99% Invisible - 555- The Big Dig
Episode Date: October 3, 2023Over its more than 40 year journey from conception to completion, Boston’s Big Dig massive infrastructure project, which rerouted the central highway in the heart of the city, encountered every hurd...le imaginable: ruthless politics, engineering challenges, secretive contractors, outright fraud and even the death of one motorist. It became a kind of poster child for big government ‘boondoggles.’ But the full story is of course much more complicated – and really represents a turning point in how America builds infrastructure.Subscribe and Listen to the full series of The Big Dig.The Big DigÂ
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This is 99% invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
Over its more than 40-year journey from conception to completion, Boston's Big Dig massive infrastructure
project, which rerouted the central highway in the heart of the city, encountered every
hurdle imaginable, ruthless politics, engineering challenges, secretive contractors, outright fraud,
and even the death of one motorist.
It became kind of a poster child for big government boondoggles.
But the full story, of course, is much more complicated, and really represents a turning
point in how America builds infrastructure.
For much of the 20th century, public works projects were viewed as an unalloyed good.
Our capacity to build big things was a point of American pride and something that both
political parties could agree on.
But as we learn more about the neighborhoods ruined, the lives affected, the graph taken,
the cost overruns, and the environmental damage, all of which were being discussed more widely
during an ascending movement towards privatization and small government, well, we got much more
cynical, and public works became just like everything else.
If you've ever had this question that I've had,
can America still build big things?
The story of the big dig in Boston has many of the answers,
a project that had a raft of very public problems,
but ultimately delivered on its promises.
Today, we're presenting the first episode in a series
that offers a true
inside account of one of the most complicated and expensive public works projects in American history.
It is a remarkable rollercoaster ride of a documentary produced by WGBH in Boston and reported and
hosted by Ian Koss. Enjoy.
There are many strange and bitter ironies in the story of the big dig, but here's what
has to be my favorite.
It's the most expensive highway project ever built in America, and yet the architect,
the man who started it all hated highways.
My grandmother lived near here on Lincoln Street.
A man named Fred Salvucci.
And I had to engage in ethnic stereotypes.
She was this Italian lady that grew terrific tomatoes and sold them to the Polish people
next door, as if only Italians know how to grow tomatoes.
But she grew everything there.
Tomatoes, potatoes, beans, basil, garlic. It was an incredibly big garden.
And she lost all that. Yeah, she lost all that.
The Massachusetts turnfights stretches across the state like a life-giving artery,
123 miles. Back in the 1950s, when Fred Salvucci was a teenager, the state of Massachusetts was on a highway building
spree, east to west, north to south, and all around the city of Boston.
The greatest of these new roads was the mass turnpike.
Six lanes, three in each direction, a highway miracle, niping through the heart of New England.
The state celebrated the occasion with this nearly hour long documentary film.
But for a young Savuji, it was not a time to celebrate, because the road came right through
his neighborhood.
They took the southern half of Lincoln Street.
The neighborhood was mostly Lithuanian and Polish people.
Very poor people with no education
didn't know how to protect themselves.
Obviously some families had to be moved.
Structures not worth saving were demolished or burned on the spot.
My grandmother was a 70 year old widow.
They came to her house in September and gave her a dollar
and a piece of paper saying,
the land is now ours, you have to go, will eventually
give you an estimate of what we're willing to pay. And they just squeezed people.
And to those responsible for the turnpikes building, we say hats off.
So it was outrageous and I kind of promised myself that if I ever had anything to do with
public works, I would never treat people the way people had treated my grandmother with
the turnpike.
So why is it that a man scarred by highways would set out to build one?
The answer is that he wanted to build a better kind of highway, a more humane kind of highway,
and that's what the big dig was.
But if that's all it was, well, we wouldn't be here.
Would we? The subject of infrastructure inspires deep cynicism in America today.
There's a feeling that once our cities were the envy of the world, but now we can barely
keep our trains running.
That once we built the interstate, and now, anytime we even attempt something ambitious,
it's over budget and behind schedule before a single shovel hits the dirt.
Running nearly three years behind schedule, the lake could jeopardize the train's funding
plan and...
There's almost a sense of glee.
Each time our doubts are proven correct.
A multi-billion dollar project now we can shake our heads and laugh it off.
What a joke.
But only after many more years of costly and complicated construction.
For me, no one project embodies the cynicism around American infrastructure.
Quite like the one Fred Savucci would one day take on.
What we hear in Boston call the Big Dig.
If you think you are furious about the
Big Dig, the mess, and the cost overruns, you've got company. If that name Big Dig has only the
vaguest meaning to you, don't sweat it. We'll get there. But it was a tunnel project. And when I was
going up in Massachusetts in the 1990s, it was hard to ignore. Back then, the project went by many names.
It was called the Big Mess, the Big Hole, the Big Pig, the Big Lie. It was, as everyone loved
to point out, the most expensive public works project in American history, full stop. It went on in my young mind forever, from before
I started kindergarten until after I graduated high school. And at the end of all that,
it was held up for the world to see as a boondoggle.
A $14 billion V-ASCO. A cautionary tale.
Did everything that could go wrong. A punchline.
The big dig, a construction project that backed up traffic for 16 years.
I mean, there are computers just getting home now.
But if it is a joke, then the joke's on us.
And I don't just mean us, the suckers up in Boston.
I mean all of us.
Because there are big things that need building in this country.
And I, for one, want to know where that cynicism comes from, the feeling that America can't
build big things. My name is Ian Koss and from GPH News, this is The Big Dig, a study in American infrastructure.
In many ways, this first episode is the prequel, the turning point that sets the whole saga
in motion.
We're not going to talk about the big dig just yet,
or about how hard it is to build in America. We're going to start back in a time when America
built a lot, maybe too much, especially when it came to highways. This is the story of the inevitable backlash, the anti-pioe movement.
Part 1. We Were Wrong.
The origin story of Fred Savucci and the Big Dig are really one in the same story. They both begin with the truly most sweeping and expensive building project in American history.
That would be the interstate system.
This is the American dream of freedom on wheels,
an automotive age traveling on time-saving superhighways.
The Interstate is so ubiquitous now.
It's almost invisible to us.
We're talking about nearly 50,000 miles of highway running through every state in the country.
It's the reason you can drive from Seattle to Boston without making a single turn
or hitting a single traffic light, and not just to the edge of the city, but right into the heart of it.
They can lift traffic up over city congestion with elevated highways raised by an aroused public.
In the 50s and 60s, these roads meant progress, the future.
The big American cities, including Boston, were losing people to the suburbs, specifically
white people.
Highways were seen as a way to bring them back in, and for the states, the whole thing
was basically free. President Eisenhower's militant call for a modern controlled access highway system
led to the passage of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956.
The deal was this. The feds provide 90% of the money.
The states are responsible for the planning and building.
As long as what you're building is an interstate highway.
In Massachusetts, just like everywhere else,
the interstate program was a pretty hard deal to turn down.
You had federal money available, ready to go, you had a plan,
and the promise of jobs to the tune of about
a billion dollars. So to say no to all that seemed unthinkable.
Carolyn Crockett is the author of the book People Before Highways and also a professor at
MIT. She argues that despite all the incentives to build, build, build, the costs of that building would
eventually force city residents to think the unthinkable.
So the anti-highway fight becomes a moment of imagining possibilities.
In the 1960s, there were anti-highway movements all over the country.
In San Francisco, New York, DC, in., in many ways Boston was late to the party, but
the consequences of what happened here would be more sweeping than any of the highway battles
before it. It would change the way cities and states around the country thought about their
urban highways. And Fred Salvucci was at the center of it. So to go back to where we started, with young Fred Salvucci's story, when he made that
promise to his grandmother to treat people better, to build more humanely, it was not at all
clear he would ever get to act on it.
As long as he could remember, the plan had always been for him to be a bricklayer, like his
father, Guido, was.
G. Salvucci and company would become G. Salvucci and son.
The plan got thrown off when Fred was in junior high.
His music teacher saw potential in him, and suggested he apply for the city's most prestigious public school, Boston Latin, and he got in.
For a stay at Latin, they give us a piece of paper and it says that I intend to go to college.
So I took the thing to come and I said, gee, my consign this, I intend to go to college, this is a lie.
His friends in the neighborhood weren't even planning to finish high school, let alone
go to college.
But Fred's mother said, look, just across the river in Cambridge, you've got MIT, one of
the best engineering schools in the world.
And she made this deal with him.
And she said, you're going to work with your father every summer, and you learn to be
a good bricklayer.
You're going to MIT if you can get in, and you learn to be a good bricklayer. You're going to MIT if you can get in and you
learn to be a good civil engineer. When you finish, you can do whichever one you want.
That's House Alvouchi wound up a student at MIT, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
One day in the early 1960s, he's sitting in class and a professor starts talking about a new highway project proposed for the city, his ears perk up.
It sounded an awful lot like the highway that had taken his grandmother's house.
It was another piece of insanity, something that I was sure made no sense.
The difference was that this time, armed with that degree in engineering, Savuchi could
actually do something about it.
So, let's get the lay of the land.
There will be several highways you need to keep track of in this part of the story, but
they all have a common origin, a master plan for the region drawn out way back in 1948.
So, if you could imagine something that highway planners often call
Spoken Wheels System, so you're looking at radio roads coming out of a center circle.
For the 1960s, a few pieces of that hub and Spoke system had been built.
But there were still, crucially, a handful of roads needed to complete the whole scheme,
including something called the Interbelt.
So when we think about the Interbelt Road, it's the heart of that wheel.
This is the road that Savuji's professor was lecturing about, that Savuji thought was absolutely
insane. And he wasn't the only one.
We said no, no, no, no, no, no, it's not going to happen.
Anstie Benfield lived one block from the proposed route of the highway.
Right square in the middle of the line of the inner belt.
The road was supposed to start in Boston, then loop around into the neighboring city of Cambridge.
That is where Anstie lived,
and where the whole region's highway fight would begin.
This part of Cambridge was largely working class.
People used to call it the Greasy Village,
because historically, it had been the site
of a massive factory that made soap from rendered pork fat.
Then just down the road, you had the candy factories, neck awayfers, Charleston Chuse,
Junior Mints, all made in Cambridge, and all giving off smells of their own.
So in the 1960s, you had a lot of long time residents who had come to work the industrial
jobs, immigrants from Ireland, Poland, Barbados,
Panama, and Black Americans coming up from the south.
But this being Cambridge, Massachusetts, you also had the grad students and professors.
One side was MIT, the other side was a Harvard. I mean a lot of Harvard.
That meant engineers, sociologists, highly educated troublemakers of all stripes.
Mayer Hayes, what is your objection to the abundance of hippies and Cambridge?
The basic objection I have is the amount of them.
Noam Chomsky was lecturing at MIT.
Joan Bias was singing protest anthems in Harvard Square.
Women's Liberation, the Vietnam War,
it was pretty fertile ground for an activist movement.
And a highway was the kind of issue
that could bring everyone together
from Catholic priests and housewives
to radical lefties and college students.
I had my graduate degree in urban studies and I had a lot of energy and I needed something to do.
Well, low and behold, within a year of buying that house on Chestnut Street, they started
planning to knock the thing down. At that point, I went into action.
In early 1966,
Anstie collected over a thousand signatures
from other residents along the inner belt route.
I took the Iowa signatures and nailed them
to the wooden doors of City Hall.
There's a picture of this in the local paper,
the Cambridge Chronicle, with Anstie carrying her two-year-old daughter on her back.
But then two weeks they changed the wooden doors to glass.
But the point was made.
The residents of Cambridge would not go quietly.
Around this same time, Fred Selvucci set aside his bricklaying dreams for good.
He took a job as a transportation planner with the city of Boston.
His boss, the mayor, actually supported the inter belt.
But Selvuchi found that many of his fellow city planners did not, so they started to meet.
There was no game plan from the beginning. We just sort of stumbled into it.
One of those rogue city planners started writing pieces about the highway for the Cambridge Chronicle.
But why is Cambridge got its head in the sand? Why aren't we proposing alternatives to questions about whether the road ought to be built at all?
But certainly if you're going to build it, it doesn't have to be this bad.
And one day, a local priest reached out to the group and said, gee, you are saying things
that we are thinking in the neighborhood, but you've got technical skills that we don't
have.
You'd be willing to work with us.
That call would change the course of the movement.
All of a sudden, we like unpaid consultants working for the neighborhood.
And I want to stress just how radical this was.
For years, states around the country had been telling residents,
trust us, we know what's best, we have the experts.
Now here were those same experts saying, no, the state is wrong.
Eventually, Savucci's group got a name, urban planning aid.
Did it feel like you're almost crossing enemy lines or something?
I mean, you're working for the city
and then you're moonlighting, helping residents
and communities organize to oppose the city and state.
Were those things intentioned for you?
I'm not by nature a sneaky person. So I sent a memo to my boss and said, look,
at night, this is what I'm doing. I'm working with people who don't believe in these highways.
If you have a problem, let me know and I'll find another job. He said, well, no, we don't want you
to go, but we want you to stop doing what you're doing. And so you don't have an option.
It's my life.
I do what I believe in.
They said, I am crazy, but fine.
Do what you do.
At that time, Savuchi was not convinced the interbelt could be stopped.
You're the governor, big construction companies, labor unions, not to mention a decade of unstoppable growth in
the interstate system, all pushing to make the road happen.
So Savuchi was more focused on finding a way to make it less destructive, so fewer families
would have to lose their homes, like his grandmother had.
That might sound like a modest aim, but it turned into a battle.
This audio is from a Cambridge City Council meeting in 1966, discussing the impact of various roots.
First of all, I'd like to give a general description of the routes that have been considered as too possible or feasible
all in its to the Brookline Elm route using the criteria which has been set up.
The route that the state was proposing was terrible and savuch's opinion.
It went straight through the neighborhood, the old Greasy Village.
If the plan was built, a sleepy one-way street lined with houses would be turned into an eight-lane elevated highway.
The width that's required just for the structure would be roughly 135 feet.
But there was a logical alternative, which Savucci's group was able to actually map out and publish.
It was just south of the original route, running along the path of old railroad tracks.
This is referred to as Scheme E or M.
It would take a fraction of the number of homes, but in a little twist of irony for Savucci,
it would go through the campus of MIT.
And the present needs of MIT need to be considered.
This of course set many MIT types against him
and this alternate route.
Savuchi recalls one critical moment,
really a very Cambridge moment, when faculty from MIT
and Harvard basically wound up debating the route issue,
upstairs at the worst house in Harvard Square.
On the neighborhood side was a Harvard economist
named Kenneth Galbrith.
Now Galbrith had just flown in from Switzerland.
That meant that Salvucci and another organizer named Jim Mori
had only a few minutes to brief him on the details of the issue.
So he's just come off of a plane and he's blurry eyed
and he's bounding up the steps
to it at a time. Galbirth, by the way, was six feet eight inches tall. Jim Mori was about five
foot six and he's running to keep up with Galbraith and I'm two steps behind him and talk about the elevator talk, Maury briefs Galbirth in the space that it takes this giant
to go two steps at a time from the ground floor
to the second floor of the worst house.
So Galbirth says, I think I got it.
The meeting begins and a professor from MIT speaks first.
You basically said, look, I've been living here for a while now,
and we keep trying to elect more progressive school
committees and more progressive city councils.
And every year, those people that
is the blue-collar population get the majority.
And we have Lausie education and Lausie government.
And maybe just maybe if this highway knocks out
2500 dwelling units and associated waters, maybe we'll win the next election.
The guy sitting next to him then makes a similar argument that the road should go through
the neighborhood, not the campus.
At which point Galworth picks up his arm, which seems to almost reach the other side of the room. Points
of finger and says, only a moral imbusel would articulate such a cynical argument. We're
living in a country that's being torn apart by race, in a city that's being torn apart
by racial strife, and somehow, through some magic that none of us in this room was smart
enough to understand, there's an integrated neighborhood here in Cambridge where people are getting
long reasonably well, and they're low income people and minorities, and how on
Earth could we ever think of destroying this precious resource and he just carries
the day.
carries the day.
These debates over the route were strategically important. They bought time, drew attention and made sure that the whole city of Cambridge had a stake in the
issue. As long as the road could go anywhere, everyone had a reason to oppose it.
But ultimately the fate of the interte could not be decided in Cambridge.
This fight was bound for higher places, the governor's office, the White House.
The trouble is, the occupants of those high offices could always change, and that would
force the activists to change too. This election coverage is coming to you from WGBHTV and WGBHFM Boston.
1966 was an election year for governor, and the man running to keep that job was named John Volpe.
And he was a highway guy. Before becoming governor, Volpe had
owned a major construction firm and then served
as the very first leader of the Federal Highway
Administration under Eisenhower.
In Cambridge today, there is a mural that
shows angry residents standing in front of a bulldozer.
It's a little hard to tell just by looking,
but if you ask, ants, they bend field. The man in the bulldozer is It's a little hard to tell just by looking, but if you ask, ants, you bend
field. The man in the bulldozer is no other than...
Governor Volpy. We're going to Holpy headquarters directly at this point.
The election was November 8th. Urban planning aid scrambled to publish new data about the highways
just beforehand, but it didn't matter. And joy is really broken out here at Volpe, Richardson headquarters.
Volpe was here to stay.
During the next four years, we will try to work as hard if not harder than we have during
the past two years.
And again, as I say, place Massachusetts number one in all fields of endeavor.
Thank you very much.
So with the highway supporter firmly entrenched in the governor's office, the anti-highway
activists now took their fight further up the ladder to Washington.
And within a year we had four or five busloads of kids to Washington.
And oh yes, I can tell you, we had signs that said Cambridge is a city
not a highway and all the kids started chanting Cambridge is a city not a
highway they will never build roads through our homes and we would haul
these songs out all the way to Washington from Cambridge. Oh, that ride was amazing.
Ansty Benfield showed me another newspaper clipping. Three kids sitting on the grass outside
the Capitol with the headline, Lollipop Lobby. That was on the Washington Post from page. I mean,
that was the kind of thing that drew attention to our objections. Yeah, it's hard to say no to 150 singing children.
That's exactly the idea.
And the strategy paid off.
The Lyndon Johnson administration ordered a pair of new studies on the interbelt, questioning
both where the belt should go and whether it should be built at all.
It was a huge win for Benfield, Savuji, and all the anti-highway folks.
But just as those studies began,
the whole game was turned on its head.
It's time for new leadership for the United States of America!
In 1968, Richard Nixon was running for president.
And in the words of one Boston Globe reporter,
Governor John Volpy was running right after him.
Volpy was tired of Democrats in Washington holding up the inter-belt, so he set out to replace
them with himself, and it worked.
When Richard Nixon becomes president, he immediately taps Volpe to be the head of transportation
in DC.
Secretary of Transportation for the whole country.
Volpe gave a speech after the election in which he spoke about the inter belt and told the
crowd with confidence.
There's a new administration taking office in Washington, and I think we'll start to see things happen.
Again, author Carolyn Crocket.
So Volby gets whisked away, and quickly his second-in-command becomes governor.
All of a sudden, the activists' allies in Washington had been replaced by their foe in Massachusetts, and their
foe in Massachusetts had been replaced by a question mark.
Didn't know anything about him.
The question mark's name was Francis Sargent.
So when Francis Sargent would become a governor in the surprise, almost light of hand move.
The thought on the ground was, hmm,
we have maybe an opening here. At the same time that the debate over the inter belt is playing out in Cambridge, work
is already beginning on another new highway in Boston.
It's called the Southwest Expressway, and it's important because when linked together,
the Southwest Expressway and the inter Belt would carry traffic from Interstate
95 straight through the city.
I-95 is the busiest interstate in the whole national system.
And by 1968, when Nixon is elected president, the road already runs through almost every
major city on the east coast.
It has cut through Miami's historic black neighborhood
of Overtown. It has cut through New York along the Cross-Bronk's Expressway. It has gone through New
Haven, Connecticut, Providence, Rhode Island, and now its two strands of concrete have literally
arrived at the edges of Boston where they are waiting for the gates to open. The person holding the keys, so to speak,
was the brand new governor of Massachusetts, Francis Sargent.
To change his mind, it would take more than just activists
in Cambridge, plus some rebellious city planners.
It would take a coalition,
including all the neighborhoods along the Southwest Expressway.
So we had this very sophisticated strategy. We went on to the gas station, got a road map.
And with crayon, we mocked out the route of the proposed interstates. And we just went
neighborhood by neighborhood where the crayon hawk went. I went to a meeting where a group called Urban Planning Aid showed us these God for Second
Plant and it was stunning.
Anne Hirschfeng was one of many, many people who heard a version of that presentation.
It included drawings of the highways and maps with dark lines superimposed on them.
Images that could activate the imagination.
Make you realize that the house you had just repainted
or the block where you knew everyone's kids
that those things could be taken away and paved over
and no one even needed to so much as ask your opinion.
When the presentation was done,
the person sitting next to Anne volunteered to help spread the word.
Then I put up my hand. I thought I'm gonna do it too. The presentation was done, the person sitting next to Anne, volunteered to help spread the word.
Then I put up my hand.
I thought I'm gonna do it too.
The Southwest Expressway would cut across three neighborhoods,
each with its own character.
First, it would enter Boston through a largely white working class neighborhood
called Jamaica Plain.
The state started clearing land there in 1966.
I actually went from house to house and took pictures of the abandoned houses.
But there were still gardens growing in the backyards, flowers.
Yeah, it looked like a normal neighborhood except there weren't people.
The next neighborhood in the highways path was Roxbury, the historic center of black culture in Boston.
Everybody knows that there are going to be 1,500 jobs that would be taken. Everybody knows that there will be another 400 homes that will be taken.
We know that there is going to be...
Like in so many cities, Boston's black residents were facing perhaps the greatest impact from highways. Because Roxbury is where the Southwest Expressway and the Inter Belt, the Spoke and the Hub,
they were going to meet in a towering five-story interchange.
The fact that 150 acres of developer land in the Roxbury
Jamaica Plain Area is going to be taken by this four-lane highway.
On the other side of that interchange
was a third neighborhood, the south end.
Here the city started to get more dense, with rows of old brown stones that were pretty
run down in those days.
It was a neighborhood approximately one mile square that would have been entirely surrounded
by highways.
Those voices you just heard, Tom Corrigan, Chuck Turner, and Ken Cookemeier, were to all
end up involved with a new umbrella organization, the Greater Boston Committee on the Transportation
Crisis, or GBC for short.
But as the coalition grew, it also became more unwieldy.
Each neighborhood had its own particular issues with the highways and its own particular
culture.
There's a story of Chuck Turner showing up for a protest in a mostly Italian neighborhood
dressed in a disheaky and carrying a poster of Malcolm X.
Some residents were grateful for the solidarity.
Some walked away right there.
To help unify all the various factions, the GBC took a very simple position.
No new highways in Greater Boston period.
The days of debating routes were officially over.
And the strategy of this new group was right in the name.
Make this an issue for all of Greater Boston, not just three neighborhoods.
That's how you get the governor's attention.
I had the set of slides in a carousel and a whole group of us spread out over the entire
metropolitan area and tell people about the
plans for the highway.
And everywhere they went, they found people who wanted to listen.
Here's Chuck Turner, one of the lead activists in Roxbury speaking at a public meeting.
You know, in this country it's a strange thing that if you look on issues, you usually
see black people fighting white people, you usually see the rich against the poor, you
usually see the suburbanites against people in the inner city.
And it's strange, it's strange when you see one issue.
And all those people are united and saying, we don't want to build and we're going to stop it.
And Governor Sergeant and no other political official in this state is going to be able to build the highway over that objection.
By January of 1969, when Francis Sargent took his oath as governor the GBC
protesters were ready. About 2000 folks show up in front of the state house saying
what are you gonna do about this road? What are you gonna do about this Sargent?
What had started as a small group of Cambridge residents pushing back against a
single road had grown into a
radical challenge to the state's entire road building policy.
And this was the coming out party for the movement.
All the players, all the factions gathered in one place.
It spilled down the stairs of the State House over into Boston Common.
Fire Department came, people from every neighborhood in Boston.
Ansty Benfield led a march over from Cambridge
and addressed the crowd.
I want area 15,000.
This road is a right road to the middle of it.
A group of protesters carried a giant coffin that
said, here lies Cambridge, a plain flu overhead,
towing a sign that said, homes lies Cambridge, a plain flu overhead towing a sign that said,
homes not highways.
And so, to his credit, Francis Sargent does come out of the state house on that day
and addresses the crowd.
We have with us now the governor, the coming world of Massachusetts.
At this moment, Sargent is kind of a contradictory figure.
On the one hand, he used to run the Department of Public Works.
So he was the guy in charge of planning and building roads
for the whole state and acknowledged that fact right away.
I was the person who made the decision
back a number of years ago regarding the road through
Cambridge, I made that decision?
These people do not look impressed by him, they do not look pleased by him, but he tries
to make his appeal.
I want you to know.
Because on the other hand, Sargent was known as a nature lover and a conservationist.
Before he was in charge of roads, he had campaigned to create the Cape Cod National Seasure
and protect the whole area from development.
So the question was, which side of his past would come out now, the conservationist or
the road builder?
I made it, man, and I said at that time, and I say now, that if we ever build highways,
we must build them with a heart.
The only concrete promise Sergeant made that day was to review the whole issue of urban
highways and come back with a decision. For the protesters, that was not good enough. Work on the expressway was happening.
Houses were being taken, land was being cleared, and every day that passed made the whole
thing feel that much more inevitable.
It's an area place to visit, even on a sunny autumn day.
WGBH sent a reporter out to document the empty strip of land that had been cleared for
the Southwest Expressway.
By the summer of 69, over 1,000 homes had been taken along this corridor, almost two
miles long, and there were hundreds more homes still to go.
Suddenly, in the middle of the crowded city, there are acres of open space and unnatural
quiet. Sometimes, a clothesline and drawing sheets behind a house tells you that not all of the crowded city, there are acres of open space and unnatural quiet.
Sometimes a clothesline and drawing sheets behind a house tells you that not all of the buildings
in the block are abandoned yet.
And far off at the edge of this wasteland, the city abruptly begins again.
To people living in this area, to empty buildings and we build lots have become a nightmare.
It's pretty wild. I'll put it a nightmare. It's pretty wild.
I'll put it that way.
It was it was growing wild.
Ronald Perry grew up in a public housing project,
less than 50 feet from where the highway was supposed
to be built.
And as a 13 year old kid, the whole area
felt like a no man's land.
I would like go up to the chain link fence and crawl up
and just walk.
Would you see other people out there?
No, just me and my dog Tiger.
That was it.
Dirt grass.
Just open areas.
Just open areas.
As he walked along the route of the planned highway,
Perry would pass a trailer that the Black Panther party had set up to provide
basic health services and breakfast for neighborhood kids.
You know, milk, cereal or anything like that. He would then pass the boarded up windows of a local
hamburger joint called Kemp's. I don't really remember when it closed just over time,
it just gradually disappeared. It was almost like being a bandit slowly but surely.
And farther down on the side of a railroad embankment,
he would see the words, stop I-95.
Spray painted in white letters, maybe 12 feet tall.
It was huge. It was huge.
Even as a kid, Ronald Perry could tell that something big was happening.
Neighbors were talking, and flyers were posted, warning of two serpents coming to strangle
the neighborhood.
That mile of dirt and grass he walked was surrounded by over a thousand units of public
housing, a thousand families just like his, wondering how much more land would be taken,
and what the effects of those roads would be.
And so the whole place, the land, the people, the buildings, hung in limbo.
What was going to happen to my mother and me, there's a lot of people to this place, and
if you just place people, where were they going to go?
How come the governor did not stop the demolition of homes that is still going on today?
All through 1969, pressure was building on sergeant from all sides.
I-95 isn't an answer. It's a continuation.
When for some reason it seems fashionable to be against highway.
Because I'm here to stay and don't forget it.
Then people have had enough.
To the average citizen, it probably didn't look like Sargent was taking any action at all.
But that year, the new governor did follow
through on his promise. He created a task force to study the issue.
And somehow identified me as a person to lead the task force.
Alan Allchuler was teaching political science at MIT, and he was content in his academic
life until he got the call from one of Sargent's aides.
And I said, no.
But then Sargent personally called me.
He said, he really didn't know what to do about the highways.
And I said, I tell you what, this was my fatal mistake.
I said, I will do it.
If you promise that when we finish, you will publish our report.
Sargent agreed, and all Truler got to work.
He met with activists from the GBC and heard their arguments,
but what really struck him was the lack of any coherent argument
from the other side.
The anti-highway people were talking about some of the devastating consequences,
and the Department of Public Works really didn't have any significant answers.
They just wanted something to build, because building is what they did.
Well, they were in tune to be fair to them
with highway departments all across the United States.
I mean, all 50 states were trying to build
out their interstate systems.
This legislation had been enacted in 1956,
where now in 1969, no governor or no state government
had ever stopped a segment of
interstate highway in all these years. So they were typical. They weren't villains of
some sort. They were conscientious people who were just doing their thing.
In January of 1970, just a few days after New Year's, Alan Altchuller's task force
finally presented their findings to the governor.
It was my job as the chairman to brief sergeant.
The report was scathing, not just about the highways, but about the entire planning process
that led to those highways, and it basically called on sergeant to halt all construction immediately.
His face got red, he stiffened, and he was polite, but I wouldn't have
bet at that moment that he was about to take our recommendations very seriously.
By this time, a whole year had passed since Sargent became governor,
and activists were already planning a second demonstration in front of the
state house. Tom Corrigan from Jamaica Plain was leading the GBC and in his words
the goal was to pull out all the stops. The whole of the governor accountable for
his lack of action. Then three nights before the date of the protest, a cryptic
message arrived from two men close to the governor.
They said, call off the demonstration.
They were very serious about it. And they came close to saying,
we're very close to an announcement. Don't blow it by making him think that he's giving
into you by having a demonstration.
It was Corrigan's call.
He knew that the rank and foul membership were rearing to go.
And the last thing they would want was to give in to the governor's will.
But Corrigan decided to give Sargent a little more time.
He promised he would resign if the gambit failed.
And we postponed it.
Did it feel like a gamble though at the time? It's always a gamble, but it worked.
A week later, Governor Sargent
did something very unusual for any politician.
He said, quote, we were wrong.
That day, he ordered a freeze on all active highway construction in Greater Boston.
None of the activists I interviewed talked about that day as a major victory in itself.
It was only a freeze, pending more study, but at least the destruction of homes had finally stopped.
Altchuller remembers going down to Washington, DC with Sargent soon after that
announcement and meeting with Sargent's old boss, Volpe, who is now the
Secretary of Transportation. They're hoping to use some federal money to further
study the state's options and they needed approval from Volpe.
And he went into a ten-minute tirade against Sajin for having made this decision.
Sajin just stood there and when it was over, he said, Governor, he still called Volpe Governor. You have to listen to the people.
And Volpe twirled around and he pointed at me who he had just met and he said, Frank,
you listen and sit at wrong people.
Despite that initial response, the Department of Transportation did ultimately grant the
funding.
That money would support a two-year comprehensive study of the region's entire transportation network,
roads, highways, bridges, tunnels, buses, everything. Crucially, Altrule's group looked into whether
they could spend the money meant for highways, a new mass transit options, new subway lines,
for example. This was unprecedented. No state had ever
reallocated money like this. It was a laboratory for what could happen when the
narrative changed and the orthodoxy of highways was questioned. At the end of it,
Sergeant scheduled a broadcast slot to announce his final decision.
Governor's Transportation Message video taken 4 424, air date 1130-72.
Did you know what he was going to say?
No, we were all lobbying like crazy, but, you know, we didn't know.
10, 9, 8, 7.
So we are all sitting in our houses watching breathless. 8, 7, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, opportunities. The problems of transportation have held us prisoner for forty years, and
recently that captivity has become intolerable. You, your family, your neighbors have become
caught in a system that's fouled our air, ravaged our cities, choked our economy, and
frustrated every single one of us. Shall we build more expressways through cities?
Shall we forge new chains to shackle us
to the mistakes of the past?
No.
We will not repeat history.
We shall learn from it.
We will not build the expressways.
I think Sergeant's decision to cancel the road
was a shock.
Better than anything I could have hoped for.
So he announced this, and we all, in our individual houses,
leaped up and ran to the GBC headquarters,
and drank and cheered and hollabalooed.
It was a miracle it seemed.
Joy, joy and happiness, and thank the good Lord.
With that speech, Sargent removed almost 25 miles of highway from the interstate system.
The first time any state or governor had done so.
Sargent then went on for almost 15 minutes detailing how the state would seek alternatives
to the cancelled highways and invest in mass transit.
Yes, highways had been cancelled before, but not like this, not on the scale, not with
this kind of authority and vision.
I think it's worth sitting with Sargent's words for a little longer and reminding ourselves.
This is a Republican governor and former commissioner of Public Works, speaking in 1972.
The risks we take come down to betting on ourselves.
On people versus things, on people versus automobiles, on people versus the reckless
destruction of our homes, our environment, the very quality of our lives.
All in the false name of progress.
The only real progress is the progress of people.
I've counted on your help before, and it's been there.
I call upon you once again, and I'm sure that you will answer that call.
Every time I hear those words, I feel inspired, awed, really, that our governor could speak
with that kind of unabashed idealism, that belief in government, and also with the conviction
that it wasn't just talk, it was action.
Feels refreshing, to be honest.
My interest in this whole story springs from a feeling, a hope, really, that our nation
is on the precipice of a new era of infrastructure.
And I'm not just thinking about roads and bridges here.
I'm thinking about wind turbines, solar farms, transmission
lines, battery plants, about making our buildings more energy efficient, and our coastlines more
resilient to storms and flooding. If you look at any optimistic scenario for surviving climate change,
it involves building stuff on a totally unprecedented scale.
In a way, Sargent had it easy.
He was choosing not to build something, to keep things as they were, and I don't think
we have that luxury right now.
Which is why the story I'm most interested in is the story of what comes next.
It's not about what our state said no to.
It's what we said yes to what we did build.
Among the many physical legacies of Boston's anti-highway fight, there's now a train line that runs where the Southwest Expressway was supposed to go.
This is Roxbury Cross-A.
If you get off in Roxbury, those acres of clear land are home to community college, a health center, Boston police headquarters, and the largest mosque in New England.
Do you know where to get the back bay, but you want to get on the train towards Oak Grove in two minutes.
Imagining a highway here now, it's unthinkable. And out of the edge of the city, you can still see
where the two strips of concrete dead end in the woods never to be continued.
But there is another legacy, a connection that most people don't talk about and that I certainly
didn't understand growing up.
Because in that same speech Sergeant gave, there are a few lines about an ambitious and visionary
idea.
Interesting long term idea, but we'll see.
What if the city could go further than just stopping highways?
What if it could tear them down, put them underground, and stitch the city back together?
This would be better that learning from the past, it would be correcting the past.
That actually became the origin of the big dig. And in two years Fred
Salvucci would be in a position to take it on. Thank you all for joining us
here today for the announcement of a very very important position and it's a
decision which required more than a little soul searching on my car. That's next time.
The big dig podcast is available wherever you get podcasts.
I've heard every episode.
I've got a little preview.
It just gets better and better.
It is a real triumph.
Episode 2 is already available in their feed and new episodes will be released weekly.
Go subscribe.
The show is produced by Isabel Hibbert and myself, Ian Koss.
It's edited by Lacey Roberts.
The editorial supervisor is Stephanie Liden with support this episode from Lisa Wardle. May Lay is the project manager and the executive producer is Devon Maverick-Roppens.
This episode was informed by two fantastic books about the Boston Anti-Highway movement.
People before highways, Boston activists, urban planners, and a new movement for citymaking
by Carolyn Crockett and Rights of Way, the politics of transportation
in Boston and the U.S. City, which includes an incredibly detailed account written in the 60s and 70s
by a Globe reporter named Alan Lupo, a highly recommend them both. To see archival video and learn
more about the show, go to gbhnews.org.
The artwork is by Matt Welch.
Our closing song is ETA by Damon and Naomi.
The Big Dig is a production of GBH News and Distributed by PRX.
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