| One of the most illegal highways ever proposed |
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WETLANDS:
West Eugene SLIDESHOW:
Osprey
Group report
ignored June 2006: last gasp?
blog WEP alternatives:
WEP
would have more hospital
siting
TREES:
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“You must remember one thing. At the
Constitutional level where we work, ninety percent of any decision is
emotional. The rational part of us supplies the reason for supporting
our predilections.”
At the May 29, 2002 Eugene / Springfield / Lane County / LTD public hearing to amend the TransPlan, West Eugene Wetlands Plan, Metro Plan and Rural Comprehensive Plan, FHWA Oregon Division administrator Dave Reilly reminded the officials that federal aid highways cannot be segmented into smaller pieces to avoid disclosure of the full impact of the project, require logical termini when approved, must meet a purpose and need, and must be fiscally constrained. The City of Eugene summary of his testimony severely downplayed his comments:
The FHWA testimony did not merely discuss the NEPA process. The agency specifically warned that logical termini, segmentation, fiscal constraint and independent utility were issues that needed to be addressed before they could sign a Record of Decision.
In July, 2002 Eugene, Springfield, Lane County and Lane Transit District amended the West Eugene Wetlands Plan, TransPlan, Metro Plan and Rural Plan to include the West Eugene Parkway, a bypass of the West 11th commercial strip. But approval at the local level does not necessarily mean that it will be built – like all federal aid highways, the ultimate decision will be made by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). Some of the hurdles blocking the bulldozers include Oregon’s land use laws (which prohibit new urban freeways outside urban growth boundaries), the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, FHWA regulations regarding highway approval, the Clean Water Act, and Section 4(f) of the Transportation Act (which prohibits federally funded roads through parks and wildlife refuges).
General Process Regulations
Biology, Water Resources, Wetlands
Cultural, Social, Land Use, Aesthetics
Noise, Air Quality, and Hazardous Material
23 CFR 771 Sec. 771.117 Categorical exclusions. (a) Categorical exclusions (CEs) are actions which meet the definition contained in 40 CFR 1508.4, and, based on past experience with similar actions, do not involve significant environmental impacts. They are actions which: do not induce significant impacts to planned growth or land use for the area, do not require the relocation of significant numbers of people; do not have a significant impact on any natural, cultural, recreational, historic or other resource; do not involve significant air, noise, or water quality impacts; do not have significant impacts on travel patterns; and do not otherwise, either individually or cumulatively, have any significant environmental impacts. (b) Any action which normally would be classified as a CE but could
involve unusual circumstances will require the Administration, in cooperation
with the applicant, to conduct appropriate environmental studies to determine
if the CE classification is proper. Such unusual circumstances include: (d) Additional actions which meet the criteria for a CE in the
CEQ regulations (40 CFR 1508.4) and paragraph (a) of this section
may be designated as CEs only after Administration approval. The applicant
shall submit documentation which demonstrates that the specific conditions
or criteria for these CEs are satisfied and that significant environmental
effects will not result. Examples of such actions include but are not
limited to: |