Environmental Impact Statement: Tappan Zee Bridge/I-287 Corridor Between Suffern, NY (Rockland County) and Port Chester, NY (Westchester County), 8740-8743 [E8-2741]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 31 / Thursday, February 14, 2008 / Notices
or on application by any carrier for good
cause shown.
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 8,
2008.
Kerry B. Long,
Chief Counsel, Federal Aviation
Administration.
[FR Doc. 08–661 Filed 2–8–08; 3:55 pm]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–M
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Federal Transit Administration
Environmental Impact Statement:
Tappan Zee Bridge/I–287 Corridor
Between Suffern, NY (Rockland
County) and Port Chester, NY
(Westchester County)
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA) and Federal
Transit Administration (FTA), United
States Department of Transportation
(DOT).
ACTION: Revised Notice of Intent.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: The FHWA and FTA are
jointly issuing this Revised Notice of
Intent (NOI) to advise the public of
modifications to the environmental
review process for the Tappan Zee
Bridge/I–287 Corridor Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS). These revisions
include the intent of FHWA and FTA to
use a tiered process to facilitate project
decision-making, and the intent of
FHWA and FTA to utilize the
environmental review provisions
afforded under Section 6002 of the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users (SAFETEA–LU). The EIS will
build upon the extensive alternatives
analysis, environmental and technical
studies and public comments and
outreach conducted to date, which are
available online at the project’s Web site
(www.tzbsite.com). This NOI revises the
NOI that was published in the Federal
Register on December 23, 2002.
The proposed tiering approach will
allow the joint lead agencies to focus on
both broad overall corridor issues in a
Tier 1 transit analysis of general
alignment and mode choice while
simultaneously assessing site specific
impacts, costs and mitigation measures
in a Tier 2 bridge and highway analysis.
The scope of analysis in the Tier 1 and
Tier 2 will be appropriate to the level
of detail necessary for those documents
and will receive input from the public
and reviewing agencies. The intent of
the joint lead agencies is for the Tier 1
and Tier 2 analyses to be developed
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concurrently in order to maximize the
efficiencies and potential for
multimodal solutions.
The Tier 1 transit analysis will
provide the basis for a corridor level
decision on transit mode(s),
alignment(s), and logical termini within
the Corridor and sufficient detail of
impact assessments and preliminary
engineering to allow the Tier 2 highway
and bridge elements to proceed to final
design and construction. Because the
transportation needs of the corridor
require a multimodal solution, the
highway, bridge, and transit elements
are intricately tied to one another and
require iterative and concurrent
development, analysis and
consideration up to the decision on
mode and alignment. Once the transit
mode and alignment decisions are
made, the analysis can focus on the
needs of the corridor which includes the
structural needs of the existing Tappan
Zee Bridge and associated highway
network, while preserving the transit
corridor within the existing right of
way.
Additional purposes of this revised
NOI are to:
• Advise the public of lead agency
roles.
• Outline how the provisions of
SAFETEA–LU Section 6002 will be met.
• Update interested parties regarding
the current approach to preparing the
EIS.
• Provide updated information on the
proposed project, purpose and need for
the project, and range of alternatives.
• Re-invite participation in the EIS
process, including comments on the
refined scope of the EIS proposed in this
notice.
• Announce the dates, times and
locations of upcoming scoping update
meetings.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael P. Anderson, Project Director,
NYSDOT, 660 White Plains Road, Suite
340, Tarrytown, NY 10591, Telephone:
(914) 358–0600; or Willet Schraft,
Senior Operations Engineer, FHWA,
New York Division, Leo W. O’Brien
Federal Building, 7th Floor, Clinton
Avenue and North Pearl Street, Albany,
NY 12207, Telephone: (518) 431–4125;
or Donald Burns, Senior Planner, FTA,
One Bowling Green, Room 429, New
York, NY 10004, Telephone: (212) 668–
2170.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
December 23, 2002, the FHWA and
FTA, in cooperation with the New York
State Thruway Authority (NYSTA) and
the Metro-North Railroad, a subsidiary
of the Metropolitan Transportation
Authority (MTA/MNR) issued a Notice
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of Intent to prepare an Alternatives
Analysis (AA) and an Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS) for the I–287
Corridor in Westchester and Rockland
Counties, NY (FR Volume 67, No. 246).
Extensive AA public involvement
activity has been conducted since
publication of that NOI such that a
revised tiered approach is warranted. Of
considerable note, is that the New York
State Department of Transportation
(NYSDOT) has become a sponsoring
agency and taken on the role of lead
State project manager. As a sponsoring
agency, NYSDOT, as well as NYSTA
and MTA/MNR, are considered Joint
Lead Agencies for the project under
SAFETEA–LU.
1. Scoping
In January 2003, after the December
2002 NOI was published, three scoping
meetings were held: one in Westchester
County; one in Rockland County; and
one in Orange County. Public and
agency comments received during those
scoping meetings have been
incorporated into the AA. As a result of
the initial scoping process which
included a Level 1 and Level 2
alternatives screening process, the
alternatives have been reduced from 150
alternative elements to six alternatives.
As a result of the changes in the project
conditions and approach that have
precipitated the issuance of this revised
NOI, scoping update meetings will be
conducted to obtain current comments
on the scope of the EIS. To assist
interested parties in formulating their
comments, a scoping informational
packet will be prepared and made
available upon request from the
NYSDOT representative identified
above or online at the project’s Web site
(www.tzbsite.com). The scoping packet
will include the project’s purpose and
need, goals and objectives, range of
alternatives, environmental issues that
will be addressed during the course of
the study and the public and agency
coordination plan, pursuant to
SAFETEA–LU. In addition, the scoping
packet will include the evaluation
criteria that will be used to conduct a
third level (‘‘Level 3’’) alternatives
screening process, which will further
analyze the remaining alternatives.
In early 2008, three additional public
scoping update meetings will be
conducted, one each in Westchester,
Rockland and Orange Counties, to
solicit additional public comments on
the scope of the EIS. Each meeting will
run from 4 to 9 p.m. and consist of an
informal open house setting and two
formal presentations. Formal
presentations will be made at 5 p.m. and
again at 7 p.m. After each presentation,
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 31 / Thursday, February 14, 2008 / Notices
the public will be provided the
opportunity to comment. Those wishing
to speak must sign up by either 5:30
p.m. or 7:30 p.m., respectively. A court
reporter will be available to record the
formal meeting and public comments.
The public meetings will be held in the
following locations:
Westchester County Public Scoping
Update Meeting: Tuesday, February
26, 2008, The Performing Arts Center,
Purchase College, State University of
New York, 735 Anderson Hill Road,
Purchase, NY 10577
Orange County Public Scoping Update
Meeting: Wednesday, February 27,
2008, Orange-Ulster BOCES Campus,
53 Gibson Road, Goshen, NY 10924
Rockland County Public Scoping
Update Meeting: Thursday, February
28, 2008, the Palisades Center, 1000
Palisades Center Drive, West Nyack,
NY 10994.
The public comment period will be
open for a maximum of 30 days
following the February 28 meeting.
Comments will be accepted until
Monday, March 31, 2008.
Written comments on the scope of the
project can be sent to Michael P.
Anderson, Project Director, NYSDOT,
Tappan Zee Bridge/I–287 Project Office,
660 White Plains Road, Suite 340,
Tarrytown, NY 10591 (Telephone: (914)
358–0600). The meetings will be
accessible to persons with disabilities. If
special needs such as an interpreter or
sign language services are needed please
contact Michael P. Anderson.
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2. Description of the Project Area
The Tappan Zee Bridge/I–287
Corridor (Corridor) is approximately 30
miles in length, extending from the I–
87/I–287 Interchange in Suffern, NY to
the I–287/I–95 interchange in Port
Chester, NY and includes the Tappan
Zee Bridge. Maintained by NYSTA, the
Corridor encompasses the entire length
of the Cross Westchester Expressway
(CWE) in Westchester County,
connecting two of the most rapidly
growing communities in the New York
region, Rockland and Orange County
with Westchester County, a major
employment destination just east of the
Hudson River. The Corridor also
intersects with the five MTA/MNR
commuter rail lines (Port Jervis, Pascack
Valley, Hudson, Harlem and New
Haven) which run north-south and none
of which are oriented east-west through
the Corridor or cross the Hudson River.
The Corridor is serviced in the east-west
direction through the following bus
services, the Tappan ZEExpress, Orange
Westchester Link (OWL) and other bus
services.
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3. Purpose and Need
The purpose and need of the project
is to address the transportation safety,
mobility and capacity needs of the
Tappan Zee Bridge/I–287 Corridor. At
the conclusion of the scoping process,
the EIS will continue to evaluate the
multimodal alternatives that meet the
purpose and need of the project. Of
particular concern is the structural
design and integrity of the Tappan Zee
Bridge, a vital infrastructure element in
the regional and national transportation
network. Numerous goals and objectives
for proposed improvements have been
developed and refined through public
and agency coordination since inception
of the original NOI in 2002. Primary
goals include providing improved
transit service within the Corridor
including connections to existing transit
service, decreasing congestion and
travel times within the Corridor, and
addressing the structural integrity and
traffic safety of the Tappan Zee Bridge.
Further refinement or modification to
these goals and objectives and the
purpose and needs of the project may be
made by the joint lead agencies once the
scoping update meetings have been
conducted and comments received.
When opened to traffic in 1955, the
Tappan Zee Bridge carried
approximately 18,000 vehicles. Today,
the bridge carries approximately
135,000 vehicles daily with volumes as
high as 170,000 on some peak days.
During the past 20 years, traffic volumes
have grown significantly in the
Corridor, by over 50 percent on the CWE
and by more than 70 percent on the
Tappan Zee Bridge. As a result, the
Corridor experiences varying levels of
traffic congestion throughout the 30mile length. The steady increase in
traffic demand over the years, together
with only limited increases in roadway
capacity and limited east-west modal
alternatives, have resulted in continual
increases in travel time and delay. The
problems are most severe during the
eastbound morning peak and the
westbound evening peak periods,
particularly within the vicinity of the
Tappan Zee Bridge.
The Tappan Zee Bridge has nonstandard safety features, narrow lane
widths (11 feet 8 inches), no shoulders
and a narrow median; operates at or
near full capacity in the peak hours; has
long periods of stop and go traffic; areas
of notable traffic turbulence and an
average collision rate four times greater
than the average rate (per million
vehicle miles), when compared to the
whole of the Thruway system. On the
highway segment of the corridor, 39
locations on the mainline and various
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entrance and exit ramps have accident
rates in excess of statewide averages.
In addition to its capacity constraints,
the structural design and integrity of the
bridge requires consideration. While the
structural condition is safe to the public,
several structural deficiencies also need
to be addressed. The bridge is located in
a moderate seismically active zone, and
was not designed in accordance with
the current seismic code. The seismic
vulnerability of the bridge is an area of
great importance to the project.
Today bus transit, car and van pools
operate in mixed traffic and are subject
to the same congestion and travel
delays. The bridge’s current capacity
constraints do not allow for dedicated
lanes that would accommodate higher
capacity vehicles and increased transit
bus services. One of the most significant
findings in the AA analysis to date is
that traffic forecasts clearly demonstrate
a demand for travel in the corridor that
cannot be accommodated by highway
improvements alone. The need to
include transit improvements in the
corridor is strongly indicated.
As a result of these conditions, the
EIS will evaluate alternatives that
address the following needs of the
Corridor:
• Preserve the existing river crossing as
a vital link in the regional and
national transportation network
• Provide a river crossing that has
structural integrity, meets current
design criteria and standards, and
accommodates transit
• Improve highway safety, mobility,
and capacity throughout the Corridor
• Improve transit mobility and capacity
throughout the Corridor and travel
connections to the existing northsouth and east-west transit network
4. Alternatives
The alternatives under consideration
involve different combinations of
bridge, highway and transit elements.
Transit modes currently undergoing
additional evaluation as a result of
ongoing analysis include the Bus Rapid
Transit (BRT), Light Rail Transit (LRT),
and Commuter Rail (CRT). The
Alternatives Analysis Report issued in
2006 identified six alternatives for
further study in the EIS. These six
alternatives were the result of Level 1
and Level 2 alternatives screening and
include the following:
• No Build Alternative
• Bridge Rehabilitation with
Transportation Demand Management
(TDM) and Transportation Systems
Management (TSM) measures
• Full Corridor BRT with a new bridge
and highway improvements in
Rockland County
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• Manhattan-bound Full Corridor CRT
with a new bridge and highway
improvements in Rockland County
• Manhattan-bound CRT with LRT in
Westchester County, a new bridge,
and highway improvements in
Rockland County
• Manhattan-bound CRT with BRT in
Westchester County, a new bridge,
and highway improvements in
Rockland County
The above six alternatives are
currently still under evaluation.
However, the EIS will include the
results of a Level 3 alternatives
screening which may result in the
elimination, combination or
modification of one or more of the
alternatives considered to date. The
evaluation criteria used to conduct this
further screening will be made available
for public and agency comment and
finalized as part of the scoping process,
consistent with the refined and updated
purpose and needs, goals, and
objectives. If the Level 3 alternatives
screening results in the elimination,
combination or modification of one or
more of the alternatives, this will be
disclosed as part of the revised
environmental review process and
documented in the EIS, affording the
opportunity for public and agency
review and comment during the DEIS
public hearings. Alternatives retained
for full evaluation in the EIS will be
compared to the baseline conditions of
the No Build Alternative in terms of
their social, economic, and
environmental impacts.
5. Probable Effects
The environmental impact assessment
of alternatives will be conducted at
various levels of detail throughout the
environmental review process. In the
initial alternatives screening phases of
the project conducted to date, the
analysis has focused on major
differentiating factors amongst the
bridge, highway, and transit elements
and alignments. This level of analysis
will continue in the Level 3 alternatives
screening process and will be
documented in a Scoping Update
Summary Report to be developed. As
alternatives are screened to a reasonable
range for detailed study in the DEIS, the
analysis will become more detailed and
dependent upon additional studies and
reports.
Specifically, the DEIS and FEIS will:
summarize the results of coordination
with federal, state, and local agencies
and the public at large; present the
appropriate federal, state, and local
regulations and policies; inventory and
compile previous studies; describe the
methodology used to assess impacts;
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identify the affected environment;
predict and analyze the constructionrelated (short-term) and operational
(long-term) impacts (direct, indirect,
and cumulative) of reasonable
alternatives; and identify opportunities
and measures for mitigating significant
adverse impacts. Specific scopes for the
environmental studies to be used in the
Level 3 alternatives screening process
and subsequent tiered analysis in the
DEIS and FEIS will be established
during the public and agency scoping
update process.
6. FHWA and FTA Procedures
The EIS is being prepared in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), as amended, and implemented
by the Council on Environmental
Quality (CEQ) regulations (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), the FHWA/FTA
Environmental Impact regulations (23
CFR part 771), and the FHWA/FTA
Statewide Planning/Metropolitan
Planning regulations (23 CFR part 450),
as well as the requirements of Section
6002 of SAFETEA–LU. In addition, this
EIS will comply with the requirements
of the National Historic Preservation Act
of 1966, as amended, section 4(f) of the
1966, U.S. Department of Transportation
Act, the 1990 Clean Air Act
Amendments, Executive Order 12898 on
Environmental Justice, Executive Order
11990 Protection of Wetlands, and other
applicable statutes, rules, and
regulations. The EIS and the
environmental review process will also
satisfy requirements of the New York
State Environmental Quality Review Act
(SEQRA) (consistent with 6 NYCRR
617.15 and SEQRA regulations, Part 15
Title 17 of NYCRR); this NOI eliminates
the need for a positive declaration under
that statute.
Regulations implementing NEPA (40
CFR 1500–1508), as well as certain
provisions of SAFETEA–LU, call for
enhanced agency and public
involvement in the EIS process. Several
of the pertinent provisions of Section
6002 of SAFETEA–LU that are reflected
in the revised approach to the
processing of the EIS include: (1) Extend
an invitation to other Federal and nonFederal agencies and Native American
tribes that may have an interest in the
proposed project to become
‘‘Participating Agencies’’; (2) Provide an
opportunity for involvement in helping
to develop the purpose and need for the
proposed project, as well as the range of
alternatives for consideration in the EIS,
and analysis methodologies and level of
detail in any such analysis; and (3)
Establish a plan for coordinating public
and agency participation and comment
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on the environmental review process.
As related to item 3, while the project
already has a public and agency
coordination plan, it was developed preSAFETEA–LU and will be amended to
reflect specific requirements set forth in
Section 6002 of that legislation. An
invitation to all Federal and non-Federal
agencies and Native American tribes
that may have an interest in the
proposed project will be extended. In
the event that an agency or tribe is not
invited and would like to participate,
please contact the Project Manager
listed under Contact Information above.
A Coordination Plan will be developed
summarizing how the public and
agencies will be engaged in the process.
This plan will be posted to the project
Web site (www.tzbsite.com). The public
coordination and outreach efforts will
include public meetings, open houses, a
project Web site, Stakeholder Advisory
Work Groups, and public hearings.
Compatible with and contributing to
the functionality of the overall project,
some elements of the Build Alternatives
may be functionally independent of
other elements. Although the current
plan is to evaluate all of these
geographically contiguous elements of
the alternatives retained for evaluation
in the EIS, as the project elements are
developed and as schedules and
construction phasing plans develop, it is
possible that some of the independent
elements may be advanced via separate
environmental evaluations under NEPA
and SEQRA. In addition, New Starts
funding may be pursued for a transit
component of the proposed project
under 49 U.S.C. 5309. If so, any such
transit component identified in the Tier
1 analysis of this would be a separate
project subject to additional Tier 2 level
NEPA environmental review and New
Starts regulations (49 CFR Part 611).
The project sponsors may identify a
preferred alternative in the Draft EIS
when made available for public and
agency comment. Public hearings on the
Draft EIS will be held within the study
area. On the basis of the Draft EIS and
the public and agency comments
received, the design of the preferred
alternative and other feasible
alternatives will be further refined in
the Final EIS. The Joint Lead Agencies
will identify the preferred alternative in
the Final EIS and the Final EIS will
serve as the basis for federal
environmental findings and
determinations needed to conclude the
environmental review process related
to:
• Tier 1 analysis findings on the
transit mode and alignment associated
with the preferred alternative.
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• Tier 2 analysis findings on the
bridge facilities and transit elements
from the Tier 1 analysis, approaches and
associated highway network
improvements within the Corridor
associated with the preferred
alternative.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Number 20.205, Highway Planning
and Construction. The regulations
implementing Executive Order 12372
regarding intergovernmental consultation on
Federal programs and activities apply to this
program.)
Jeffrey Kolb, New York Division
Administrator, Federal Highway
Administration, Leo W. O’Brien
Building, 7th Floor, Clinton Avenue and
North Pearl Street, Albany, NY 12207.
Brigid Hynes-Cherin, Region II
Administrator, Federal Transit
Administration, One Bowling Green,
Room 429, New York, NY 10004.
Dated: February 6, 2008.
Jeffrey W. Kolb,
New York Division Administrator, Federal
Highway Administration.
Brigid Hynes-Cherin,
Region II Administrator, Federal Transit
Administration.
[FR Doc. E8–2741 Filed 2–13–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA–2008–0016, Notice 1]
NHTSA’s Activities Under the United
Nations Economic Commission for
Europe 1998 Global Agreement: Head
Restraints
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Request for comments.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NHTSA is publishing this
notice to inform the public that there
may be a vote to adopt the Global
Technical Regulation (GTR) on Head
Restraints at the March 2008 session of
the World Forum for Harmonization of
Vehicle Regulations (WP.29). In
anticipation of this vote, NHTSA is
requesting comments on this GTR to
inform its decision for the vote.
Publication of this information is in
accordance with NHTSA’s Statement of
Policy regarding Agency Policy Goals
and Public Participation in the
Implementation of the 1998 Global
Agreement on Global Technical
Regulations.
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Written comments may be
submitted to this agency by March 6,
2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
[identified by DOT Docket No. NHTSA–
2008–0016, Notice 1] by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility:
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: West
Building Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. ET, Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
Telephone: 1–800–647–5527.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number for this proposed collection of
information. Note that all comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided.
Please see the Privacy Act heading
below.
Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search
the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR
19477–78) or you may visit https://
DocketInfo.dot.gov.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and follow the
online instructions, or visit the Docket
Management Facility at the street
address listed above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Ezana Wondimneh, Chief, International
Policy and Harmonization (NVS–133),
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590–
0001; Phone: 202–366–2117, Fax: 202–
493–2990.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
December 14, 2004, NHTSA published a
final rule upgrading Federal Motor
Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No.
202, ‘‘Head Restraints.’’ (64 FR 74847)
In upgrading the existing FMVSS,
NHTSA adopted into the FMVSS many
of the requirements which already
existed in the head restraint regulation
DATES:
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8743
of the United Nations Economic
Commission for Europe (UNECE), and
which provided improved safety over
then existing FMVSS. However, in
instances where opportunities existed to
achieve increased safety in a cost
effective manner or to better enforce our
standard, the agency went beyond or
took an approach different from that in
the UNECE regulation. One important
area in which the FMVSS achieved
increased safety over the current UNECE
regulation was in the addition of a
backset requirement (the distance
between the head restraint and the back
of the head) to reduce whiplash injuries.
In anticipation of these differences
between the FMVSS and the UNECE
regulation, in its October 8, 2004 notice
on the status of NHTSA’s participation
under the 1998 Agreement (69 FR
60460), NHTSA sought comments on
whether the U.S. should sponsor a GTR
on head restraints. NHTSA thought that
a GTR in this area would not be difficult
to achieve given the level of
harmonization that already existed
between the U.S. and UNECE
regulations. In addition, NHTSA
believed that much would be gained
from such an effort worldwide. The GTR
will incorporate the newly adopted
backset requirements from the U.S.
regulation, thus improving safety in
countries that do not have a backset
requirement. The GTR will also
harmonize any remaining differences
between the UNECE regulation and the
FMVSS, creating a common regulatory
framework and paving the way for
future cooperation in the area of rear
impact and whiplash injury reduction.
No comments were received from the
U.S. public objecting to NHTSA’s
sponsorship and pursuit of this GTR.
Many countries participating in the
United Nations’ process under the 1998
Agreement also welcomed the U.S.
leadership. Since whiplash injuries are
not unique to the United States,
countries around the world had strong
incentive to cooperate in order to
address the social and economic
impacts of these injuries.
During the November 2004 meeting of
WP.29, NHTSA gained the approval of
the Executive Committee of the 1998
Global Agreement (AC.3) to begin the
development of a Head Restraints GTR.
The proposal was referred to the
Working Party on Passive Safety (GRSP).
In February 2005, the GRSP formed an
informal working group, chaired by the
United States, to develop the GTR.
In developing and drafting the new
GTR, the working group combined
elements from UNECE Regulations Nos.
17 and 25, and the newly upgraded
FMVSS No. 202. The group also
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 31 (Thursday, February 14, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 8740-8743]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-2741]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Federal Transit Administration
Environmental Impact Statement: Tappan Zee Bridge/I-287 Corridor
Between Suffern, NY (Rockland County) and Port Chester, NY (Westchester
County)
AGENCIES: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and Federal Transit
Administration (FTA), United States Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Revised Notice of Intent.
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SUMMARY: The FHWA and FTA are jointly issuing this Revised Notice of
Intent (NOI) to advise the public of modifications to the environmental
review process for the Tappan Zee Bridge/I-287 Corridor Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS). These revisions include the intent of FHWA and
FTA to use a tiered process to facilitate project decision-making, and
the intent of FHWA and FTA to utilize the environmental review
provisions afforded under Section 6002 of the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users
(SAFETEA-LU). The EIS will build upon the extensive alternatives
analysis, environmental and technical studies and public comments and
outreach conducted to date, which are available online at the project's
Web site (www.tzbsite.com). This NOI revises the NOI that was published
in the Federal Register on December 23, 2002.
The proposed tiering approach will allow the joint lead agencies to
focus on both broad overall corridor issues in a Tier 1 transit
analysis of general alignment and mode choice while simultaneously
assessing site specific impacts, costs and mitigation measures in a
Tier 2 bridge and highway analysis. The scope of analysis in the Tier 1
and Tier 2 will be appropriate to the level of detail necessary for
those documents and will receive input from the public and reviewing
agencies. The intent of the joint lead agencies is for the Tier 1 and
Tier 2 analyses to be developed concurrently in order to maximize the
efficiencies and potential for multimodal solutions.
The Tier 1 transit analysis will provide the basis for a corridor
level decision on transit mode(s), alignment(s), and logical termini
within the Corridor and sufficient detail of impact assessments and
preliminary engineering to allow the Tier 2 highway and bridge elements
to proceed to final design and construction. Because the transportation
needs of the corridor require a multimodal solution, the highway,
bridge, and transit elements are intricately tied to one another and
require iterative and concurrent development, analysis and
consideration up to the decision on mode and alignment. Once the
transit mode and alignment decisions are made, the analysis can focus
on the needs of the corridor which includes the structural needs of the
existing Tappan Zee Bridge and associated highway network, while
preserving the transit corridor within the existing right of way.
Additional purposes of this revised NOI are to:
Advise the public of lead agency roles.
Outline how the provisions of SAFETEA-LU Section 6002 will
be met.
Update interested parties regarding the current approach
to preparing the EIS.
Provide updated information on the proposed project,
purpose and need for the project, and range of alternatives.
Re-invite participation in the EIS process, including
comments on the refined scope of the EIS proposed in this notice.
Announce the dates, times and locations of upcoming
scoping update meetings.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael P. Anderson, Project Director,
NYSDOT, 660 White Plains Road, Suite 340, Tarrytown, NY 10591,
Telephone: (914) 358-0600; or Willet Schraft, Senior Operations
Engineer, FHWA, New York Division, Leo W. O'Brien Federal Building, 7th
Floor, Clinton Avenue and North Pearl Street, Albany, NY 12207,
Telephone: (518) 431-4125; or Donald Burns, Senior Planner, FTA, One
Bowling Green, Room 429, New York, NY 10004, Telephone: (212) 668-2170.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On December 23, 2002, the FHWA and FTA, in
cooperation with the New York State Thruway Authority (NYSTA) and the
Metro-North Railroad, a subsidiary of the Metropolitan Transportation
Authority (MTA/MNR) issued a Notice of Intent to prepare an
Alternatives Analysis (AA) and an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
for the I-287 Corridor in Westchester and Rockland Counties, NY (FR
Volume 67, No. 246). Extensive AA public involvement activity has been
conducted since publication of that NOI such that a revised tiered
approach is warranted. Of considerable note, is that the New York State
Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) has become a sponsoring agency
and taken on the role of lead State project manager. As a sponsoring
agency, NYSDOT, as well as NYSTA and MTA/MNR, are considered Joint Lead
Agencies for the project under SAFETEA-LU.
1. Scoping
In January 2003, after the December 2002 NOI was published, three
scoping meetings were held: one in Westchester County; one in Rockland
County; and one in Orange County. Public and agency comments received
during those scoping meetings have been incorporated into the AA. As a
result of the initial scoping process which included a Level 1 and
Level 2 alternatives screening process, the alternatives have been
reduced from 150 alternative elements to six alternatives. As a result
of the changes in the project conditions and approach that have
precipitated the issuance of this revised NOI, scoping update meetings
will be conducted to obtain current comments on the scope of the EIS.
To assist interested parties in formulating their comments, a scoping
informational packet will be prepared and made available upon request
from the NYSDOT representative identified above or online at the
project's Web site (www.tzbsite.com). The scoping packet will include
the project's purpose and need, goals and objectives, range of
alternatives, environmental issues that will be addressed during the
course of the study and the public and agency coordination plan,
pursuant to SAFETEA-LU. In addition, the scoping packet will include
the evaluation criteria that will be used to conduct a third level
(``Level 3'') alternatives screening process, which will further
analyze the remaining alternatives.
In early 2008, three additional public scoping update meetings will
be conducted, one each in Westchester, Rockland and Orange Counties, to
solicit additional public comments on the scope of the EIS. Each
meeting will run from 4 to 9 p.m. and consist of an informal open house
setting and two formal presentations. Formal presentations will be made
at 5 p.m. and again at 7 p.m. After each presentation,
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the public will be provided the opportunity to comment. Those wishing
to speak must sign up by either 5:30 p.m. or 7:30 p.m., respectively. A
court reporter will be available to record the formal meeting and
public comments. The public meetings will be held in the following
locations:
Westchester County Public Scoping Update Meeting: Tuesday, February 26,
2008, The Performing Arts Center, Purchase College, State University of
New York, 735 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase, NY 10577
Orange County Public Scoping Update Meeting: Wednesday, February 27,
2008, Orange-Ulster BOCES Campus, 53 Gibson Road, Goshen, NY 10924
Rockland County Public Scoping Update Meeting: Thursday, February 28,
2008, the Palisades Center, 1000 Palisades Center Drive, West Nyack, NY
10994.
The public comment period will be open for a maximum of 30 days
following the February 28 meeting. Comments will be accepted until
Monday, March 31, 2008.
Written comments on the scope of the project can be sent to Michael
P. Anderson, Project Director, NYSDOT, Tappan Zee Bridge/I-287 Project
Office, 660 White Plains Road, Suite 340, Tarrytown, NY 10591
(Telephone: (914) 358-0600). The meetings will be accessible to persons
with disabilities. If special needs such as an interpreter or sign
language services are needed please contact Michael P. Anderson.
2. Description of the Project Area
The Tappan Zee Bridge/I-287 Corridor (Corridor) is approximately 30
miles in length, extending from the I-87/I-287 Interchange in Suffern,
NY to the I-287/I-95 interchange in Port Chester, NY and includes the
Tappan Zee Bridge. Maintained by NYSTA, the Corridor encompasses the
entire length of the Cross Westchester Expressway (CWE) in Westchester
County, connecting two of the most rapidly growing communities in the
New York region, Rockland and Orange County with Westchester County, a
major employment destination just east of the Hudson River. The
Corridor also intersects with the five MTA/MNR commuter rail lines
(Port Jervis, Pascack Valley, Hudson, Harlem and New Haven) which run
north-south and none of which are oriented east-west through the
Corridor or cross the Hudson River. The Corridor is serviced in the
east-west direction through the following bus services, the Tappan
ZEExpress, Orange Westchester Link (OWL) and other bus services.
3. Purpose and Need
The purpose and need of the project is to address the
transportation safety, mobility and capacity needs of the Tappan Zee
Bridge/I-287 Corridor. At the conclusion of the scoping process, the
EIS will continue to evaluate the multimodal alternatives that meet the
purpose and need of the project. Of particular concern is the
structural design and integrity of the Tappan Zee Bridge, a vital
infrastructure element in the regional and national transportation
network. Numerous goals and objectives for proposed improvements have
been developed and refined through public and agency coordination since
inception of the original NOI in 2002. Primary goals include providing
improved transit service within the Corridor including connections to
existing transit service, decreasing congestion and travel times within
the Corridor, and addressing the structural integrity and traffic
safety of the Tappan Zee Bridge. Further refinement or modification to
these goals and objectives and the purpose and needs of the project may
be made by the joint lead agencies once the scoping update meetings
have been conducted and comments received.
When opened to traffic in 1955, the Tappan Zee Bridge carried
approximately 18,000 vehicles. Today, the bridge carries approximately
135,000 vehicles daily with volumes as high as 170,000 on some peak
days. During the past 20 years, traffic volumes have grown
significantly in the Corridor, by over 50 percent on the CWE and by
more than 70 percent on the Tappan Zee Bridge. As a result, the
Corridor experiences varying levels of traffic congestion throughout
the 30-mile length. The steady increase in traffic demand over the
years, together with only limited increases in roadway capacity and
limited east-west modal alternatives, have resulted in continual
increases in travel time and delay. The problems are most severe during
the eastbound morning peak and the westbound evening peak periods,
particularly within the vicinity of the Tappan Zee Bridge.
The Tappan Zee Bridge has non-standard safety features, narrow lane
widths (11 feet 8 inches), no shoulders and a narrow median; operates
at or near full capacity in the peak hours; has long periods of stop
and go traffic; areas of notable traffic turbulence and an average
collision rate four times greater than the average rate (per million
vehicle miles), when compared to the whole of the Thruway system. On
the highway segment of the corridor, 39 locations on the mainline and
various entrance and exit ramps have accident rates in excess of
statewide averages.
In addition to its capacity constraints, the structural design and
integrity of the bridge requires consideration. While the structural
condition is safe to the public, several structural deficiencies also
need to be addressed. The bridge is located in a moderate seismically
active zone, and was not designed in accordance with the current
seismic code. The seismic vulnerability of the bridge is an area of
great importance to the project.
Today bus transit, car and van pools operate in mixed traffic and
are subject to the same congestion and travel delays. The bridge's
current capacity constraints do not allow for dedicated lanes that
would accommodate higher capacity vehicles and increased transit bus
services. One of the most significant findings in the AA analysis to
date is that traffic forecasts clearly demonstrate a demand for travel
in the corridor that cannot be accommodated by highway improvements
alone. The need to include transit improvements in the corridor is
strongly indicated.
As a result of these conditions, the EIS will evaluate alternatives
that address the following needs of the Corridor:
Preserve the existing river crossing as a vital link in the
regional and national transportation network
Provide a river crossing that has structural integrity, meets
current design criteria and standards, and accommodates transit
Improve highway safety, mobility, and capacity throughout the
Corridor
Improve transit mobility and capacity throughout the Corridor
and travel connections to the existing north-south and east-west
transit network
4. Alternatives
The alternatives under consideration involve different combinations
of bridge, highway and transit elements. Transit modes currently
undergoing additional evaluation as a result of ongoing analysis
include the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), Light Rail Transit (LRT), and
Commuter Rail (CRT). The Alternatives Analysis Report issued in 2006
identified six alternatives for further study in the EIS. These six
alternatives were the result of Level 1 and Level 2 alternatives
screening and include the following:
No Build Alternative
Bridge Rehabilitation with Transportation Demand Management
(TDM) and Transportation Systems Management (TSM) measures
Full Corridor BRT with a new bridge and highway improvements
in Rockland County
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Manhattan-bound Full Corridor CRT with a new bridge and
highway improvements in Rockland County
Manhattan-bound CRT with LRT in Westchester County, a new
bridge, and highway improvements in Rockland County
Manhattan-bound CRT with BRT in Westchester County, a new
bridge, and highway improvements in Rockland County
The above six alternatives are currently still under evaluation.
However, the EIS will include the results of a Level 3 alternatives
screening which may result in the elimination, combination or
modification of one or more of the alternatives considered to date. The
evaluation criteria used to conduct this further screening will be made
available for public and agency comment and finalized as part of the
scoping process, consistent with the refined and updated purpose and
needs, goals, and objectives. If the Level 3 alternatives screening
results in the elimination, combination or modification of one or more
of the alternatives, this will be disclosed as part of the revised
environmental review process and documented in the EIS, affording the
opportunity for public and agency review and comment during the DEIS
public hearings. Alternatives retained for full evaluation in the EIS
will be compared to the baseline conditions of the No Build Alternative
in terms of their social, economic, and environmental impacts.
5. Probable Effects
The environmental impact assessment of alternatives will be
conducted at various levels of detail throughout the environmental
review process. In the initial alternatives screening phases of the
project conducted to date, the analysis has focused on major
differentiating factors amongst the bridge, highway, and transit
elements and alignments. This level of analysis will continue in the
Level 3 alternatives screening process and will be documented in a
Scoping Update Summary Report to be developed. As alternatives are
screened to a reasonable range for detailed study in the DEIS, the
analysis will become more detailed and dependent upon additional
studies and reports.
Specifically, the DEIS and FEIS will: summarize the results of
coordination with federal, state, and local agencies and the public at
large; present the appropriate federal, state, and local regulations
and policies; inventory and compile previous studies; describe the
methodology used to assess impacts; identify the affected environment;
predict and analyze the construction-related (short-term) and
operational (long-term) impacts (direct, indirect, and cumulative) of
reasonable alternatives; and identify opportunities and measures for
mitigating significant adverse impacts. Specific scopes for the
environmental studies to be used in the Level 3 alternatives screening
process and subsequent tiered analysis in the DEIS and FEIS will be
established during the public and agency scoping update process.
6. FHWA and FTA Procedures
The EIS is being prepared in accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), as amended, and implemented by
the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations (40 CFR parts
1500-1508), the FHWA/FTA Environmental Impact regulations (23 CFR part
771), and the FHWA/FTA Statewide Planning/Metropolitan Planning
regulations (23 CFR part 450), as well as the requirements of Section
6002 of SAFETEA-LU. In addition, this EIS will comply with the
requirements of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as
amended, section 4(f) of the 1966, U.S. Department of Transportation
Act, the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments, Executive Order 12898 on
Environmental Justice, Executive Order 11990 Protection of Wetlands,
and other applicable statutes, rules, and regulations. The EIS and the
environmental review process will also satisfy requirements of the New
York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) (consistent with 6
NYCRR 617.15 and SEQRA regulations, Part 15 Title 17 of NYCRR); this
NOI eliminates the need for a positive declaration under that statute.
Regulations implementing NEPA (40 CFR 1500-1508), as well as
certain provisions of SAFETEA-LU, call for enhanced agency and public
involvement in the EIS process. Several of the pertinent provisions of
Section 6002 of SAFETEA-LU that are reflected in the revised approach
to the processing of the EIS include: (1) Extend an invitation to other
Federal and non-Federal agencies and Native American tribes that may
have an interest in the proposed project to become ``Participating
Agencies''; (2) Provide an opportunity for involvement in helping to
develop the purpose and need for the proposed project, as well as the
range of alternatives for consideration in the EIS, and analysis
methodologies and level of detail in any such analysis; and (3)
Establish a plan for coordinating public and agency participation and
comment on the environmental review process. As related to item 3,
while the project already has a public and agency coordination plan, it
was developed pre-SAFETEA-LU and will be amended to reflect specific
requirements set forth in Section 6002 of that legislation. An
invitation to all Federal and non-Federal agencies and Native American
tribes that may have an interest in the proposed project will be
extended. In the event that an agency or tribe is not invited and would
like to participate, please contact the Project Manager listed under
Contact Information above. A Coordination Plan will be developed
summarizing how the public and agencies will be engaged in the process.
This plan will be posted to the project Web site (www.tzbsite.com). The
public coordination and outreach efforts will include public meetings,
open houses, a project Web site, Stakeholder Advisory Work Groups, and
public hearings.
Compatible with and contributing to the functionality of the
overall project, some elements of the Build Alternatives may be
functionally independent of other elements. Although the current plan
is to evaluate all of these geographically contiguous elements of the
alternatives retained for evaluation in the EIS, as the project
elements are developed and as schedules and construction phasing plans
develop, it is possible that some of the independent elements may be
advanced via separate environmental evaluations under NEPA and SEQRA.
In addition, New Starts funding may be pursued for a transit component
of the proposed project under 49 U.S.C. 5309. If so, any such transit
component identified in the Tier 1 analysis of this would be a separate
project subject to additional Tier 2 level NEPA environmental review
and New Starts regulations (49 CFR Part 611).
The project sponsors may identify a preferred alternative in the
Draft EIS when made available for public and agency comment. Public
hearings on the Draft EIS will be held within the study area. On the
basis of the Draft EIS and the public and agency comments received, the
design of the preferred alternative and other feasible alternatives
will be further refined in the Final EIS. The Joint Lead Agencies will
identify the preferred alternative in the Final EIS and the Final EIS
will serve as the basis for federal environmental findings and
determinations needed to conclude the environmental review process
related to:
Tier 1 analysis findings on the transit mode and alignment
associated with the preferred alternative.
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Tier 2 analysis findings on the bridge facilities and
transit elements from the Tier 1 analysis, approaches and associated
highway network improvements within the Corridor associated with the
preferred alternative.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program Number 20.205,
Highway Planning and Construction. The regulations implementing
Executive Order 12372 regarding intergovernmental consultation on
Federal programs and activities apply to this program.)
Jeffrey Kolb, New York Division Administrator, Federal Highway
Administration, Leo W. O'Brien Building, 7th Floor, Clinton Avenue and
North Pearl Street, Albany, NY 12207.
Brigid Hynes-Cherin, Region II Administrator, Federal Transit
Administration, One Bowling Green, Room 429, New York, NY 10004.
Dated: February 6, 2008.
Jeffrey W. Kolb,
New York Division Administrator, Federal Highway Administration.
Brigid Hynes-Cherin,
Region II Administrator, Federal Transit Administration.
[FR Doc. E8-2741 Filed 2-13-08; 8:45 am]
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