SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) has awarded the Interstate 81 (I-81) viaduct-replacement project more than $180 million for work in the neighborhoods surrounding the elevated portion of the highway. The funding award targets neighborhoods like the new 15th ward and Syracuse’s northside. After the I-81 viaduct comes down, these parts of the […]
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The funding award targets neighborhoods like the new 15th ward and Syracuse’s northside. After the I-81 viaduct comes down, these parts of the city will have “modern safe complete streets, new and improved parks, greenery, and community infrastructure to have a brighter, more interconnected and dynamic future for the next generation of Syracuse residents,” per the office of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.).
The funding comes from USDOT’s Neighborhood Access and Equity program, both Schumer and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) announced Monday.
Schumer created the program in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), based on the work he and Gillibrand did creating the Reconnecting Communities program in the Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Law, his office noted.
The award makes the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) and City of Syracuse project — dubbed I-81 Connecting Syracuse — “among the first in the nation” to tap the program.
“This [more than] $180 million is about laying the foundation for the next generation in Syracuse. It will create new modern tree-lined streets, add new parks for our families, bike paths, and new opportunity,” Schumer said in the news release. “When I negotiated the Inflation Reduction Act, I knew we needed to increase funding to the critical reconnecting communities’ initiatives, so places like Syracuse could access the robust funding needed to turn the dreams of I-81’s transformation into a reality. Today’s major award will help make Syracuse a national model for the future of reconnecting communities across America.”
This $180 million in federal funding will provide about $150 million to NYSDOT and $30 million to the City of Syracuse to pay for elements of the community grid, specifically to “help connect and enhance quality of life for disadvantaged communities in Syracuse to ensure this once-in-a-generation project will help transform and reconnect the communities divided by I-81,” Schumer’s office said.