Highways radically reshaped American cities: They destroyed dense downtown neighborhoods, divided many Black communities and increased car dependence.
Now, some cities are looking to take them out. nyti.ms/2RPyf27
Midcentury highway projects often targeted Black neighborhoods, destroying cultural and economic centers and bringing decades of environmental harm. nyti.ms/2RPyf27
Some cities have committed to replacing stretches of interstate with more connected, walkable neighborhoods. Others are facing pressure from local residents to address the pollution, noise and safety hazards brought by the mega-roads.
The growing movement has been energized by support from the Biden administration, which has made addressing racial justice and climate change, major themes in the debate over highway removal, central to its agenda.
Rochester, New York, recently filled in a nearly-mile-long stretch of its sunken Inner Loop highway, and is now looking to remove more of it. “You now have people living somewhere that was just road before,” said Shawn Dunwoody, a local artist and community organizer.
If rebuilding cities is done right, highway removal projects could make life better for local residents as well as the planet. But reconnecting neighborhoods is more complicated than breaking them apart. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
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Here are some of the notable spending proposals in President Biden’s $6 trillion budget request. nyti.ms/3wHsJxc
Climate change is back in the budget — a stark contrast to the Trump administration, which tried, unsuccessfully, to zero out funding for dozens of clean energy programs. nyti.ms/3wHsJxc
The White House is betting that it can reach its goal of cutting U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 by funding new wind turbines, solar panels, electric vehicles and clean energy technologies. nyti.ms/3wHsJxc
A man known only as Franco A. represents the rise of a new brand of extremism in Germany. A military officer who was caught posing as a Syrian refugee, he is now accused of plotting political murder.
His story is part of our new podcast series. nyti.ms/3vFiXff
Our audio documentary series explores how extremists in Germany, many of them soldiers, police officers and like-minded civilians are planning for the day they believe democracy will end in Germany — “Day X.” nyti.ms/3vt1Mxf
The five-part series includes reporting by our Berlin bureau chief, @kbennhold, who first started reporting about a so-called shadow army of extremists in Germany’s armed forces in 2018, and the case of Franco A. last year. nyti.ms/34lBTDF
Dai Guihua, 31, once radiated vitality. She had “special wishes” she told to the night sky. She yearned to escape poverty.
22 days after her husband vanished, Dai walked to a pond and killed herself, as well as her son and daughter. This is her story. nyti.ms/3bWMadC
As the tragic tale of Dai’s death spread across social media and state news outlets, she became a symbol of the struggles in rural China, of those left behind in the country’s great economic boom. She is known as the “Orphan Girl.” nyti.ms/2Sx9cRg
@HernandezJavier traveled to Langtang, China, seven times to retrace the story of Dai, her children and the town's residents. He discovered a struggling Chinese town through the eyes of a teacher, a farmer, a social media star and a healer. nyti.ms/2Sx9cRg
Michael Larson, the man who manages Bill Gates's fortune and his foundation's endowment, engaged in a pattern of workplace misconduct, former employees said. nyti.ms/34lYkIY
Larson, who oversees Cascade Investment, Gates’s money-management firm, openly judged female employees on their attractiveness, showed colleagues nude photos of women and on several occasions made sexually inappropriate comments. He made a racist remark to a Black employee.
Over the years, at least six people complained to Gates, according to the former employees and others with direct knowledge of the complaints. Larson still runs the firm.
Larson and his spokesman denied some but not all instances of Larson’s misconduct. nyti.ms/34lYkIY
Baraa al-Garabli was killed in Jabaliya, Gaza, just minutes after the war broke out. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
The al-Hadidi brothers were asleep, their father said, when an Israeli bomb killed them, their mother, their aunt and four cousins.
Suheib loved birds. Yahya liked riding his bike. Osama was known for his style. And Abdurrahman dreamed of going to Turkey. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
George Floyd’s murder prompted protests around the world and an uprising for racial justice nearly unparalleled in American history. Here is a look back at what has transpired in the year since his death. nyti.ms/3vmRAq1
May 25, 2020: George Floyd is killed by the police on a street corner in Minneapolis after being handcuffed and pinned to the ground by Derek Chauvin and other officers responding to a forgery call. Darnella Frazier, 17, turns on her cellphone to capture video of the incident.
May 26, 2020: The Minneapolis police chief, Medaria Arradondo, fires the four officers involved in the arrest of Floyd. Hundreds of protesters against police violence flood the streets of the city in the evening.