Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Hudson Tunnel Project in Hudson County, New Jersey and New York County, New York, 26308-26312 [2016-10277]
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Jose R. Pitre Rodriguez
Mr. Pitre Rodriguez, 57, has had
amblyopia in his right eye since
childhood. The visual acuity in his right
eye is 20/400, and in his left eye, 20/20.
Following an examination in 2015, his
optometrist stated, ‘‘Mr. Pitre has
sufficient vision to perform the driving
test required and to operate a
commercial vehicle.’’ Mr. Pitre
Rodriguez reported that he has driven
straight trucks for 23 years,
accumulating 61,600 miles. He holds a
Class A CDL from FL. His driving record
for the last 3 years shows no crashes and
no convictions for moving violations in
a CMV.
John Rueckert
Mr. Rueckert, 63, had a retinal
detachment in his left eye in 2013. The
visual acuity in his right eye is 20/20,
and in his left eye, 20/100. Following an
examination in 2015, his optometrist
stated, ‘‘In my opinion, John has
sufficient vision to perform the driving
tasks required to operate a commercial
vehicle.’’ Mr. Rueckert reported that he
has driven straight trucks for 45 years,
accumulating 2.25 million miles and
tractor-trailer combinations for 39 years,
accumulating 5.85 million miles. He
holds a Class A CDL from South Dakota.
His driving record for the last 3 years
shows no crashes and no convictions for
moving violations in a CMV.
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Joseph W. Schmit
Mr. Schmit, 54, has a prosthetic left
eye due to a traumatic incident in 1987.
The visual acuity in his right eye is 20/
20, and in his left eye, no light
perception. Following an examination
in 2016, his optometrist stated, ‘‘It is my
medical opinion that he has sufficient
vision to perform the driving tasks
required to operate a commercial
vehicle.’’ Mr. Schmit reported that he
has driven straight trucks for 20 years,
accumulating 250,000 miles and tractortrailer combinations for 4 years,
accumulating 22,000 miles. He holds a
Class A CDL from Nebraska. His driving
record for the last 3 years shows no
crashes and no convictions for moving
violations in a CMV.
Douglas R. Strickland
Mr. Strickland, 25, has had refractive
amblyopia in his right eye since
childhood. The visual acuity in his right
eye is 20/400, and in his left eye, 20/20.
Following an examination in 2015, his
optometrist stated, ‘‘He should be
cleared to drive a commercial vehicle
from a visual standpoint in my
opinion.’’ Mr. Strickland reported that
he has driven straight trucks for 8 years,
accumulating 12,800 miles. He holds a
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Class C CDL from North Carolina. His
driving record for the last 3 years shows
no crashes and no convictions for
moving violations in a CMV.
Vladimir Szudor
Mr. Szudor, 44, has had amblyopia in
his right eye since childhood. The
visual acuity in his right eye is 20/200,
and in his left eye, 20/20. Following an
examination in 2015, his optometrist
stated, ‘‘Yes, Mr. Szudor has sufficient
vision to perform the driving tasks to
operate commercial vehicle.’’ Mr.
Szudor reported that he has driven
buses for 8 years, accumulating 320,000
miles. He holds an operator’s license
from Florida. His driving record for the
last 3 years shows no crashes and no
convictions for moving violations in a
CMV.
Marvin S. Zimmerman
Mr. Zimmerman, 69, has had
amblyopia in his right eye since
childhood. The visual acuity in his right
eye is light perception, and in his left
eye, 20/20. Following an examination in
2015, his optometrist stated, ‘‘In my
medical opinion Mr. Zimmerman has
sufficient vision to perform the driving
tasks required to operate a commercial
vehicle.’’ Mr. Zimmerman reported that
he has driven tractor-trailer
combinations for 40 years, accumulating
5.2 million miles. He holds a Class A
CDL from Pennsylvania. His driving
record for the last 3 years shows no
crashes and no convictions for moving
violations in a CMV.
III. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
FMCSA encourages you to participate
by submitting comments and related
materials.
Submitting Comments
If you submit a comment, please
include the docket number for this
notice, indicate the specific section of
this document to which each comment
applies, and provide a reason for each
suggestion or recommendation. You
may submit your comments and
material online or by fax, mail, or hand
delivery, but please use only one of
these means. FMCSA recommends that
you include your name and a mailing
address, an email address, or a phone
number in the body of your document
so the Agency can contact you if it has
questions regarding your submission.
To submit your comment online, go to
https://www.regulations.gov and put the
docket number FMCSA–2016–0027 in
the ‘‘Keyword’’ box, and click ‘‘Search.
When the new screen appears, click on
‘‘Comment Now!’’ button and type your
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comment into the text box in the
following screen. Choose whether you
are submitting your comment as an
individual or on behalf of a third party
and then submit. If you submit your
comments by mail or hand delivery,
submit them in an unbound format, no
larger than 81⁄2 by 11 inches, suitable for
copying and electronic filing. If you
submit comments by mail and would
like to know that they reached the
facility, please enclose a stamped, selfaddressed postcard or envelope.
FMCSA will consider all comments
and material received during the
comment period. FMCSA may issue a
final determination at any time after the
close of the comment period.
Viewing Comments and Documents
To view comments, as well as
documents mentioned in this preamble
as being available in the docket, go to
https://www.regulations.gov and insert
the docket number FMCSA–2016–0027
in the ‘‘Keyword’’ box and click
‘‘Search.’’ Next, click ‘‘Open Docket
Folder’’ button and choose the
document listed to review. If you do not
have access to the Internet, you may
view the docket online by visiting the
Docket Management Facility in Room
W12–140 on the ground floor of the
DOT West Building, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., e.t., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Issued on: April 26, 2016.
Larry W. Minor,
Associate Administrator for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2016–10200 Filed 4–29–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
for the Hudson Tunnel Project in
Hudson County, New Jersey and New
York County, New York
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of intent (NOI) to prepare
an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS).
AGENCY:
Through this Notice, FRA
announces its intent to jointly prepare
an environmental impact statement
(EIS) with the New Jersey Transit
Corporation (NJ TRANSIT) for the
Hudson Tunnel Project (the Proposed
Action or the Project) under the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA). The Proposed Action is
SUMMARY:
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intended to preserve the current
functionality of the Northeast Corridor’s
(NEC) Hudson River rail crossing
between New Jersey and New York and
strengthen the resilience of the NEC.
The Project would consist of
construction of a new rail tunnel
beneath the Hudson River, including
railroad infrastructure in New Jersey
and New York connecting the new rail
tunnel to the existing NEC, and
rehabilitation of the existing NEC tunnel
beneath the Hudson River, referred to as
the North River Tunnel. The EIS will
evaluate the potential environmental
impacts of a reasonable range of
alternatives, including the No Action
(No Build) Alternative. As appropriate,
FRA and NJ TRANSIT will coordinate
with the National Railroad Passenger
Corporation (Amtrak), as owner of the
North River Tunnel, and the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey
(PANYNJ) on the EIS.
FRA invites the public and all
interested parties to provide comments
on the scope of the EIS, including the
proposed purpose and need, the
Proposed Action and alternatives to be
considered in the EIS, potential
environmental impacts of concern and
methodologies to be used in the EIS, the
approach for public and agency
involvement, and any other particular
concerns about the potential impacts of
the Proposed Action.
DATES: Persons interested in providing
written comments on the scope of the
EIS must do so by May 31, 2016. Please
submit written comments via the
internet, email, or mail, using the
contact information provided below.
Persons may also provide comments
orally or in writing at the public scoping
meetings. FRA and NJ TRANSIT will
hold two scoping meetings on the
following dates:
• May 17, 2016, at the Hotel
Pennsylvania, Gold Ballroom, 3rd Floor,
401 Seventh Avenue at West 33rd
Street, New York, New York 10001.
• May 19, 2016, at Union City High
School, 2500 Kennedy Boulevard,
Union City, New Jersey 07087.
Both days will include an afternoon
session from 3 to 5 p.m. with a brief
presentation about the Proposed Action
at 4 p.m., and an evening session from
6 to 8 p.m. with a brief presentation
about the Proposed Action at 7 p.m. The
public can review Project information,
talk informally with members of the
study staff, and formally submit
comments to the FRA (to a stenographer
or in writing). The meeting facilities
will be accessible to persons with
disabilities. Spanish language
translators will be present. If you need
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special translation or signing services or
other special accommodations, please
contact the Project team five days prior
to the meeting at 973–261–8115, or
email team@hudsontunnelproject.com.
FRA and NJ TRANSIT will give equal
consideration to oral and written
comments.
ADDRESSES: The public and other
interested parties are encouraged to
comment via the internet at the Project’s
Web site
(www.hudsontunnelproject.com) or via
email at team@
hudsontunnelproject.com. You can also
send written comments by mail to
persons identified below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amishi Castelli, Ph.D., Environmental
Protection Specialist, Office of Railroad
Policy and Development, USDOT
Federal Railroad Administration, One
Bowling Green, Suite 429, New York,
NY 10004, or Amishi.Castelli@dot.gov;
or Mr. RJ Palladino, AICP, PP, Senior
Program Manager, NJ TRANSIT Capital
Planning, One Penn Plaza East—8th
Floor, Newark, NJ 07105, or
RPalladino@njtransit.com.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: FRA and
NJ TRANSIT will prepare the EIS in
compliance with NEPA, the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ)
regulations implementing NEPA (40
CFR parts 1500–1508), and the FRA
Procedures for Considering
Environmental Impacts (FRA’s
Environmental Procedures) (64 FR
28545, May 26, 1999; 78 FR 2713, Jan.
14, 2013). Consistent with Section
11503 of the Fixing America’s Surface
Transportation Act of 2015 (FAST Act),
FRA and NJ TRANSIT will prepare the
EIS consistent with 23 U.S.C. 139. After
release and circulation of a Draft EIS for
public comment, FRA intends to issue
a single document that consists of the
Final EIS and Record of Decision under
Public Law 112–141, 126 Stat. 405,
Section 1319(b) unless it determines the
statutory criteria or practicability
considerations preclude issuing a
combined document.
The EIS will also document
compliance with other applicable
Federal, state, and local environmental
laws and regulations, including Section
106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act (NHPA); the
Conformity requirements of the Clean
Air Act; the Clean Water Act; Section
4(f) of the Department of Transportation
Act of 1966 (Section 4(f)); the
Endangered Species Act; Executive
Order 11988 and USDOT Order 5650.2
on Floodplain Management; Executive
Order 11990 on Protection of Wetlands;
the Magnuson-Stevens Act related to
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Essential Fish Habitat; the Coastal Zone
Management Act; and Executive Order
12898 on Environmental Justice. The
EIS will provide FRA, NJ TRANSIT, and
other cooperating and participating
agencies and the public with
information about alternatives that meet
the Proposed Action’s purpose and
need, including their environmental
impacts and appropriate measures to
avoid, minimize, and mitigate those
impacts.
The Proposed Action may affect
historic properties and will be subject to
the requirements of Section 106 of the
NHPA (54 U.S.C. 306108). Consistent
with regulations issued by the Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation (36
CFR part 800), FRA intends to
coordinate compliance with Section 106
of the NHPA with the preparation of the
EIS. The public and interested parties
may also provide input relevant to
FRA’s review under Section 106
including identifying potentially
eligible resources and the potential
effect of the Proposed Action on those
resources. In addition, the public or
other interested parties may also request
to participate in the Section 106 process
as a consulting party under 36 CFR part
800.
Project Background
The existing NEC rail tunnel beneath
the Hudson River is known as the North
River Tunnel. This tunnel is used by
Amtrak for intercity passenger rail
service and by NJ TRANSIT for
commuter rail service. The approach to
the tunnel begins east of NJ TRANSIT’s
Frank R. Lautenberg Station in
Secaucus, New Jersey (which is 5 miles
east of Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT’s
Newark Penn Station). East of the
Secaucus station, the NEC has two
tracks that approach the tunnel on a
raised embankment through the towns
of Secaucus and North Bergen, New
Jersey. Tracks enter a tunnel portal in
North Bergen, passing beneath Union
City and Weehawken, New Jersey and
the Hudson River before emerging
within the Penn Station New York
(PSNY) rail complex in New York City.
The tunnel has two separate tubes, each
accommodating a single track for
electrically powered trains, and extends
approximately 2.5 miles from the tunnel
portal in North Bergen to PSNY. The
existing North River Tunnel is a critical
NEC asset and is the only intercity
passenger rail crossing into New York
City from New Jersey and areas west
and south.
The NEC is the most heavily used
passenger rail line in the U.S., both in
terms of ridership and service
frequency. Amtrak operates over the
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entire NEC, providing regional service,
long distance service, and high-speed
Acela Express service. Amtrak owns the
majority of the NEC, including the
North River Tunnel. NJ TRANSIT
operates an extensive commuter rail
network in New Jersey that extends to
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Orange and
Rockland Counties in New York; and
New York City. Amtrak’s NEC service
and NJ TRANSIT’s commuter rail
service provide connections between
the major cities of the Mid-Atlantic and
Northeast states and commuter access
for thousands of people who work in the
region. Therefore, both services are
important to the region’s economy. In
2014, Amtrak carried approximately
24,000 weekday passengers each day on
more than 100 trains between New York
and New Jersey. NJ TRANSIT carried
almost 90,000 weekday passengers each
day on approximately 350 trains
between New York and New Jersey.
Extensive engineering work and
environmental documentation have
been prepared over the past two decades
for a new Hudson River rail tunnel. This
has included the detailed studies and
design conducted for the Access to the
Region’s Core (ARC) project from 1995
through 2010. The ARC project
evaluated several options for
construction of a new tunnel under the
Hudson River in combination with an
expansion of station capacity in
midtown Manhattan to accommodate
growing passenger demand. In addition,
Amtrak conducted the Gateway Program
Feasibility Study in 2011–2013, which
assessed options for constructing a new
Hudson River tunnel. Amtrak’s Gateway
Program envisions a series of
improvement projects to upgrade and
expand the capacity of the NEC. While
many of the Gateway improvements are
still being fully defined, a new Hudson
Tunnel on the NEC is urgently needed
to maintain existing service.
In 2012, the FRA launched the NEC
FUTURE study to consider the role of
rail passenger service in the context of
current and future transportation
demands and to evaluate the
appropriate level of capacity
improvements to make across the NEC.
The intent of the NEC FUTURE program
is to help develop a long-term vision
and investment program for the NEC.
Through NEC FUTURE, FRA is
currently evaluating overall capacity
improvements and environmental
consequences associated with improved
NEC rail services, including transHudson service. However, as described
above, this Proposed Action addresses a
specific need due to the deterioration of
the existing North River Tunnel and can
be considered independently from the
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other projects analyzed in the NEC
FUTURE EIS. All three build
alternatives evaluated in the NEC
FUTURE Tier 1 Draft EIS FRA released
in November 2015 included new
Hudson River tunnel investments
similar to this Proposed Action. This
EIS may incorporate the appropriate
analysis and other relevant elements
from the NEC FUTURE Tier 1 EIS while
focusing on the issues specific to this
independent Project.
As appropriate, FRA and NJ TRANSIT
will use the work conducted for the
ARC project and Amtrak’s feasibility
study to provide baseline information
for the study of the Proposed Action.
While the Proposed Action addresses
maintenance and resilience of the NEC
Hudson River crossing, it would not
increase rail capacity. At the same time,
the Proposed Action would not
preclude other future projects to expand
rail capacity in the area. Accordingly,
although the Proposed Action may also
be an element of a larger program to
expand rail capacity, it would meet an
urgent existing need and will be
evaluated as a separate project from any
larger initiative. Ultimately, an increase
in service between Newark Penn Station
and PSNY would not occur until other
substantial infrastructure capacity
improvements are built in addition to a
new Hudson River rail tunnel. These
improvements will be the subject of one
or more separate design, engineering,
and appropriate environmental reviews.
Purpose and Need
The purpose of the Proposed Action
is: (1) To preserve the current
functionality of Amtrak’s NEC service
and NJ TRANSIT’s commuter rail
service between New Jersey and PSNY
by repairing the deteriorating North
River Tunnel; and (2) to strengthen the
NEC’s resiliency to support reliable rail
service by providing redundant capacity
under the Hudson River for Amtrak and
NJ TRANSIT NEC trains between New
Jersey and the existing PSNY. These
improvements must be achieved while
maintaining uninterrupted commuter
and intercity rail service and by
optimizing the use of existing
infrastructure.
Service reliability through the tunnel
has been compromised due to damage to
tunnel components Superstorm Sandy
caused, when it inundated both tubes in
the North River Tunnel with seawater in
October 2012. That storm resulted in the
cancellation of all Amtrak and NJ
TRANSIT service into New York City
for five days. Although the tunnel was
restored to service and is now safe for
travel, chlorides from the seawater
remain in the tunnel’s concrete liner
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and bench walls, causing ongoing
damage to the bench walls, imbedded
steel, track, and signaling and electrical
components.
The damage Superstorm Sandy
caused is compounded by the tunnel’s
age and the intensity of its current use
(operating at capacity to meet current
demands), resulting in frequent delays
due to component failures within the
tunnel. With no other Hudson River
passenger rail crossing into PSNY,
single-point failures can suspend rail
service, causing delays that cascade up
and down the NEC as well as
throughout NJ TRANSIT’s commuter
system, disrupting service for hundreds
of thousands of passengers. For
example, on March 17, 2016, a NJ
TRANSIT train became disabled in one
of the tunnel’s tubes during the morning
peak period, resulting in delays to 57
other Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT trains
headed into and out of PSNY that day.
Service disruptions will continue and
will over time happen more frequently
as the deterioration from the seawater
inundation continues and components
fail in an unpredictable manner.
Because of the importance of the
North River Tunnel to essential
commuter and intercity rail service
between New Jersey and New York,
City, rehabilitation of the existing North
River Tunnel must be accomplished
without unacceptable reductions in
weekday service. Removing one tube in
the existing North River Tunnel from
operation without new capacity in place
would reduce weekday service to
volumes well below the current
maximum capacity of 24 peak direction
trains per hour.
In addition, the existing two-track
North River Tunnel is operating at full
capacity and does not provide
redundancy for reliable train operations
during disruptions or maintenance.
Therefore, any service disruption results
in major passenger delays and
substantial reductions to overall system
flexibility, reliability and on-time
performance. This condition is
exacerbated by the need to perform
increased maintenance to address
damage Superstorm Sandy caused.
These maintenance demands are
difficult to meet because of the intensity
of rail service in the tunnel. Efforts to
maintain the North River Tunnel in a
functional condition currently require
nightly and weekend tunnel outages
with reductions in service due to singletrack operations. Train service is
adjusted to allow the closure of one tube
of the North River Tunnel each weekend
for maintenance for a 55-hour window
beginning Friday evening and ending
early Monday morning.
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Proposed Action and Alternatives
The Proposed Action, the Hudson
Tunnel Project, consists of:
• A new NEC rail tunnel with two
tubes and electrified tracks beneath the
Hudson River, extending from a new
tunnel portal in North Bergen, New
Jersey to the PSNY rail complex;
• Ventilation shaft buildings above
the tunnel on both sides of the Hudson
River to provide smoke ventilation
during emergencies;
• Modifications to the existing NEC
tracks in New Jersey and additional
track on the NEC to connect the new
tunnel to the NEC, beginning just east of
Frank R. Lautenberg Station in
Secaucus, New Jersey, and approaching
the new tunnel portal in North Bergen,
New Jersey;
• Modifications to connecting rail
infrastructure at PSNY to connect the
new tunnel’s tracks to the existing
tracks at PSNY; and
• Rehabilitation of the existing North
River Tunnel.
Once the North River Tunnel
rehabilitation is complete, both the old
and new tunnel would be in service,
providing redundant capacity and
increased operational flexibility for
Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT.
In addition to those permanent
features, the Proposed Action would
involve the following types of
construction activities, which will be
described and evaluated in the Draft
EIS:
• Construction of new tracks along
the NEC between Frank R. Lautenberg
Station and the new tunnel portal;
• Construction of the new tunnel
using Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM)
technology, which is conducted
underground from a tunnel portal. At
this time, it is anticipated that tunneling
would likely occur from the New Jersey
side of the new tunnel;
• Construction staging sites near the
tunnel portal and at the vent shaft site
in New Jersey. These locations would be
used to access the tunnel and to remove
rock from the tunnel while it is being
bored;
• Construction staging site at the vent
shaft site in Manhattan; and
• Potential construction activities that
affect the Hudson River riverbed above
the tunnel location.
Alternatives will be developed based
on the purpose of and need for the
Project, information obtained through
the scoping process, and information
from previous studies. The EIS process
will consider a No Action Alternative
and a reasonable range of Build
Alternatives identified through an
alternatives development process. The
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Draft EIS will document the alternatives
development and screening process. On
the basis of that screening process and
further analysis in the Draft EIS itself,
FRA anticipates that the Draft EIS will
also identify and describe the Preferred
Alternative consistent with 40 CFR
1502.14(e).
Possible Effects
Consistent with NEPA and FRA’s
Environmental Procedures, the EIS will
consider the potential direct, indirect,
and cumulative effects of the Project
alternatives on the social, economic,
and environmental resources in the
study area. This analysis will include
identification of study areas;
documentation of the affected
environment; evaluation of direct and
indirect effects of the alternatives; and
identification of measures to avoid and/
or mitigate adverse impacts.
The analysis will include detailed
consideration of impacts that would
occur during the Project’s
construction—including construction of
the new tunnel and rehabilitation of the
existing tunnel—as well as
consideration of the impacts once the
construction is complete. The Proposed
Action would not expand capacity on
this portion of the NEC as compared to
the No Action Alternative, and therefore
service changes are not an anticipated
consequence of the Proposed Action.
FRA and NJ TRANSIT will evaluate
direct, indirect and cumulative changes
to the human and natural environment
resulting from the alternatives,
including analyses of the following
resource areas:
• Transportation;
• Social and economic conditions;
• Property acquisition;
• Parks and recreational resources;
• Visual and aesthetic resources;
• Historic and archaeological
resources;
• Air quality;
• Greenhouse gas emissions and
resilience;
• Noise and vibration;
• Ecology (including wetlands, water
and sediment quality, floodplains, and
biological resources);
• Threatened and endangered
species;
• Contaminated materials; and
• Environmental justice.
A Section 4(f) evaluation will also be
included in the Draft EIS.
Scoping, Public Involvement, and
Agency Coordination
This NOI initiates the scoping process
under NEPA, which helps guide the
development of the Draft EIS. FRA and
NJ TRANSIT invite all interested
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individuals, organizations, and federal,
state, and local agencies to comment on
the scope of the EIS. Comments are
encouraged on the Proposed Action’s
purpose and need; the alternatives to
consider in the EIS; the analyses to
include in the EIS and the study area
and methodologies to be used; the
approach for public and agency
involvement; and any particular
concerns about the anticipated impacts
of the Proposed Action.
Public agencies with jurisdiction are
requested to advise FRA of the
applicable permit and environmental
review requirements of each agency,
and the scope and content of the
environmental information germane to
the agency’s statutory responsibilities in
connection with the Proposed Action.
Public agencies are requested to advise
FRA if they anticipate taking a major
action in connection with the Proposed
Action and if they wish to cooperate in
the preparation of the EIS under 40 CFR
1501.16.
FRA will coordinate with
participating agencies during
development of the Draft EIS under 23
U.S.C. 139. FRA will also coordinate
with federally recognized tribes and
Consulting Parties established under
Section 106 of the NHPA.
The lead agencies will invite all
Federal and non-Federal agencies and
Native American tribes that may have
an interest in the Proposed Action to
become participating agencies for the
EIS. If an agency or tribe is not invited
and would like to participate, please
contact FRA at the contact information
listed above. The lead agencies will
develop a Coordination Plan
summarizing how they will engage the
public, agencies, and tribes in the
process. The Coordination Plan will be
posted to the Project Web site
(www.hudsontunnelproject.com) and to
FRA’s Web site (www.fra.dot.gov/Page/
P0214). NJ TRANSIT will lead the
outreach activities during the public
scoping process, beginning with the
scoping meeting and comment period
identified under DATES above. Public
meetings, open houses and other public
involvement initiatives, including
newsletters and outreach, will be held
and used throughout the course of this
study. Public outreach activities will be
announced on the Project Web site
(www.hudsontunnelproject.com) and
through mailings, public notices,
advertisements and press releases.
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Issued in Washington, DC, on April 27,
2016.
Amitabha Bose,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2016–10277 Filed 4–28–16; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA–2016–0053]
Reports, Forms and Record Keeping
Requirements, Agency Information
Collection Activity Under OMB Review
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed extension,
without change, of a currently approved
collection of information.
AGENCY:
Before a federal agency may
collect certain information from the
public, the agency must receive
approval from the Office of Management
and Budget (‘‘OMB’’). Under procedures
established by the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
before seeking OMB approval, federal
agencies must solicit public comment
on proposed collections of information,
including extensions and reinstatements
of previously approved collections. In
compliance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, this notice
describes one collection of information
for which NHTSA intends to seek OMB
approval.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before July 1, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
to the docket number identified in the
heading of this document 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,
West Building, Ground Floor, Rm. W12–
140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: West
Building Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
Regardless of how you submit your
comments, please be sure to mention
the docket number of this document and
cite OMB Clearance No. 2127–0609,
‘‘Criminal Penalty Safe Harbor
Provision.’’
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:30 Apr 29, 2016
Jkt 238001
You may call the Docket at 202–366–
9322.
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 discussion 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).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kerry Kolodziej, Office of the Chief
Counsel, NCC–100, National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
20590 (telephone: 202–366–5263).
Please identify the relevant collection of
information by referring to OMB
Clearance Number 2127–0609 ‘‘Criminal
Penalty Safe Harbor Provision.’’
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
before an agency submits a proposed
collection of information to OMB for
approval, it must publish a document in
the Federal Register providing a 60-day
comment period and otherwise consult
with members of the public and affected
agencies concerning each proposed
collection of information. The OMB has
promulgated regulations describing
what must be included in such a
document. Under OMB’s regulations (at
5 CFR 1320.8(d)), an agency must ask
for public comment on the following:
(i) Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(ii) the accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
(iii) how to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(iv) how to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including the use
of appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
In compliance with these
requirements, NHTSA asks for public
comment on the following proposed
extension, without change, of a
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
currently approved collection of
information:
Criminal Penalty Safe Harbor Provision
Type of Request—Extension, without
change, of a currently approved
collection.
OMB Clearance Number—2127–0609.
Form Number—This collection of
information uses no standard forms.
Requested Expiration Date of
Approval—Three (3) years from the date
of approval of the collection.
Summary of the Collection of
Information—Each person seeking safe
harbor protection from criminal
penalties under 49 U.S.C. 30170 related
to an improper report or failure to report
is required to submit the following
information to NHTSA: (1) A signed and
dated document that identifies (a) each
previous improper report and each
failure to report as required under 49
U.S.C. 30166, including a regulation,
requirement, request or order issued
thereunder, for which protection is
sought and (b) the specific predicate
under which the improper or omitted
report should have been provided; and
(2) the complete and correct information
that was required to be submitted but
was improperly submitted or was not
previously submitted, including
relevant documents that were not
previously submitted to NHTSA or, if
the person cannot do so, provide a
detailed description of that information
and/or the content of those documents
and the reason why the individual
cannot provide them to NHTSA. See 49
U.S.C. 30170(a)(2) and 49 CFR 578.7;
see also 66 FR 38380 (July 24, 2001)
(safe harbor final rule); 65 FR 81414
(Dec. 26, 2000) (safe harbor interim final
rule).
Description of the Need for the
Information and Use of the
Information—This information
collection was mandated by Section 5 of
the Transportation Recall Enhancement,
Accountability, and Documentation Act,
codified at 49 U.S.C. 30170(a)(2). The
information collected will provide
NHTSA with information the Agency
should have received previously and
will also promptly provide the Agency
with correct information to do its
analyses, such as, for example,
conducting tests or drawing conclusions
about possible safety-related defects.
NHTSA anticipates using this
information to help it to accomplish its
statutory assignment of identifying
safety-related defects in motor vehicles
and motor vehicle equipment and, when
appropriate, seeking safety recalls.
Description of the Likely Respondents,
Including Estimated Number and
Proposed Frequency of Response to the
E:\FR\FM\02MYN1.SGM
02MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 84 (Monday, May 2, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 26308-26312]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-10277]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Hudson Tunnel
Project in Hudson County, New Jersey and New York County, New York
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of intent (NOI) to prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Through this Notice, FRA announces its intent to jointly
prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS) with the New Jersey
Transit Corporation (NJ TRANSIT) for the Hudson Tunnel Project (the
Proposed Action or the Project) under the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA). The Proposed Action is
[[Page 26309]]
intended to preserve the current functionality of the Northeast
Corridor's (NEC) Hudson River rail crossing between New Jersey and New
York and strengthen the resilience of the NEC. The Project would
consist of construction of a new rail tunnel beneath the Hudson River,
including railroad infrastructure in New Jersey and New York connecting
the new rail tunnel to the existing NEC, and rehabilitation of the
existing NEC tunnel beneath the Hudson River, referred to as the North
River Tunnel. The EIS will evaluate the potential environmental impacts
of a reasonable range of alternatives, including the No Action (No
Build) Alternative. As appropriate, FRA and NJ TRANSIT will coordinate
with the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak), as owner of
the North River Tunnel, and the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey (PANYNJ) on the EIS.
FRA invites the public and all interested parties to provide
comments on the scope of the EIS, including the proposed purpose and
need, the Proposed Action and alternatives to be considered in the EIS,
potential environmental impacts of concern and methodologies to be used
in the EIS, the approach for public and agency involvement, and any
other particular concerns about the potential impacts of the Proposed
Action.
DATES: Persons interested in providing written comments on the scope of
the EIS must do so by May 31, 2016. Please submit written comments via
the internet, email, or mail, using the contact information provided
below.
Persons may also provide comments orally or in writing at the
public scoping meetings. FRA and NJ TRANSIT will hold two scoping
meetings on the following dates:
May 17, 2016, at the Hotel Pennsylvania, Gold Ballroom,
3rd Floor, 401 Seventh Avenue at West 33rd Street, New York, New York
10001.
May 19, 2016, at Union City High School, 2500 Kennedy
Boulevard, Union City, New Jersey 07087.
Both days will include an afternoon session from 3 to 5 p.m. with a
brief presentation about the Proposed Action at 4 p.m., and an evening
session from 6 to 8 p.m. with a brief presentation about the Proposed
Action at 7 p.m. The public can review Project information, talk
informally with members of the study staff, and formally submit
comments to the FRA (to a stenographer or in writing). The meeting
facilities will be accessible to persons with disabilities. Spanish
language translators will be present. If you need special translation
or signing services or other special accommodations, please contact the
Project team five days prior to the meeting at 973-261-8115, or email
team@hudsontunnelproject.com.
FRA and NJ TRANSIT will give equal consideration to oral and
written comments.
ADDRESSES: The public and other interested parties are encouraged to
comment via the internet at the Project's Web site
(www.hudsontunnelproject.com) or via email at
team@hudsontunnelproject.com. You can also send written comments by
mail to persons identified below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amishi Castelli, Ph.D., Environmental
Protection Specialist, Office of Railroad Policy and Development, USDOT
Federal Railroad Administration, One Bowling Green, Suite 429, New
York, NY 10004, or Amishi.Castelli@dot.gov; or Mr. RJ Palladino, AICP,
PP, Senior Program Manager, NJ TRANSIT Capital Planning, One Penn Plaza
East--8th Floor, Newark, NJ 07105, or RPalladino@njtransit.com.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: FRA and NJ TRANSIT will prepare the EIS in
compliance with NEPA, the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ)
regulations implementing NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and the FRA
Procedures for Considering Environmental Impacts (FRA's Environmental
Procedures) (64 FR 28545, May 26, 1999; 78 FR 2713, Jan. 14, 2013).
Consistent with Section 11503 of the Fixing America's Surface
Transportation Act of 2015 (FAST Act), FRA and NJ TRANSIT will prepare
the EIS consistent with 23 U.S.C. 139. After release and circulation of
a Draft EIS for public comment, FRA intends to issue a single document
that consists of the Final EIS and Record of Decision under Public Law
112-141, 126 Stat. 405, Section 1319(b) unless it determines the
statutory criteria or practicability considerations preclude issuing a
combined document.
The EIS will also document compliance with other applicable
Federal, state, and local environmental laws and regulations, including
Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA); the
Conformity requirements of the Clean Air Act; the Clean Water Act;
Section 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act of 1966 (Section
4(f)); the Endangered Species Act; Executive Order 11988 and USDOT
Order 5650.2 on Floodplain Management; Executive Order 11990 on
Protection of Wetlands; the Magnuson-Stevens Act related to Essential
Fish Habitat; the Coastal Zone Management Act; and Executive Order
12898 on Environmental Justice. The EIS will provide FRA, NJ TRANSIT,
and other cooperating and participating agencies and the public with
information about alternatives that meet the Proposed Action's purpose
and need, including their environmental impacts and appropriate
measures to avoid, minimize, and mitigate those impacts.
The Proposed Action may affect historic properties and will be
subject to the requirements of Section 106 of the NHPA (54 U.S.C.
306108). Consistent with regulations issued by the Advisory Council on
Historic Preservation (36 CFR part 800), FRA intends to coordinate
compliance with Section 106 of the NHPA with the preparation of the
EIS. The public and interested parties may also provide input relevant
to FRA's review under Section 106 including identifying potentially
eligible resources and the potential effect of the Proposed Action on
those resources. In addition, the public or other interested parties
may also request to participate in the Section 106 process as a
consulting party under 36 CFR part 800.
Project Background
The existing NEC rail tunnel beneath the Hudson River is known as
the North River Tunnel. This tunnel is used by Amtrak for intercity
passenger rail service and by NJ TRANSIT for commuter rail service. The
approach to the tunnel begins east of NJ TRANSIT's Frank R. Lautenberg
Station in Secaucus, New Jersey (which is 5 miles east of Amtrak and NJ
TRANSIT's Newark Penn Station). East of the Secaucus station, the NEC
has two tracks that approach the tunnel on a raised embankment through
the towns of Secaucus and North Bergen, New Jersey. Tracks enter a
tunnel portal in North Bergen, passing beneath Union City and
Weehawken, New Jersey and the Hudson River before emerging within the
Penn Station New York (PSNY) rail complex in New York City. The tunnel
has two separate tubes, each accommodating a single track for
electrically powered trains, and extends approximately 2.5 miles from
the tunnel portal in North Bergen to PSNY. The existing North River
Tunnel is a critical NEC asset and is the only intercity passenger rail
crossing into New York City from New Jersey and areas west and south.
The NEC is the most heavily used passenger rail line in the U.S.,
both in terms of ridership and service frequency. Amtrak operates over
the
[[Page 26310]]
entire NEC, providing regional service, long distance service, and
high-speed Acela Express service. Amtrak owns the majority of the NEC,
including the North River Tunnel. NJ TRANSIT operates an extensive
commuter rail network in New Jersey that extends to Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania; Orange and Rockland Counties in New York; and New York
City. Amtrak's NEC service and NJ TRANSIT's commuter rail service
provide connections between the major cities of the Mid-Atlantic and
Northeast states and commuter access for thousands of people who work
in the region. Therefore, both services are important to the region's
economy. In 2014, Amtrak carried approximately 24,000 weekday
passengers each day on more than 100 trains between New York and New
Jersey. NJ TRANSIT carried almost 90,000 weekday passengers each day on
approximately 350 trains between New York and New Jersey.
Extensive engineering work and environmental documentation have
been prepared over the past two decades for a new Hudson River rail
tunnel. This has included the detailed studies and design conducted for
the Access to the Region's Core (ARC) project from 1995 through 2010.
The ARC project evaluated several options for construction of a new
tunnel under the Hudson River in combination with an expansion of
station capacity in midtown Manhattan to accommodate growing passenger
demand. In addition, Amtrak conducted the Gateway Program Feasibility
Study in 2011-2013, which assessed options for constructing a new
Hudson River tunnel. Amtrak's Gateway Program envisions a series of
improvement projects to upgrade and expand the capacity of the NEC.
While many of the Gateway improvements are still being fully defined, a
new Hudson Tunnel on the NEC is urgently needed to maintain existing
service.
In 2012, the FRA launched the NEC FUTURE study to consider the role
of rail passenger service in the context of current and future
transportation demands and to evaluate the appropriate level of
capacity improvements to make across the NEC. The intent of the NEC
FUTURE program is to help develop a long-term vision and investment
program for the NEC. Through NEC FUTURE, FRA is currently evaluating
overall capacity improvements and environmental consequences associated
with improved NEC rail services, including trans-Hudson service.
However, as described above, this Proposed Action addresses a specific
need due to the deterioration of the existing North River Tunnel and
can be considered independently from the other projects analyzed in the
NEC FUTURE EIS. All three build alternatives evaluated in the NEC
FUTURE Tier 1 Draft EIS FRA released in November 2015 included new
Hudson River tunnel investments similar to this Proposed Action. This
EIS may incorporate the appropriate analysis and other relevant
elements from the NEC FUTURE Tier 1 EIS while focusing on the issues
specific to this independent Project.
As appropriate, FRA and NJ TRANSIT will use the work conducted for
the ARC project and Amtrak's feasibility study to provide baseline
information for the study of the Proposed Action. While the Proposed
Action addresses maintenance and resilience of the NEC Hudson River
crossing, it would not increase rail capacity. At the same time, the
Proposed Action would not preclude other future projects to expand rail
capacity in the area. Accordingly, although the Proposed Action may
also be an element of a larger program to expand rail capacity, it
would meet an urgent existing need and will be evaluated as a separate
project from any larger initiative. Ultimately, an increase in service
between Newark Penn Station and PSNY would not occur until other
substantial infrastructure capacity improvements are built in addition
to a new Hudson River rail tunnel. These improvements will be the
subject of one or more separate design, engineering, and appropriate
environmental reviews.
Purpose and Need
The purpose of the Proposed Action is: (1) To preserve the current
functionality of Amtrak's NEC service and NJ TRANSIT's commuter rail
service between New Jersey and PSNY by repairing the deteriorating
North River Tunnel; and (2) to strengthen the NEC's resiliency to
support reliable rail service by providing redundant capacity under the
Hudson River for Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT NEC trains between New Jersey
and the existing PSNY. These improvements must be achieved while
maintaining uninterrupted commuter and intercity rail service and by
optimizing the use of existing infrastructure.
Service reliability through the tunnel has been compromised due to
damage to tunnel components Superstorm Sandy caused, when it inundated
both tubes in the North River Tunnel with seawater in October 2012.
That storm resulted in the cancellation of all Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT
service into New York City for five days. Although the tunnel was
restored to service and is now safe for travel, chlorides from the
seawater remain in the tunnel's concrete liner and bench walls, causing
ongoing damage to the bench walls, imbedded steel, track, and signaling
and electrical components.
The damage Superstorm Sandy caused is compounded by the tunnel's
age and the intensity of its current use (operating at capacity to meet
current demands), resulting in frequent delays due to component
failures within the tunnel. With no other Hudson River passenger rail
crossing into PSNY, single-point failures can suspend rail service,
causing delays that cascade up and down the NEC as well as throughout
NJ TRANSIT's commuter system, disrupting service for hundreds of
thousands of passengers. For example, on March 17, 2016, a NJ TRANSIT
train became disabled in one of the tunnel's tubes during the morning
peak period, resulting in delays to 57 other Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT
trains headed into and out of PSNY that day. Service disruptions will
continue and will over time happen more frequently as the deterioration
from the seawater inundation continues and components fail in an
unpredictable manner.
Because of the importance of the North River Tunnel to essential
commuter and intercity rail service between New Jersey and New York,
City, rehabilitation of the existing North River Tunnel must be
accomplished without unacceptable reductions in weekday service.
Removing one tube in the existing North River Tunnel from operation
without new capacity in place would reduce weekday service to volumes
well below the current maximum capacity of 24 peak direction trains per
hour.
In addition, the existing two-track North River Tunnel is operating
at full capacity and does not provide redundancy for reliable train
operations during disruptions or maintenance. Therefore, any service
disruption results in major passenger delays and substantial reductions
to overall system flexibility, reliability and on-time performance.
This condition is exacerbated by the need to perform increased
maintenance to address damage Superstorm Sandy caused. These
maintenance demands are difficult to meet because of the intensity of
rail service in the tunnel. Efforts to maintain the North River Tunnel
in a functional condition currently require nightly and weekend tunnel
outages with reductions in service due to single-track operations.
Train service is adjusted to allow the closure of one tube of the North
River Tunnel each weekend for maintenance for a 55-hour window
beginning Friday evening and ending early Monday morning.
[[Page 26311]]
Proposed Action and Alternatives
The Proposed Action, the Hudson Tunnel Project, consists of:
A new NEC rail tunnel with two tubes and electrified
tracks beneath the Hudson River, extending from a new tunnel portal in
North Bergen, New Jersey to the PSNY rail complex;
Ventilation shaft buildings above the tunnel on both sides
of the Hudson River to provide smoke ventilation during emergencies;
Modifications to the existing NEC tracks in New Jersey and
additional track on the NEC to connect the new tunnel to the NEC,
beginning just east of Frank R. Lautenberg Station in Secaucus, New
Jersey, and approaching the new tunnel portal in North Bergen, New
Jersey;
Modifications to connecting rail infrastructure at PSNY to
connect the new tunnel's tracks to the existing tracks at PSNY; and
Rehabilitation of the existing North River Tunnel.
Once the North River Tunnel rehabilitation is complete, both the old
and new tunnel would be in service, providing redundant capacity and
increased operational flexibility for Amtrak and NJ TRANSIT.
In addition to those permanent features, the Proposed Action would
involve the following types of construction activities, which will be
described and evaluated in the Draft EIS:
Construction of new tracks along the NEC between Frank R.
Lautenberg Station and the new tunnel portal;
Construction of the new tunnel using Tunnel Boring Machine
(TBM) technology, which is conducted underground from a tunnel portal.
At this time, it is anticipated that tunneling would likely occur from
the New Jersey side of the new tunnel;
Construction staging sites near the tunnel portal and at
the vent shaft site in New Jersey. These locations would be used to
access the tunnel and to remove rock from the tunnel while it is being
bored;
Construction staging site at the vent shaft site in
Manhattan; and
Potential construction activities that affect the Hudson
River riverbed above the tunnel location.
Alternatives will be developed based on the purpose of and need for
the Project, information obtained through the scoping process, and
information from previous studies. The EIS process will consider a No
Action Alternative and a reasonable range of Build Alternatives
identified through an alternatives development process. The Draft EIS
will document the alternatives development and screening process. On
the basis of that screening process and further analysis in the Draft
EIS itself, FRA anticipates that the Draft EIS will also identify and
describe the Preferred Alternative consistent with 40 CFR 1502.14(e).
Possible Effects
Consistent with NEPA and FRA's Environmental Procedures, the EIS
will consider the potential direct, indirect, and cumulative effects of
the Project alternatives on the social, economic, and environmental
resources in the study area. This analysis will include identification
of study areas; documentation of the affected environment; evaluation
of direct and indirect effects of the alternatives; and identification
of measures to avoid and/or mitigate adverse impacts.
The analysis will include detailed consideration of impacts that
would occur during the Project's construction--including construction
of the new tunnel and rehabilitation of the existing tunnel--as well as
consideration of the impacts once the construction is complete. The
Proposed Action would not expand capacity on this portion of the NEC as
compared to the No Action Alternative, and therefore service changes
are not an anticipated consequence of the Proposed Action. FRA and NJ
TRANSIT will evaluate direct, indirect and cumulative changes to the
human and natural environment resulting from the alternatives,
including analyses of the following resource areas:
Transportation;
Social and economic conditions;
Property acquisition;
Parks and recreational resources;
Visual and aesthetic resources;
Historic and archaeological resources;
Air quality;
Greenhouse gas emissions and resilience;
Noise and vibration;
Ecology (including wetlands, water and sediment quality,
floodplains, and biological resources);
Threatened and endangered species;
Contaminated materials; and
Environmental justice.
A Section 4(f) evaluation will also be included in the Draft EIS.
Scoping, Public Involvement, and Agency Coordination
This NOI initiates the scoping process under NEPA, which helps
guide the development of the Draft EIS. FRA and NJ TRANSIT invite all
interested individuals, organizations, and federal, state, and local
agencies to comment on the scope of the EIS. Comments are encouraged on
the Proposed Action's purpose and need; the alternatives to consider in
the EIS; the analyses to include in the EIS and the study area and
methodologies to be used; the approach for public and agency
involvement; and any particular concerns about the anticipated impacts
of the Proposed Action.
Public agencies with jurisdiction are requested to advise FRA of
the applicable permit and environmental review requirements of each
agency, and the scope and content of the environmental information
germane to the agency's statutory responsibilities in connection with
the Proposed Action. Public agencies are requested to advise FRA if
they anticipate taking a major action in connection with the Proposed
Action and if they wish to cooperate in the preparation of the EIS
under 40 CFR 1501.16.
FRA will coordinate with participating agencies during development
of the Draft EIS under 23 U.S.C. 139. FRA will also coordinate with
federally recognized tribes and Consulting Parties established under
Section 106 of the NHPA.
The lead agencies will invite all Federal and non-Federal agencies
and Native American tribes that may have an interest in the Proposed
Action to become participating agencies for the EIS. If an agency or
tribe is not invited and would like to participate, please contact FRA
at the contact information listed above. The lead agencies will develop
a Coordination Plan summarizing how they will engage the public,
agencies, and tribes in the process. The Coordination Plan will be
posted to the Project Web site (www.hudsontunnelproject.com) and to
FRA's Web site (www.fra.dot.gov/Page/P0214). NJ TRANSIT will lead the
outreach activities during the public scoping process, beginning with
the scoping meeting and comment period identified under DATES above.
Public meetings, open houses and other public involvement initiatives,
including newsletters and outreach, will be held and used throughout
the course of this study. Public outreach activities will be announced
on the Project Web site (www.hudsontunnelproject.com) and through
mailings, public notices, advertisements and press releases.
[[Page 26312]]
Issued in Washington, DC, on April 27, 2016.
Amitabha Bose,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2016-10277 Filed 4-28-16; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-06-P