Office of Commercial Space Transportation; Notice of Availability and Request for Comment on the Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Streamlining the Processing of Experimental Permit Applications, 16439-16440 [E9-7913]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 68 / Friday, April 10, 2009 / Notices
a map provided by San Benito, the line
extends from near Hollister to near
Carnardero.
The transaction is scheduled to take
place in June 2009 or later (after the
April 26, 2009 effective date of the
exemption).
If the notice contains false or
misleading information, the exemption
is void ab initio.2 Petitions to reopen the
proceeding to revoke the exemption
under 49 U.S.C. 10502(d) may be filed
at any time. The filing of a petition to
revoke will not automatically stay the
transaction. Petitions for stay must be
filed no later than April 17, 2009 (at
least 7 days before the exemption
becomes effective).
An original and 10 copies of all
pleading, referring to STB Finance
Docket No. 35225, must be filed with
the Surface Transportation Board, 395 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20423–
0001. In addition, a copy of each
pleading must be served on Janie Shang,
K&L Gates LLP, 1601 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20006.
Board decisions and notices are
available on our Web site at https://
www.stb.dot.gov.
Decided: April 6, 2009.
By the Board, Joseph H. Dettmar, Acting
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Kulunie L. Cannon,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. E9–8076 Filed 4–9–09; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
Notice: Letter of Public Notification of
the Airports Grants Program Including
ARRA Requirements; Information
Collection Activity
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
This request is being submitted to
OMB via an Emergency Information
Collection Request.
SUMMARY: New requirements within the
American Recovery and Reimbursement
Act of 2009 have made necessary a
revision to the OMB-approved
collection ‘‘Airports Grants Program’’ to
include further burden. The information
listed below represents the new totals
for the complete ‘‘Airports Grants
Program’’ with the new requirements
per the American Recovery and
Reimbursement Act of 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nancy S. Williams, APP–501 at
AGENCY:
2 A motion to dismiss has been filed in this
proceeding. The motion will be addressed in a
subsequent Board decision.
15:39 Apr 09, 2009
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 31,
2009.
Carla Mauney,
FAA Information Collection Clearance
Officer, IT Enterprises Business Services
Division, AES–200.
[FR Doc. E9–7914 Filed 4–9–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–M
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
VerDate Nov<24>2008
Nancy.S.Williams@faa.gov, or 202–267–
8822.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Airports Grants Program
Including ARRA Requirements.
OMB Control Number: 2120–0569.
Forms(s) 5100–100, 5100–101, 5100–
108, 5100–126, 5100–127, 5370–1.
Affected Public: An estimated 1,950
Respondents.
Frequency: This information is
collected on occasion.
Estimated Average Burden per
Response: Approximately 9 hours per
response.
Estimated Annual Burden Hours: An
estimated 86,240 hours annually.
Abstract: The FAA collects
information from airport sponsors and
planning agencies in order to administer
the Airports Grants Program. Data is
used to determine eligibility, ensure
proper use of Federal Funds, and ensure
project accomplishment.
Jkt 217001
Office of Commercial Space
Transportation; Notice of Availability
and Request for Comment on the Draft
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for Streamlining the
Processing of Experimental Permit
Applications
AGENCY: Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of availability and
request for comment.
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA) (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.), Council on Environmental
Quality NEPA implementing regulations
(40 CFR parts 1500–1508), and FAA
Order 1050.1E, Change 1, the FAA is
announcing the availability of and
requesting comments on the Draft
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for Streamlining the
Processing of Experimental Permit
Applications (PEIS). The FAA Office of
Commercial Space Transportation is the
lead Federal agency for the development
of the PEIS. The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration and the U.S.
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
16439
Air Force are cooperating agencies.
Under the Proposed Action evaluated in
the PEIS, the FAA would issue
experimental permits for the launch and
reentry of reusable suborbital rockets
from both FAA-licensed and nonlicensed launch sites using the PEIS as
the basis for determining the potential
environmental consequences of issuing
experimental permits.
Under the No Action Alternative, the
FAA would continue issuing
experimental permits for the launch and
reentry of reusable suborbital rockets
using its present method of analyzing
environmental consequences case by
case, without tiering from a
programmatic document.
The PEIS examines the potential
environmental impacts of issuing an
experimental permit for the operation of
reusable suborbital rockets anywhere in
the U.S. and abroad, and the potential
site-specific impacts of permitted
launches from seven FAA-licensed
commercial launch sites: California
Spaceport, California; Mojave Air and
Space Port, California; Kodiak Launch
Complex, Alaska; Mid-Atlantic Regional
Spaceport, Virginia; Space Florida
Launch Complex-46 at Cape Canaveral
Air Force Station, Florida; Oklahoma
Spaceport, Oklahoma; Spaceport
America, New Mexico; and one Federal
range, the Shuttle Landing Facility at
John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida.
Subsequent environmental analyses
that fall under the scope of the PEIS
could tier from this document and
incorporate the findings of the PEIS by
reference, allowing an applicant and the
FAA to focus on the relevant and
unique impacts of an experimental
permit application. Tiering and
incorporation by reference would
streamline the development of
subsequent environmental analyses in
accordance with NEPA and FAA Order
1050.1E.
The PEIS will not authorize the
launch or reentry of reusable suborbital
rockets from launch sites. Individual
launch operators would be required to
coordinate with site operators to gain
access to a site. In addition, the launch
operators would be required to apply to
the FAA for an experimental permit,
which would require an individual
safety and environmental review.
DATES: The public comment period for
the NEPA process begins with the
publication of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s Notice of
Availability of the Draft PEIS in the
Federal Register. To ensure that all
comments can be addressed in the Final
PEIS, the FAA must receive comments
no later than May 25, 2009.
E:\FR\FM\10APN1.SGM
10APN1
16440
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 68 / Friday, April 10, 2009 / Notices
Comments submitted by
mail should be addressed to Ms. Stacey
M. Zee, FAA Environmental Specialist,
FAA Experimental Permits PEIS, c/o
ICF International, 9300 Lee Highway,
Fairfax, VA 22031. Comments may be
submitted via electronic mail to PEIS–
Experimental-Permits@icfi.com.
Comments also may be submitted via
fax to (703) 934–3951.
The Draft PEIS may be viewed at the
following locations:
ADDRESSES:
Alaska
Chiniak Public Library, Mile 41,
Chiniak, AK 99615.
Kodiak Library, 319 Lower Mill Bay
Road, Kodiak, Alaska 99615.
California
Kern County Library, 9507 California
City Blvd., California City, CA 93505.
Lompoc Library, 3755 Constellation Rd.,
Lompoc, CA 93436.
Lompoc Public Library, 501 E North
Ave., Lompoc, CA 93436.
Mojave Public Library, 16916–1/2
Highway 14, Mojave, CA 93501.
Florida
Merritt Island Public Library, 1195
North Courtenay Parkway, Merritt
Island, FL 32953.
Titusville Public Library, 2121 S.
Hopkins Ave., Titusville, FL 32780.
New Mexico
Truth or Consequences Library, 325
Library Lane, Truth or Consequences,
NM 87901.
Hatch Public Library, 503 E Hall St.,
Hatch, NM 87937.
Oklahoma
Clinton Public Library, 721 Frisco Ave.,
Clinton, OK 73601.
Elk City Carnegie Library, 221 West
Broadway, Elk City, OK 73644.
Virginia
Island Library, 4077 Main St.,
Chincoteague, VA 23336.
Eastern Shore Public Library, 23610
Front St., Accomac, VA 23301.
The FAA also sent the Draft PEIS to
interested persons and agencies shown
on the distribution list in Chapter 8 of
the PEIS. The Draft PEIS, along with the
Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare the
Draft PEIS, are available on the Internet
in Adobe® portable document format at
https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/
headquarters_offices/ast/
environmental/review/
documents_progress/.
Additional Information: Under the
Proposed Action, the FAA would issue
experimental permits for the launch and
reentry of reusable suborbital rockets
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:39 Apr 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
from both FAA-licensed and nonlicensed launch sites using the PEIS as
the basis for determining the potential
environmental consequences of issuing
experimental permits. An experimental
permit would implement the
appropriate safety requirements as
defined in 14 CFR part 437. A permit
would be valid for 1 year and would
authorize an unlimited number of
launches and reentries of a particular
reusable suborbital rocket design from a
specified site(s). A permittee could
renew the permit by submitting a
written application to the FAA for
renewal at least 60 days before the
permit expired.
Based on the FAA’s review of past
activities and consultations with various
organizations in the commercial space
industry, the FAA projected that a
maximum of 1,000 launch and reentry
events could occur annually at any one
location from 2009 to 2014. The FAA
used this estimate to develop an upper
bound to assess the potential impacts of
the Experimental Permit Program. In
some cases, the maximum number of
events analyzed in the PEIS for specific
sites are fewer than 1,000 if the site
cannot support all of the flight profiles
identified in the PEIS. The estimates
used in the PEIS are extremely
conservative and the actual number of
launches per year would likely be
lower.
The PEIS considers activities
associated with the launch and reentry
of reusable suborbital rockets, including
pre-flight activities, flight profile
(takeoff, flight, and landing), and postflight activities (vehicle safing). The
general suborbital rocket designs
addressed in the PEIS include vehicles
resembling conventional aircraft—30 to
140 feet long with unfueled weight of
up to 9,921 pounds; vehicles resembling
conventional rockets—6 to 33 feet long
with unfueled weight of up to 5,500
pounds; and vehicles that hover—up to
20 feet in length or diameter with
unfueled weight of up to 4,400 pounds.
To assess potential impacts of the
Experiment Permit Program, the PEIS
also considers the approximate
proportions of general reusable
suborbital rocket flight profiles, as
follows: (1) Horizontal takeoff (rocket or
jet powered), flight, and horizontal
landing (glide or jet powered); (2)
vertical takeoff (rocket powered), flight,
and vertical landing (rocket powered or
parachute); and (3) rocket powered
hovering flights (vertical takeoff and
landing).
The PEIS analyzes the potential
environmental effects of permitted
launches on the impact categories
described in FAA Order 1050.1E,
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Change 1. The PEIS does not analyze
environmental consequences specific to
construction because the Proposed
Action and No Action Alternative do
not involve construction activities. The
PEIS also addresses potential
cumulative impacts of the Proposed
Action.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Stacey M. Zee, FAA Environmental
Specialist, FAA Experimental Permits
PEIS, c/o ICF International, 9300 Lee
Highway, Fairfax, VA 22031; e-mail
PEIS–Experimental-Permits@icfi.com; or
fax (703) 934–3951.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 26,
2009.
Michael McElligott,
Manager, Space Systems Development
Division.
[FR Doc. E9–7913 Filed 4–9–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Notice of Final Federal Actions on the
Kosciuszko Bridge (Interstate 278)
Over Newtown Creek, Kings and
Queens Counties, NY
AGENCY: Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of limitation on claims
for judicial review of actions by FHWA
and other Federal agencies.
SUMMARY: This notice announces actions
taken by the FHWA and other Federal
agencies that are final within the
meaning of 23 U.S.C. 139(l)(1). The
actions relate to the proposed highway
project and the replacement of the
Kosciuszko Bridge over Newtown Creek.
Those actions grant licenses, permits,
and approvals for the project.
DATES: By this notice, the FHWA is
advising the public of the final agency
actions subject to 23 U.S.C. 139(l)(1). A
claim seeking judicial review of the
Federal agency actions on the highway
project will be barred unless the claim
is filed on or before October 7, 2009. If
the federal law that authorizes judicial
review of a claim provides a time period
less than 180 days for filing such claim,
then the shorter time period still
applies.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeffrey Kolb, P.E., Division
Administrator, Federal Highway
Administration, New York Division, Leo
W. O’Brien Federal Building, Suite 719,
Clinton Avenue and North Pearl Street,
E:\FR\FM\10APN1.SGM
10APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 68 (Friday, April 10, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 16439-16440]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-7913]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
Office of Commercial Space Transportation; Notice of Availability
and Request for Comment on the Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for Streamlining the Processing of Experimental Permit
Applications
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of availability and request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), Council on
Environmental Quality NEPA implementing regulations (40 CFR parts 1500-
1508), and FAA Order 1050.1E, Change 1, the FAA is announcing the
availability of and requesting comments on the Draft Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement for Streamlining the Processing of
Experimental Permit Applications (PEIS). The FAA Office of Commercial
Space Transportation is the lead Federal agency for the development of
the PEIS. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the
U.S. Air Force are cooperating agencies. Under the Proposed Action
evaluated in the PEIS, the FAA would issue experimental permits for the
launch and reentry of reusable suborbital rockets from both FAA-
licensed and non-licensed launch sites using the PEIS as the basis for
determining the potential environmental consequences of issuing
experimental permits.
Under the No Action Alternative, the FAA would continue issuing
experimental permits for the launch and reentry of reusable suborbital
rockets using its present method of analyzing environmental
consequences case by case, without tiering from a programmatic
document.
The PEIS examines the potential environmental impacts of issuing an
experimental permit for the operation of reusable suborbital rockets
anywhere in the U.S. and abroad, and the potential site-specific
impacts of permitted launches from seven FAA-licensed commercial launch
sites: California Spaceport, California; Mojave Air and Space Port,
California; Kodiak Launch Complex, Alaska; Mid-Atlantic Regional
Spaceport, Virginia; Space Florida Launch Complex-46 at Cape Canaveral
Air Force Station, Florida; Oklahoma Spaceport, Oklahoma; Spaceport
America, New Mexico; and one Federal range, the Shuttle Landing
Facility at John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida.
Subsequent environmental analyses that fall under the scope of the
PEIS could tier from this document and incorporate the findings of the
PEIS by reference, allowing an applicant and the FAA to focus on the
relevant and unique impacts of an experimental permit application.
Tiering and incorporation by reference would streamline the development
of subsequent environmental analyses in accordance with NEPA and FAA
Order 1050.1E.
The PEIS will not authorize the launch or reentry of reusable
suborbital rockets from launch sites. Individual launch operators would
be required to coordinate with site operators to gain access to a site.
In addition, the launch operators would be required to apply to the FAA
for an experimental permit, which would require an individual safety
and environmental review.
DATES: The public comment period for the NEPA process begins with the
publication of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Notice of
Availability of the Draft PEIS in the Federal Register. To ensure that
all comments can be addressed in the Final PEIS, the FAA must receive
comments no later than May 25, 2009.
[[Page 16440]]
ADDRESSES: Comments submitted by mail should be addressed to Ms. Stacey
M. Zee, FAA Environmental Specialist, FAA Experimental Permits PEIS, c/
o ICF International, 9300 Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA 22031. Comments may
be submitted via electronic mail to PEIS-Experimental-Permits@icfi.com.
Comments also may be submitted via fax to (703) 934-3951.
The Draft PEIS may be viewed at the following locations:
Alaska
Chiniak Public Library, Mile 41, Chiniak, AK 99615.
Kodiak Library, 319 Lower Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, Alaska 99615.
California
Kern County Library, 9507 California City Blvd., California City, CA
93505.
Lompoc Library, 3755 Constellation Rd., Lompoc, CA 93436.
Lompoc Public Library, 501 E North Ave., Lompoc, CA 93436.
Mojave Public Library, 16916-1/2 Highway 14, Mojave, CA 93501.
Florida
Merritt Island Public Library, 1195 North Courtenay Parkway, Merritt
Island, FL 32953.
Titusville Public Library, 2121 S. Hopkins Ave., Titusville, FL 32780.
New Mexico
Truth or Consequences Library, 325 Library Lane, Truth or Consequences,
NM 87901.
Hatch Public Library, 503 E Hall St., Hatch, NM 87937.
Oklahoma
Clinton Public Library, 721 Frisco Ave., Clinton, OK 73601.
Elk City Carnegie Library, 221 West Broadway, Elk City, OK 73644.
Virginia
Island Library, 4077 Main St., Chincoteague, VA 23336.
Eastern Shore Public Library, 23610 Front St., Accomac, VA 23301.
The FAA also sent the Draft PEIS to interested persons and agencies
shown on the distribution list in Chapter 8 of the PEIS. The Draft
PEIS, along with the Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare the Draft PEIS,
are available on the Internet in Adobe[reg] portable document format at
https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/ast/environmental/review/documents_progress/.
Additional Information: Under the Proposed Action, the FAA would
issue experimental permits for the launch and reentry of reusable
suborbital rockets from both FAA-licensed and non-licensed launch sites
using the PEIS as the basis for determining the potential environmental
consequences of issuing experimental permits. An experimental permit
would implement the appropriate safety requirements as defined in 14
CFR part 437. A permit would be valid for 1 year and would authorize an
unlimited number of launches and reentries of a particular reusable
suborbital rocket design from a specified site(s). A permittee could
renew the permit by submitting a written application to the FAA for
renewal at least 60 days before the permit expired.
Based on the FAA's review of past activities and consultations with
various organizations in the commercial space industry, the FAA
projected that a maximum of 1,000 launch and reentry events could occur
annually at any one location from 2009 to 2014. The FAA used this
estimate to develop an upper bound to assess the potential impacts of
the Experimental Permit Program. In some cases, the maximum number of
events analyzed in the PEIS for specific sites are fewer than 1,000 if
the site cannot support all of the flight profiles identified in the
PEIS. The estimates used in the PEIS are extremely conservative and the
actual number of launches per year would likely be lower.
The PEIS considers activities associated with the launch and
reentry of reusable suborbital rockets, including pre-flight
activities, flight profile (takeoff, flight, and landing), and post-
flight activities (vehicle safing). The general suborbital rocket
designs addressed in the PEIS include vehicles resembling conventional
aircraft--30 to 140 feet long with unfueled weight of up to 9,921
pounds; vehicles resembling conventional rockets--6 to 33 feet long
with unfueled weight of up to 5,500 pounds; and vehicles that hover--up
to 20 feet in length or diameter with unfueled weight of up to 4,400
pounds. To assess potential impacts of the Experiment Permit Program,
the PEIS also considers the approximate proportions of general reusable
suborbital rocket flight profiles, as follows: (1) Horizontal takeoff
(rocket or jet powered), flight, and horizontal landing (glide or jet
powered); (2) vertical takeoff (rocket powered), flight, and vertical
landing (rocket powered or parachute); and (3) rocket powered hovering
flights (vertical takeoff and landing).
The PEIS analyzes the potential environmental effects of permitted
launches on the impact categories described in FAA Order 1050.1E,
Change 1. The PEIS does not analyze environmental consequences specific
to construction because the Proposed Action and No Action Alternative
do not involve construction activities. The PEIS also addresses
potential cumulative impacts of the Proposed Action.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Stacey M. Zee, FAA Environmental
Specialist, FAA Experimental Permits PEIS, c/o ICF International, 9300
Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA 22031; e-mail PEIS-Experimental-Permits@icfi.com; or fax (703) 934-3951.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 26, 2009.
Michael McElligott,
Manager, Space Systems Development Division.
[FR Doc. E9-7913 Filed 4-9-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-13-P