Preparation of an Alternatives Analysis and Environmental Impact Statement for High Capacity Transit Improvements for the Indianapolis Northeast Corridor in the Indiana Counties of Marion and Hamilton, 10860-10862 [2010-4973]
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10860
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 9, 2010 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 2010–4911 Filed 3–8–10; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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[Public Notice 6437]
Announcement of a Meeting of the
International Telecommunication
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SUMMARY: This notice announces a
meeting of the International
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April 19–30 meeting of International
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[FR Doc. 2010–4981 Filed 3–8–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–07–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Preparation of an Alternatives Analysis
and Environmental Impact Statement
for High Capacity Transit
Improvements for the Indianapolis
Northeast Corridor in the Indiana
Counties of Marion and Hamilton
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration,
U.S. Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to prepare an
Alternatives Analysis/Environmental
Impact Statement.
SUMMARY: The Federal Transit
Administration (FTA), the Central
Indiana Regional Transportation
Authority (CIRTA), the Indianapolis
Metropolitan Planning Organization
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(Indianapolis MPO) and Indianapolis
Public Transportation Corporation
(IndyGo) intend to prepare an
Alternatives Analysis/Environmental
Impact Statement (AA/EIS) relating to
proposed high capacity transit
improvements in the Northeast Corridor
located in the Indiana counties of
Marion and Hamilton. The study area is
an approximately 23-mile long travel
corridor extending from downtown
Indianapolis to the northern parts of
Noblesville and includes the
communities of Carmel and Fishers.
Options to be considered include NoBuild, Transportation System
Management (TSM), Bus Rapid Transit
(BRT), and Commuter Rail. The AA/EIS
will be prepared in accordance with the
requirements of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and
its implementing regulations. The AA/
EIS process provides opportunities for
the public to comment on the scope of
the EIS, including the project’s purpose
and need, the alternatives to be
considered, and the impacts to be
evaluated. The southern terminal of all
alternatives will be Union Station or an
adjacent transit center in downtown
Indianapolis.
The purpose of this notice is to alert
interested parties regarding the intent to
prepare the AA/EIS, to provide
information on the nature of the
proposed project and possible
alternatives, to invite public
participation in the AA/EIS process,
including comments on the scope of the
EIS as proposed in this notice, to
announce that public scoping meetings
will be conducted, and to identify
participating agency contacts. This
input will be used to assist
decisionmakers in determining a locally
preferred alternative (LPA) and Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS)
for the Northeast Corridor. Upon
selection of an LPA, the project
sponsors will request permission from
FTA to enter into preliminary
engineering per requirements of New
Starts regulations 49 CFR Part 611. The
Final Environmental Impact Statement
(FEIS) will be issued after FTA approves
entrance into preliminary engineering.
Dates, Times, and Locations:
Comment Due Date: Written comments
on the purpose and need for the
proposed improvements, and the scope
of alternatives and impacts to be
considered should be sent to the
Indianapolis MPO by April 30, 2010.
Public scoping meetings to accept
comments on the scope of the study will
be held on the following dates:
• Wednesday, March 17 from 7 p.m.
until 8:30 p.m. in the Julia Carson
Government Center located at 300 E Fall
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Creek Parkway N Dr., Indianapolis,
Indiana.
• Wednesday, March 24 from 7 p.m.
until 8:30 p.m. in the Hamilton County
Government Center located at One
Hamilton County Square, Noblesville,
Indiana.
The public scoping meetings will be
informal meetings in an open house
format. Interested persons may ask
questions about the proposal and the
FTA’s environmental review process.
The project’s purpose and need and the
initial set of alternatives proposed for
study will be presented at these
meetings. CIRTA, MPO and IndyGO
project team members will be available
to answer questions and receive
comments. Writing stations will be
available to those who wish to submit
written comments at the public scoping
meetings. Project team members will be
available to listen and make notes of
residents’ comments.
The public scoping meeting locations
comply with the Americans with
Disabilities Act. Persons needing special
accommodations should contact Anna
M. Tyskiewicz, Project Manager, at (317)
327–5487 or atyszkie@indygov.org at
least 48 hours prior to the meeting.
Subsequent to the public scoping
meetings, an interagency scoping
meeting for Federal, State, regional and
local resource and regulatory agencies
will be held in April 2010. All
appropriate agencies that may have an
interest in this project, or have a
potential interest in becoming a
participating agency, will be notified of
the meeting through separate direct
correspondence.
Submitting Comments on the Scope of
the Study: Scoping materials will be
available at the meetings and through
the project’s Web site at https://
www.indyconnect.org. FTA, CIRTA, the
Indianapolis MPO and IndyGo
encourage broad participation in the
AA/EIS process. All interested agencies,
organizations, communities, and
members of the public are invited to
participate in the scoping process by
reviewing and commenting on the scope
of the AA/EIS.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on the
scope of the AA/EIS may be submitted
to the attention of Anna M. Tyskiewicz,
Project Manager, Indianapolis
Metropolitan Planning Organization,
City County Building, Suite 1922, 200 E.
Washington Street, Indianapolis,
Indiana 46204, Phone: (317) 327–5487,
Fax (317) 327–5950, E-mail:
atyszkie@indygov.org.
Additional Information: Contact
Reginald Arkell, Federal Transit
Administration, Region 5, 200 W.
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Adams Street, Suite 320, Chicago,
Illinois 60606, Phone: 312–886–3704, Email: reginald.arkell@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Scoping
The FTA, the Indianapolis MPO and
CIRTA invite all interested individuals,
organizations, businesses, and Federal,
State, and local agencies to participate
in establishing the purpose and need,
project alternatives, and methodologies
of the environmental analysis approach
for the AA/EIS, as well as participate in
an active public involvement program.
During the scoping process, the public
is invited to comment on (a) the purpose
and need; (b) the alternatives to be
addressed; (c) the transit technologies to
be evaluated; (d) the alignments and
station locations to be considered; (e)
the environmental, social, and economic
impacts to be analyzed; and (f) the
evaluation approach to be used to select
the LPA.
NEPA ‘‘scoping’’ (40 CFR 1501.7) is
intended to identify the significant
issues associated with alternatives that
will be examined in detail and to limit
consideration of issues that are not truly
significant. It is in the NEPA scoping
process that potentially significant
environmental impacts should be
identified. Environmental benefits will
also be highlighted.
Once the scope of the environmental
study is defined, an annotated outline of
the draft AA/EIS will be prepared and
shared with interested agencies and the
public. The outline will serve to: (1)
Document the results of the scoping
process; (2) contribute to the
transparency of the process; and (3)
provide a clear roadmap for concise
development of the environmental
document.
Following the public scoping process,
public outreach activities will continue
with interested residents, stakeholders
and groups throughout the AA/EIS
process. The Web site, https://
www.indyconnect.org, will be updated
periodically to reflect the status of the
project. Additional opportunities for
public participation will be announced
through mailings, notices, and press
releases.
II. Description of Study Area and
Project Need
The Study Area includes the main
travel corridors between downtown
Indianapolis and the rapidly growing
areas of Hamilton County, Indiana,
including the communities of Carmel,
Fishers, and Noblesville, as well as the
intervening high-density residential and
commercial areas of northeastern and
central Marion County. This is referred
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10861
to as the Northeast Corridor. The length
of this corridor, from downtown
Indianapolis to the northern part of
Noblesville, is approximately 23 miles.
This part of Indianapolis contains the
region’s most severe travel congestion
and mobility challenges. Previous
studies have shown that the Northeast
Corridor, and particularly I–69 north of
I–465, continues to face the worst traffic
congestion in the region. Given growing
mobility challenges, forecasted
populations and employment growth
coupled by a strong urban center near
downtown Indianapolis, a potential
promising alternative is investment in
transit to supplement and enhance
existing Indianapolis bus systems
(IndyGo) and to extend services to new
markets throughout this regional
corridor.
III. Alternatives
The proposed alternatives to be
evaluated in the AA/EIS will include
the following:
• No-Build Alternative: The No-Build
Alternative is defined as the existing
transportation system, plus any
committed transportation
improvements. Committed
transportation improvements include
projects that are already in the
Indianapolis MPO and Indiana
Department of Transportation (INDOT)
financially constrained Transportation
Improvement Program (TIP), which
includes added travel lanes and
interchange improvements on I–69 and
I–465.
• Transportation System Management
(TSM) Alternative: A TSM Alternative,
which reflects the best that can be done
for mobility without constructing a new
transit guideway, is required as part of
the New Starts evaluation process. Bus
service would operate in mixed traffic
along I–69, Binford Boulevard, Fall
Creek Parkway, and the Capitol Avenue/
Illinois Street one-way pair between
Noblesville and South Street in
Indianapolis.
• Bus Rapid Transit (BRT)
Alternative: A dedicated busway with
on-line stations and other related capital
improvements would be constructed in
the HHPA Railroad right-of-way
between Noblesville and approximately
10th Street in Indianapolis, then
operations would occur on-street in
mixed traffic via the Capitol Avenue/
Illinois Street one-way pair to South
Street.
• Commuter Rail Transit (CRT)
Alternative: In the commuter rail transit
alternative, two different train
technologies will be considered—FRA
compliant vehicles (suitable for mixed
traffic with freight trains) and non-FRA
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compliant light rail vehicles. FRA
compliant vehicles, which would
include passenger coaches powered by
diesel locomotives or diesel multiple
units (DMUs), would operate on
improved tracks in the HHPA Railroad
right-of-way between Noblesville and
approximately 10th Street in
Indianapolis, then in the CSX Railroad
right-of-way to Union Station. NonFRA-compliant DMU light rail vehicles
would operate on improved tracks in
the HHPA Railroad right-of-way
between Noblesville and approximately
10th Street in Indianapolis, then in the
CSX Railroad right-of-way to Union
Station. As an option for reaching a
downtown transit center at or adjacent
to Union Station, an alignment through
the street network of downtown
Indianapolis will be analyzed to avoid
potential freight conflicts and to allow
opportunities for additional stops in the
core downtown employment district.
Based on public and agency input
received during scoping, variations of
the above alternatives will be
considered for the Northeast Corridor.
IV. Potential Impacts for Analysis
The scoping process will identify
which of the following environmental
impact areas are most relevant to the
project, and merit further exploration in
the AA/EIS. The impact areas include:
land use, zoning, potential
displacements, parkland, economic
development, community disruptions,
environmental justice, aesthetics, air
quality, noise and vibration, wildlife,
vegetation, threatened and endangered
species, farmland, water quality,
wetlands, waterways, floodplains,
hazardous materials, and cultural,
historic and archaeological resources.
The AA/EIS will take into account
both positive and negative impacts,
direct and indirect impacts, short-term
and long-term impacts and site specific
and corridor wide impacts. Evaluation
criteria will be consistent with all
Federal, State, and local criteria,
regulations and policies. The AA/EIS
will identify measures to avoid or
mitigate significant adverse
environmental impacts.
To ensure that all significant issues
related to this proposed action are
identified and addressed, scoping
comments and suggestions are invited
from all interested parties.
The Public Involvement Program will
include a full range of involvement
activities. Activities will include
outreach to local and regional officials
and community and civic groups; a
public scoping process to define the
issues of concern among all parties
interested in the project; organizing
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periodic meetings with various local
agencies, organizations and committees;
a public hearing on release of the DEIS;
and development and distribution of
project newsletters. There will be
additional opportunities to participate
in the scoping process in addition to the
public meetings announced in this
notice. Specific mechanisms for
involvement will be detailed in the
Public Involvement Program.
V. Evaluation Criteria
The Indianapolis MPO may seek New
Starts funding for the proposed project
under 49 U.S.C. 5309 and will therefore
be subject to New Starts regulations (49
CFR Part 611). The New Starts
regulations require a planning
Alternatives Analysis that leads to the
selection of a locally preferred
alternative and inclusion of the locally
preferred alternative as part of the longrange transportation plan adopted by
the Indianapolis MPO. The New Starts
regulations also require the submission
of certain project-justification
information in support of a request to
initiate preliminary engineering, which
is normally developed in conjunction
with the NEPA process. Pertinent New
Starts evaluation criteria will be
included in an appendix of the FEIS.
VI. The EIS Process and the Role of
Participating Agencies and the Public
The regulations implementing NEPA,
as well as provisions of the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users (SAFETEA–LU), call for public
involvement in the AA/EIS process.
Section 6002 of SAFETEA–LU requires
the following: (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 by
participating agencies and the public to
help define the purpose and need for a
proposed project, as well as the range of
alternatives for consideration in the AA/
EIS; and (3) establish a plan for
coordinating public and agency
participation in, and comment on, the
environmental review process.
The AA/EIS will be prepared in
accordance with NEPA and its
implementing regulations issued by the
Council on Environmental Quality (40
CFR Parts 1500–1508) and with the
FTA/Federal Highway Administration
regulations ‘‘Environmental Impact and
Related Procedures’’ (23 CFR Part 771).
In accordance with 23 CFR 771.105(a)
and 771.133, FTA will comply with all
Federal environmental laws,
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regulations, and executive orders
applicable to the proposed project
during the environmental review
process to the maximum extent
practicable. These requirements
include, but are not limited to, the
environmental and public hearing
provisions of Federal transit laws (49
U.S.C. 5301(e), 5323(b), and 5324), the
project-level air quality conformity
regulation of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) (40 CFR part
93), the section 404(b)(1) guidelines of
EPA (40 CFR part 230), the regulation
implementing section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act (36
CFR part 800), the regulation
implementing section 7 of the
Endangered Species Act (50 CFR part
402), section 4(f) of the Department of
Transportation Act (23 CFR 771.135),
and Executive Orders 12898 on
environmental justice, 11988 on
floodplain management.
Issued on: March 3, 2010.
´
Marisol Simon,
Regional Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2010–4973 Filed 3–8–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
34 Disclosures
AGENCY: Office of Thrift Supervision
(OTS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
SUMMARY: The Department of the
Treasury, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to comment on
proposed and continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44
U.S.C. 3507. The Office of Thrift
Supervision within the Department of
the Treasury will submit the proposed
information collection requirement
described below to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act. Today, OTS is soliciting
public comments on its proposal to
extend this information collection.
DATES: Submit written comments on or
before May 10, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Send comments, referring to
the collection by title of the proposal or
by OMB approval number, to
Information Collection Comments, Chief
Counsel’s Office, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552; send a facsimile
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 45 (Tuesday, March 9, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 10860-10862]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-4973]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Preparation of an Alternatives Analysis and Environmental Impact
Statement for High Capacity Transit Improvements for the Indianapolis
Northeast Corridor in the Indiana Counties of Marion and Hamilton
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to prepare an Alternatives Analysis/
Environmental Impact Statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Transit Administration (FTA), the Central Indiana
Regional Transportation Authority (CIRTA), the Indianapolis
Metropolitan Planning Organization (Indianapolis MPO) and Indianapolis
Public Transportation Corporation (IndyGo) intend to prepare an
Alternatives Analysis/Environmental Impact Statement (AA/EIS) relating
to proposed high capacity transit improvements in the Northeast
Corridor located in the Indiana counties of Marion and Hamilton. The
study area is an approximately 23-mile long travel corridor extending
from downtown Indianapolis to the northern parts of Noblesville and
includes the communities of Carmel and Fishers. Options to be
considered include No-Build, Transportation System Management (TSM),
Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), and Commuter Rail. The AA/EIS will be prepared
in accordance with the requirements of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) and its implementing regulations. The AA/EIS process
provides opportunities for the public to comment on the scope of the
EIS, including the project's purpose and need, the alternatives to be
considered, and the impacts to be evaluated. The southern terminal of
all alternatives will be Union Station or an adjacent transit center in
downtown Indianapolis.
The purpose of this notice is to alert interested parties regarding
the intent to prepare the AA/EIS, to provide information on the nature
of the proposed project and possible alternatives, to invite public
participation in the AA/EIS process, including comments on the scope of
the EIS as proposed in this notice, to announce that public scoping
meetings will be conducted, and to identify participating agency
contacts. This input will be used to assist decisionmakers in
determining a locally preferred alternative (LPA) and Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Northeast Corridor. Upon
selection of an LPA, the project sponsors will request permission from
FTA to enter into preliminary engineering per requirements of New
Starts regulations 49 CFR Part 611. The Final Environmental Impact
Statement (FEIS) will be issued after FTA approves entrance into
preliminary engineering.
Dates, Times, and Locations: Comment Due Date: Written comments on
the purpose and need for the proposed improvements, and the scope of
alternatives and impacts to be considered should be sent to the
Indianapolis MPO by April 30, 2010. Public scoping meetings to accept
comments on the scope of the study will be held on the following dates:
Wednesday, March 17 from 7 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. in the
Julia Carson Government Center located at 300 E Fall
[[Page 10861]]
Creek Parkway N Dr., Indianapolis, Indiana.
Wednesday, March 24 from 7 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. in the
Hamilton County Government Center located at One Hamilton County
Square, Noblesville, Indiana.
The public scoping meetings will be informal meetings in an open
house format. Interested persons may ask questions about the proposal
and the FTA's environmental review process. The project's purpose and
need and the initial set of alternatives proposed for study will be
presented at these meetings. CIRTA, MPO and IndyGO project team members
will be available to answer questions and receive comments. Writing
stations will be available to those who wish to submit written comments
at the public scoping meetings. Project team members will be available
to listen and make notes of residents' comments.
The public scoping meeting locations comply with the Americans with
Disabilities Act. Persons needing special accommodations should contact
Anna M. Tyskiewicz, Project Manager, at (317) 327-5487 or
atyszkie@indygov.org at least 48 hours prior to the meeting.
Subsequent to the public scoping meetings, an interagency scoping
meeting for Federal, State, regional and local resource and regulatory
agencies will be held in April 2010. All appropriate agencies that may
have an interest in this project, or have a potential interest in
becoming a participating agency, will be notified of the meeting
through separate direct correspondence.
Submitting Comments on the Scope of the Study: Scoping materials
will be available at the meetings and through the project's Web site at
https://www.indyconnect.org. FTA, CIRTA, the Indianapolis MPO and IndyGo
encourage broad participation in the AA/EIS process. All interested
agencies, organizations, communities, and members of the public are
invited to participate in the scoping process by reviewing and
commenting on the scope of the AA/EIS.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on the scope of the AA/EIS may be submitted
to the attention of Anna M. Tyskiewicz, Project Manager, Indianapolis
Metropolitan Planning Organization, City County Building, Suite 1922,
200 E. Washington Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204, Phone: (317)
327-5487, Fax (317) 327-5950, E-mail: atyszkie@indygov.org.
Additional Information: Contact Reginald Arkell, Federal Transit
Administration, Region 5, 200 W. Adams Street, Suite 320, Chicago,
Illinois 60606, Phone: 312-886-3704, E-mail: reginald.arkell@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Scoping
The FTA, the Indianapolis MPO and CIRTA invite all interested
individuals, organizations, businesses, and Federal, State, and local
agencies to participate in establishing the purpose and need, project
alternatives, and methodologies of the environmental analysis approach
for the AA/EIS, as well as participate in an active public involvement
program. During the scoping process, the public is invited to comment
on (a) the purpose and need; (b) the alternatives to be addressed; (c)
the transit technologies to be evaluated; (d) the alignments and
station locations to be considered; (e) the environmental, social, and
economic impacts to be analyzed; and (f) the evaluation approach to be
used to select the LPA.
NEPA ``scoping'' (40 CFR 1501.7) is intended to identify the
significant issues associated with alternatives that will be examined
in detail and to limit consideration of issues that are not truly
significant. It is in the NEPA scoping process that potentially
significant environmental impacts should be identified. Environmental
benefits will also be highlighted.
Once the scope of the environmental study is defined, an annotated
outline of the draft AA/EIS will be prepared and shared with interested
agencies and the public. The outline will serve to: (1) Document the
results of the scoping process; (2) contribute to the transparency of
the process; and (3) provide a clear roadmap for concise development of
the environmental document.
Following the public scoping process, public outreach activities
will continue with interested residents, stakeholders and groups
throughout the AA/EIS process. The Web site, https://www.indyconnect.org, will be updated periodically to reflect the status
of the project. Additional opportunities for public participation will
be announced through mailings, notices, and press releases.
II. Description of Study Area and Project Need
The Study Area includes the main travel corridors between downtown
Indianapolis and the rapidly growing areas of Hamilton County, Indiana,
including the communities of Carmel, Fishers, and Noblesville, as well
as the intervening high-density residential and commercial areas of
northeastern and central Marion County. This is referred to as the
Northeast Corridor. The length of this corridor, from downtown
Indianapolis to the northern part of Noblesville, is approximately 23
miles.
This part of Indianapolis contains the region's most severe travel
congestion and mobility challenges. Previous studies have shown that
the Northeast Corridor, and particularly I-69 north of I-465, continues
to face the worst traffic congestion in the region. Given growing
mobility challenges, forecasted populations and employment growth
coupled by a strong urban center near downtown Indianapolis, a
potential promising alternative is investment in transit to supplement
and enhance existing Indianapolis bus systems (IndyGo) and to extend
services to new markets throughout this regional corridor.
III. Alternatives
The proposed alternatives to be evaluated in the AA/EIS will
include the following:
No-Build Alternative: The No-Build Alternative is defined
as the existing transportation system, plus any committed
transportation improvements. Committed transportation improvements
include projects that are already in the Indianapolis MPO and Indiana
Department of Transportation (INDOT) financially constrained
Transportation Improvement Program (TIP), which includes added travel
lanes and interchange improvements on I-69 and I-465.
Transportation System Management (TSM) Alternative: A TSM
Alternative, which reflects the best that can be done for mobility
without constructing a new transit guideway, is required as part of the
New Starts evaluation process. Bus service would operate in mixed
traffic along I-69, Binford Boulevard, Fall Creek Parkway, and the
Capitol Avenue/Illinois Street one-way pair between Noblesville and
South Street in Indianapolis.
Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) Alternative: A dedicated busway
with on-line stations and other related capital improvements would be
constructed in the HHPA Railroad right-of-way between Noblesville and
approximately 10th Street in Indianapolis, then operations would occur
on-street in mixed traffic via the Capitol Avenue/Illinois Street one-
way pair to South Street.
Commuter Rail Transit (CRT) Alternative: In the commuter
rail transit alternative, two different train technologies will be
considered--FRA compliant vehicles (suitable for mixed traffic with
freight trains) and non-FRA
[[Page 10862]]
compliant light rail vehicles. FRA compliant vehicles, which would
include passenger coaches powered by diesel locomotives or diesel
multiple units (DMUs), would operate on improved tracks in the HHPA
Railroad right-of-way between Noblesville and approximately 10th Street
in Indianapolis, then in the CSX Railroad right-of-way to Union
Station. Non-FRA-compliant DMU light rail vehicles would operate on
improved tracks in the HHPA Railroad right-of-way between Noblesville
and approximately 10th Street in Indianapolis, then in the CSX Railroad
right-of-way to Union Station. As an option for reaching a downtown
transit center at or adjacent to Union Station, an alignment through
the street network of downtown Indianapolis will be analyzed to avoid
potential freight conflicts and to allow opportunities for additional
stops in the core downtown employment district.
Based on public and agency input received during scoping,
variations of the above alternatives will be considered for the
Northeast Corridor.
IV. Potential Impacts for Analysis
The scoping process will identify which of the following
environmental impact areas are most relevant to the project, and merit
further exploration in the AA/EIS. The impact areas include: land use,
zoning, potential displacements, parkland, economic development,
community disruptions, environmental justice, aesthetics, air quality,
noise and vibration, wildlife, vegetation, threatened and endangered
species, farmland, water quality, wetlands, waterways, floodplains,
hazardous materials, and cultural, historic and archaeological
resources.
The AA/EIS will take into account both positive and negative
impacts, direct and indirect impacts, short-term and long-term impacts
and site specific and corridor wide impacts. Evaluation criteria will
be consistent with all Federal, State, and local criteria, regulations
and policies. The AA/EIS will identify measures to avoid or mitigate
significant adverse environmental impacts.
To ensure that all significant issues related to this proposed
action are identified and addressed, scoping comments and suggestions
are invited from all interested parties.
The Public Involvement Program will include a full range of
involvement activities. Activities will include outreach to local and
regional officials and community and civic groups; a public scoping
process to define the issues of concern among all parties interested in
the project; organizing periodic meetings with various local agencies,
organizations and committees; a public hearing on release of the DEIS;
and development and distribution of project newsletters. There will be
additional opportunities to participate in the scoping process in
addition to the public meetings announced in this notice. Specific
mechanisms for involvement will be detailed in the Public Involvement
Program.
V. Evaluation Criteria
The Indianapolis MPO may seek New Starts funding for the proposed
project under 49 U.S.C. 5309 and will therefore be subject to New
Starts regulations (49 CFR Part 611). The New Starts regulations
require a planning Alternatives Analysis that leads to the selection of
a locally preferred alternative and inclusion of the locally preferred
alternative as part of the long-range transportation plan adopted by
the Indianapolis MPO. The New Starts regulations also require the
submission of certain project-justification information in support of a
request to initiate preliminary engineering, which is normally
developed in conjunction with the NEPA process. Pertinent New Starts
evaluation criteria will be included in an appendix of the FEIS.
VI. The EIS Process and the Role of Participating Agencies and the
Public
The regulations implementing NEPA, as well as provisions of the
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU), call for public involvement in the AA/
EIS process. Section 6002 of SAFETEA-LU requires the following: (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 by participating agencies and the public to
help define the purpose and need for a proposed project, as well as the
range of alternatives for consideration in the AA/EIS; and (3)
establish a plan for coordinating public and agency participation in,
and comment on, the environmental review process.
The AA/EIS will be prepared in accordance with NEPA and its
implementing regulations issued by the Council on Environmental Quality
(40 CFR Parts 1500-1508) and with the FTA/Federal Highway
Administration regulations ``Environmental Impact and Related
Procedures'' (23 CFR Part 771). In accordance with 23 CFR 771.105(a)
and 771.133, FTA will comply with all Federal environmental laws,
regulations, and executive orders applicable to the proposed project
during the environmental review process to the maximum extent
practicable. These requirements include, but are not limited to, the
environmental and public hearing provisions of Federal transit laws (49
U.S.C. 5301(e), 5323(b), and 5324), the project-level air quality
conformity regulation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
(40 CFR part 93), the section 404(b)(1) guidelines of EPA (40 CFR part
230), the regulation implementing section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act (36 CFR part 800), the regulation implementing section
7 of the Endangered Species Act (50 CFR part 402), section 4(f) of the
Department of Transportation Act (23 CFR 771.135), and Executive Orders
12898 on environmental justice, 11988 on floodplain management.
Issued on: March 3, 2010.
Marisol Sim[oacute]n,
Regional Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2010-4973 Filed 3-8-10; 8:45 am]
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