
American highways ripped apart city neighborhoods. A $1 billion plan wants to do better
CNN
The Department of Transportation announced Thursday that it will soon fund up to $1 billion in projects to reconnect city neighborhoods that have been scarred by highways.
Urban experts say the investment pales in comparison to the long-running negative impacts of urban highways, but welcome the funding as a way to show the benefits of human-focused urban design, which may inspire more projects.
"Reconnection is a profoundly good thing," said Mindy Fullilove, a professor of urban policy and health at the New School, who has studied how highways divide cities. "It's part of a larger strategy of making our cities what we need — vital, functioning places where people cross paths and get to know each other."

Jeffrey Epstein survivors are slamming the Justice Department’s partial release of the Epstein files that began last Friday, contending that contrary to what is mandated by law, the department’s disclosures so far have been incomplete and improperly redacted — and challenging for the survivors to navigate as they search for information about their own cases.












