The facilitation of a community discussion about the benefits and challenges surrounding I-81.

NYCLU: I-81

NYCLU conducted outreach both in city and suburban neighborhoods to encourage an open dialogue and community conversation around the benefits and challenges of various I-81 replacement options.

Attorney Lanessa Chaplin grew up seeing I-81 every day as a Southside resident of Syracuse, but during her childhood, she wasn’t aware of how it contributed to the generational poverty that surrounded her or the negative psychological, neurological, and respiratory effects that can come with living near the highway. Chaplin, who now serves as Project Counsel for the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), was born on the Westside, raised on the Southside, and dreamed of becoming an attorney, just like Judge Judy, who she watched on television.

When she read that the NYCLU’s position would involve legal and policy matters that affected communities of color, she knew joining the NYCLU was the right career move.

Chaplin’s position was formed when the NYCLU Central New York Chapter encouraged the state-wide NYCLU to help foster community dialogue around the topic of I-81’s challenges and future opportunities.

“This is the first time that we have been intimately involved in an infrastructure project, largely because we see how it affects the school system and how it contributes to the segregation and lack of resources in schools,” said Chaplin.

Specifically, NYCLU is conducting outreach both in city and suburban neighborhoods to encourage an open dialogue and community conversation around the benefits and challenges of various I-81 replacement options. After ten years of research, the Department of Transportation (DOT) has issued a legally-binding preliminary Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) with time for communities to comment on their proposal.

Since the structure is in an environmental justice community, which means it is in a neighborhood of persons of color, historically disenfranchised communities and/or low income communities, there is a heightened level of requirements before a decision can be made. These requirements direct federal agencies to identify and address the disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental effects of their actions on minority and low-income populations. They also help to ensure that a suitable balance of social, economic and environmental factors is incorporated into the planning and decision-making processes of state, regional and local agencies. Basically, these requirements provide Syracuse with an opportunity to enhance its neighborhoods and the lives of city residents.

With the help of a grant from the Community Foundation, Lanessa Chaplin and her team of ‘Credible Messengers’ have activated several modes of community engagement around I-81, including a ‘listening tour’, door-to-door canvassing, Tuesday workshops (held weekly), panels at ArtRage Gallery and Henninger High School, and the design of postcards for sending comments to the DOT regarding the DEIS. Chaplin commented: “All of the work that I am able to do is because of the Community Foundation.”

The postcards are easy to fill out, brightly colored, and will be legally-binding documents when in the hands of the DOT. Each postcard has room for three stickers, which allow the sender to state their top priorities including: “Air and noise pollution must be mitigated at Dr. King School,” and “Cumulative exposure analysis must occur in environmental justice communities.” The postcards are a tangible, hands-on effort to formulate comments about what the community wants. Chaplin and NYCLU hope to create a platform in which every voice is heard.

“We don’t want to speak for the community. We want the community to speak for themselves,” she said.

Related Stories

未分类 June 13, 2024

LeadSafeCNY: 我们的邻里投资概览

一张新的热图展示了迄今为止我们通过 "LeadSafeCNY "倡议进行的社区投资所产生的影响。

故事 June 5, 2024

通过粮食正义运动传递希望

在 COVID-19 大流行之初,纽约中部宗教间工作组织开始分发美国奶制品协会的剩余牛奶,并由此建立了一个庞大的食品储藏室网络,目前为 32 个基层储藏室提供支持。

博客 May 13, 2024

根据锡拉丘兹社区需求设计的住房

A Tiny Home for Good 的开发总监凯蒂-韦弗(Katie Weaver)介绍了 A Tiny Home for Good 如何通过一种住房解决方案来满足雪城贫困社区对经济适用房的迫切需求,从而为社区振兴做出贡献。

主题 April 23, 2024

我们在做什么?CNYCF 工作人员更新

了解我们团队成员的专业知识和热情承诺,他们在社区中推动积极变革,激励他人。

未分类 April 17, 2024

科特兰县非营利组织获得 55,000 美元赠款

申请者应邀提交一个用于提升其非营利组织的 "好点子",并说明该点子将如何帮助该组织更好地服务于社区。

故事 March 19, 2024

无缝奉献莱拉-莫吉洛

莱拉-莫吉廖(Leyla Morgillo)总是乐善好施,无论是付出时间还是金钱。 现在,她帮助她的客户在纽约州中部及其他地区进行同样的变革。

博客 March 5, 2024

为新美国聋人提供一个安全的空间,让他们不受任何限制地发展教育、领导才能和生活技能

新美国聋人宣传公司(Deaf New American Advocacy, Inc.)创始人兼首席执行官莫努-切特里(Monu Chhetri)解释了参加 Resilia 对其组织成功的关键作用。

出版物 March 5, 2024

与非营利合作伙伴的合作参与

冬季之声 2024》:拨款事宜

未分类 June 13, 2024

LeadSafeCNY: 我们的邻里投资概览

一张新的热图展示了迄今为止我们通过 "LeadSafeCNY "倡议进行的社区投资所产生的影响。

故事 June 5, 2024

通过粮食正义运动传递希望

在 COVID-19 大流行之初,纽约中部宗教间工作组织开始分发美国奶制品协会的剩余牛奶,并由此建立了一个庞大的食品储藏室网络,目前为 32 个基层储藏室提供支持。

博客 May 13, 2024

根据锡拉丘兹社区需求设计的住房

A Tiny Home for Good 的开发总监凯蒂-韦弗(Katie Weaver)介绍了 A Tiny Home for Good 如何通过一种住房解决方案来满足雪城贫困社区对经济适用房的迫切需求,从而为社区振兴做出贡献。

主题 April 23, 2024

我们在做什么?CNYCF 工作人员更新

了解我们团队成员的专业知识和热情承诺,他们在社区中推动积极变革,激励他人。

未分类 April 17, 2024

科特兰县非营利组织获得 55,000 美元赠款

申请者应邀提交一个用于提升其非营利组织的 "好点子",并说明该点子将如何帮助该组织更好地服务于社区。

故事 March 19, 2024

无缝奉献莱拉-莫吉洛

莱拉-莫吉廖(Leyla Morgillo)总是乐善好施,无论是付出时间还是金钱。 现在,她帮助她的客户在纽约州中部及其他地区进行同样的变革。

博客 March 5, 2024

为新美国聋人提供一个安全的空间,让他们不受任何限制地发展教育、领导才能和生活技能

新美国聋人宣传公司(Deaf New American Advocacy, Inc.)创始人兼首席执行官莫努-切特里(Monu Chhetri)解释了参加 Resilia 对其组织成功的关键作用。

出版物 March 5, 2024

与非营利合作伙伴的合作参与

冬季之声 2024》:拨款事宜

查看更多