of rules to encourage private dollars for state transportation projects, which was added as an amendment to a large spending bill on Friday.
“Expanding highway capacity will incentivize more driving and more harmful emissions in an area already burdened by high asthma rates and other chronic health problems,” said José Miguel Acosta Córdova of the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization.
Community, environmental and health organizations oppose the 11th-hour moves to bring private highway funding to Illinois, proposals supported by labor and business groups.
They fear that the changes may mean less oversight and transparency of the planning processes in which major road expansions are approved.
For some environmental justice communities, there is much concern.
Residents in Little Village, a neighborhood on Chicago’s Southwest Side, experience some of the worst air pollution in the city, an analysis last year showed. Every day, trucks from an industrial corridor travel through the neighborhood to and from I-55.
“Semi-trucks come through this residential area all of the time,” said Esmeralda Hernandez, 46, a lifelong resident of Little Village.
Adding new lanes to the expressway near her home is not the solution to addressing congestion and pollution, she adds.
“There has to be another answer than putting in more lanes,” Hernandez said.
Marc Poulos, executive director of the labor management group for Local 150 International Union of Operating Engineers, said private money is needed to make sure road projects get funded. Some labor and business advocates have wanted to see the state enter into its first private transportation partnership for a number of years, and the proposed changes are a “modernizing of the statute” that allows such projects.
The widening of the Stevenson has been envisioned since the expressway was built in the 1960s, he said.
The project is one of several roadway building or expansion projects in the country that environmentalists and community groups have criticized, saying that new or wider roads that accommodate more traffic will result in more cars on the road, ultimately increasing air pollution. Research has generally shown that traffic reduction resulting from highway expansions is often brief before leading to a subsequent increase in volume, as the increased road capacity tends to attract more drivers—a theory known as induced demand.
Transportation is a top source of greenhouse gas emissions in Chicago and Illinois, a freight hub where 2 million people live near warehouses enveloped by truck pollution and face heightened respiratory health risks. Research has shown that traffic pollution in Chicago is concentrated in predominantly Black and Hispanic neighborhoods on its South and West sides.
Little Village resident Alexis Sanchez, 26, said he only learned about the proposed plan last week from a local environmental justice organization and believes that the Stevenson Expressway expansion would not be good for the community’s health.
A couple of weeks ago, he kept his bedroom window open overnight. “It’s a pretty familiar smell,” but that night, the diesel exhaust odor woke him up, he said.
He’s lived near the Stevenson Expressway almost all of his life and is used to trucks passing through his neighborhood, but that night was an “eye-opener,” he said. “I don’t know what I’m breathing that could potentially affect my health in the future.”
Sanchez’s father, Alejandro Sanchez Riviera, 51, is often stuck in traffic on the Stevenson Expressway on his way back from work. He hopes that additional lanes alleviate traffic congestion and improve air quality in the area. “Sometimes we open the windows, but it feels like we’re just smelling smoke,” he said.
Originally from Mexico City, Sanchez Riviera says he feels at home and close to his roots in Little Village but is disappointed to see few efforts to address air pollution.
“It’s a sanctuary for us, and sometimes we get used to what comes with the air, but we need to see some change,” he said. “We don’t know what is in the air.”
veryGood! (29)
Related
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Biden bets big on bringing factories back to America, building on some Trump ideas
- Search continues for 9-month-old baby swept away in Pennsylvania flash flooding
- Taylor Swift, Keke Palmer, Austin Butler and More Invited to Join the Oscars’ Prestigious Academy
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Climate Envoy John Kerry Seeks Restart to US Emissions Talks With China
- Al Jaffee, longtime 'Mad Magazine' cartoonist, dies at 102
- New Reports Show Forests Need Far More Funding to Help the Climate, and Even Then, They Can’t Do It All
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Why can't Twitter and TikTok be easily replaced? Something called 'network effects'
Ranking
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Inside Clean Energy: Drought is Causing U.S. Hydropower to Have a Rough Year. Is This a Sign of a Long-Term Shift?
- Body believed to be of missing 2-year-old girl found in Philadelphia river
- SpaceX prepares to launch its mammoth rocket 'Starship'
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- How much is your reputation worth?
- Proof Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker Already Chose Their Baby Boy’s Name
- Naomi Campbell Welcomes Baby No. 2
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
How Climate and the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline Undergirds the Ukraine-Russia Standoff
Newly elected United Auto Workers leader strikes militant tone ahead of contract talks
Kathy Griffin Fiercely Defends Madonna From Ageism and Misogyny Amid Hospitalization
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Inflation eased in March but prices are still climbing too fast to get comfortable
Inside Clean Energy: Here’s Why Some Utilities Support, and Others Are Wary of, the Federal Clean Energy Proposal
Dylan Mulvaney Calls Out Bud Light’s Lack of Support Amid Ongoing “Bullying and Transphobia”