Public Radio for the Piedmont and High Country
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Black Political Caucus says it will file lawsuit to stop I-77 toll lanes

Black Political Caucus President Jocelyn Nolley speaks at a news conference Monday. The BPC says it will file a lawsuit to halt plans to build new toll lanes on Interstate 77.
Steve Harrison
/
WFAE
Black Political Caucus President Jocelyn Nolley speaks at a news conference Monday. The BPC says it will file a lawsuit to halt plans to build new toll lanes on Interstate 77.

The Black Political Caucus of Charlotte Mecklenburg said at a news conference Monday that it will file a lawsuit in Mecklenburg Superior Court to get a temporary restraining order to halt the Interstate 77 toll lane expansion project.

Residents in historically Black neighborhoods near uptown say the highway widening will further divide their communities from uptown and increase noise pollution. The BPC says the North Carolina Department of Transportation hasn’t engaged with the community enough. One complaint is that the state released maps of the project in the fall of 2025 only after it said it was too late to stop the project.

Raki McGregor, the chair of the BPC’s transportation committee, said the DOT has acted as a “dictatorship.”

McCrorey Heights neighborhood president Sean Langley said he also wants Democratic Governor Josh Stein involved with the project.

“We want Governor Stein’s input,” Langley said. “We want him to hear the voice of this community, of this chorus of neighborhoods that are all echoing the same thing.”

Interstate 77 is one of the state’s most congested highways. The DOT wants to build two toll lanes in each direction from uptown to the South Carolina line.

Supporters of the project – like the Charlotte Regional Business Alliance – have said the toll lanes are critical to keep the region moving.

The lawsuit comes as the DOT and the staff of the Charlotte Regional Transportation Planning Organization have said it’s too late to pause or stop the project. The CRTPO contract attorney, Mujeeb Shah-Khan, wrote a memo last week that said the organization’s board no longer has any influence over the project, and that it can’t order a pause.

Mecklenburg Commissioner and CRTPO member Leigh Altman dismissed Shah-Khan’s memo, noting it didn’t have any legal citations to justify his opinion.

“An attorney opinion without any citations to authority is not an attorney opinion,” she said. “It’s a personal opinion.”

The Charlotte City Council is scheduled to discuss the toll lanes tonight at 6. At least nine council members have said they want to explore ways to pause the project.

Steve Harrison is WFAE's politics and government reporter. Prior to joining WFAE, Steve worked at the Charlotte Observer, where he started on the business desk, then covered politics extensively as the Observer’s lead city government reporter. Steve also spent 10 years with the Miami Herald. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, the Sporting News and Sports Illustrated.

Support quality journalism, like the story above,
with your gift right now.

Donate