New England Transrail, LLC, d/b/a Wilmington & Woburn Terminal Railway-Construction, Acquisition and Operation Exemption-in Wilmington and Woburn, Mass., 67416-67419 [2016-23692]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 190 / Friday, September 30, 2016 / Notices
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Dated: September 16, 2016.
Jonathan W. Burby,
Executive Secretary, Shipping Coordinating
Committee, Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2016–23708 Filed 9–29–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–09–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
[Docket No. FD 34797 (Sub–No. 1)]
New England Transrail, LLC, d/b/a
Wilmington & Woburn Terminal
Railway—Construction, Acquisition
and Operation Exemption—in
Wilmington and Woburn, Mass.
Surface Transportation Board.
Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement; notice
of availability of the draft scope of study
AGENCY:
ACTION:
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for the environmental impact statement;
notice of scoping meeting; and request
for comments on draft scope.
On June 24, 2016, New
England Transrail, LLC (NET) filed a
petition for exemption with the Surface
Transportation Board (Board) pursuant
to 49 U.S.C. 10502 and 10901 in Docket
No. FD 34797 (Sub–No. 1). NET intends
to acquire, construct and operate
various rail lines and construct and
operate transloading facilities, where
goods and materials are transferred from
rail to truck, in the towns of Wilmington
and Woburn, Massachusetts. NET
proposes to acquire 5,727 feet of
existing track, to rehabilitate or
construct a combined 10,838 feet of
track, and to operate as a rail carrier
over the total 16,565 feet of track on and
adjacent to property currently owned by
the Olin Corporation at 51 Eames Street
in Wilmington.1 NET anticipates
moving goods and materials (e.g. bricks,
newspaper, steel, glycols, biofuels,
liquid natural gas, vegetable oils, wood
chips, sand, and gravel) and
transloading them from rail cars directly
onto trucks, into holding tanks, or into
a warehouse on site for temporary
storage.
Because this project has the potential
to result in significant environmental
impacts, the Board’s Office of
Environmental Analysis (OEA) has
determined that the preparation of an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
is appropriate pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.).2 The purpose of this Notice of
Intent is to inform stakeholders—
including members of the public;
Tribes; federal, state, and local agencies;
environmental groups; potential
shippers and other parties—interested
in or potentially affected by the
proposed project of the decision to
prepare an EIS. OEA will hold a public
scoping meeting as part of the NEPA
process. Oral and written comments
submitted during scoping will assist
OEA in issuing a Final Scope of Study
that defines the range of actions,
SUMMARY:
1 Generally, Board authorization is not required
for proposals by existing carriers to acquire or
construct rail facilities and ‘‘excepted’’ ancillary
track (spur, industrial or side tracks used to support
line-haul services). 49 U.S.C. 10906; Nicholson v.
ICC, 711 F.2d 364, 367–8 (D.C. Cir. 1983); but see
Effingham R.R.—Pet. for Declaratory Order—
Constr. at Effingham, Ill., 2 S.T.B. 606, 609–10
(1997) (Board has licensing authority over proposal
by new carrier to construct and operate over
§ 10906 track that would constitute its entire
operation).
2 See New Eng. Transrail, LLC—Constr., Acquis.,
& Operation Exemption—in Wilmington & Woburn,
Mass., (2016 Decision) FD 34797, slip op. at 5 (STB
served May 17, 2016).
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alternatives, and impacts to be
considered in the EIS. The date and
location for the public meeting, along
with the Draft Scope of Study for review
and comment, are provided below.
Background
I. The Prior Proceedings. In December
2003, NET filed its original petition for
exemption for authority to acquire,
construct and operate track to use in
conjunction with a reload facility at the
Olin site in Docket No. FD 34391. OEA 3
conducted an environmental review and
issued an Environmental Assessment
(EA) in August 2004 and a Post-EA in
December 2004. After issuance of the
Post-EA, a number of parties informed
the Board that NET had modified its
proposed project to include, among
other changes, the processing of
municipal solid waste (MSW) at the
facility without notifying OEA and that
therefore, the environmental review was
incomplete.
In May 2005, the Board issued a
decision dismissing the case without
prejudice to NET filing a new petition
or application based on its current
project plans. The Board concluded that
the project had changed significantly
from the proposal presented in the
petition and that NET had not informed
OEA of the changes until after the
environmental review had been
completed. Because the petition was
modified to the point that analysis
already performed by the Board became
substantially deficient and required
extensive revision, the Board found that
it was appropriate to terminate the
proceeding.4
In December 2005, NET filed its
petition for exemption in a new docket,
Docket No. FD 34797, for acquisition,
construction, and operation authority.
NET outlined its plans to rehabilitate
the existing track on the property and to
construct new sections of track to
support a facility to handle construction
and demolition debris (C&D) and MSW.
Following NET’s filing, opposing parties
argued that some or all of NET’s
planned activities would not constitute
‘‘rail transportation,’’ and in 2006, a
coalition of parties asked the Board to
address the threshold issue of the extent
of this agency’s jurisdiction over the
proposed project. Additionally, in 2006,
the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) added the project site to
the National Priorities List (NPL) under
the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
3 OEA was formerly known as the Board’s Section
of Environmental Analysis (SEA).
4 See New Eng. Transrail, LLC—Constr., Acquis.,
& Operation Exemption—in Wilmington & Woburn,
Mass., FD 34391 (STB served May 3, 2005).
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Act (CERCLA or Superfund). EPA
suggested that, in order to fully address
the proposal’s effect on potentially
contaminated soil and groundwater, the
Board defer issuing even a preliminary
analysis under NEPA of the potential
environmental impacts of NET’s
proposal until EPA had completed the
relevant portion of its Remedial
Investigation and Feasibility Study (RI/
FS) of the site.
In July 2007, the Board issued a
decision finding that NET would, if
authorized, become a rail carrier subject
to the Board’s jurisdiction and thus
would need authority to acquire,
construct and operate the track. The
Board also addressed the extent to
which the handling of C&D and MSW
would come within the scope of the
Board’s jurisdiction, but the issue was
not decided because the Board deferred
environmental review until EPA had
completed the relevant portion of its RI/
FS Study at the site.5 In May 2016, the
Board lifted the deferral after EPA
submitted a letter stating that the facts
no longer supported continuing to defer
the Board’s environmental review in the
case.6 The Board also directed NET to
file an updated petition for exemption
in a new sub-docket detailing its current
plans for the site.7
II. The Instant Proceeding. On June
24, 2016, NET filed an updated petition
for exemption outlining its current
proposal with the Board in Docket No.
FD 34797 (Sub–No. 1).8 As stated above,
NET proposes to acquire, construct and
operate track and to construct and
operate transloading facilities on and
adjacent to the Olin site. NET plans to
move goods and materials, including
bricks, newspaper, steel, glycols,
biofuels, liquid natural gas, vegetable
oils, wood chips, sand, and gravel and
transload them from rail cars directly
onto trucks, into holding tanks, or into
a warehouse on site for temporary
storage. This Notice of Intent initiates
the EIS process and scoping for this
proceeding.
Date and Location of Public Scoping
Meeting: The public scoping meeting
will be held at the following location on
the date listed:
• October 25, 2016; 5:30–8:00 p.m. at
Wilmington Middle School, 25 Carter
Lane, Wilmington, MA 01887
The scoping meeting will be held in
an open house format for the first half
5 See New Eng. Transrail, LLC—Constr., Acquis.,
& Operation Exemption—in Wilmington & Woburn,
Mass., FD 34797 (STB served July 10, 2007).
6 See Letter from EPA (Nov. 6, 2015).
7 See 2016 Decision.
8 NET’s current plans do not include operating a
municipal solid waste transfer station at the facility.
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hour followed by a brief presentation by
OEA. After the presentation, interested
parties will be provided an opportunity
for public comment at an open
microphone for the balance of the
scoping meeting. A court reporter will
transcribe the public comments.
The meeting location complies with
the Americans with Disabilities Act of
1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq.). Persons
that need special accommodations
should telephone OEA’s toll-free
number for this project at 877–573–
8930.
OEA invites written public comments
on all aspects of the Draft Scope of
Study and is providing a 60-day public
comment period which begins on
September 30, 2016. These written
comments may be submitted (1) during
the scoping meetings, or (2) by mailing
or submitting comments electronically
using the filing instructions below.
Comments should be submitted by
November 29, 2016 to assure full
consideration during the scoping
process. OEA will issue a Final Scope
of Study after the close of the scoping
comment period
Summary of the Board’s
Environmental Review Process: The
NEPA process is intended to assist the
Board and the public in identifying and
assessing the potential environmental
consequences of a proposed action
before a decision on the proposed action
is made. OEA is responsible for
ensuring that the Board complies with
NEPA and related environmental
statutes. The first stage of the EIS
process is scoping. Scoping is an open
process for determining the range of
actions, alternatives and the potential
scope of environmental issues to be
addressed in the EIS. As part of the
scoping process, OEA has developed,
and has made available for public
comment in this notice, a Draft Scope of
Study for the EIS. A scoping meeting
will be held in the project area to
provide further opportunities for public
involvement and input during the
scoping process at the time and location
set out above. In addition to comments
on the Draft Scope of Study, interested
parties are encouraged to comment on
potential alternatives for the proposed
project, including the no-action
alternative.
To assist OEA in identifying a range
of reasonable and feasible alternatives
that could meet the purpose and need
for the proposed project, OEA requested
detailed information from NET on the
alternative sites that were examined as
part of project site selection in a letter
dated August 29, 2016. NET states in its
response, dated September 7, 2016, that
it examined alternative sites in
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Tewksbury, MA, and another in North
Billerica, MA. NET determined that the
Tewksbury site would be too small for
the development of a multi-commodity
freight facility. NET also found the
North Billerica site unsuitable because
of its location away from the center of
the region and concerns regarding
highway accessibility. OEA invites the
public to comment on any potential,
reasonable and feasible alternatives that
could meet the purpose and need for
NET’s proposed project.
At the conclusion of the scoping
comment period, OEA will issue a Final
Scope of Study for the EIS. After issuing
the Final Scope of Study, OEA will
prepare a Draft EIS for the project. The
Draft EIS will address the
environmental issues and concerns
identified during the scoping process
and assess all reasonable and feasible
alternatives, including the no-action
alternative. The Draft EIS will also
contain OEA’s preliminary
recommendations for environmental
mitigation measures. Upon completion,
the Draft EIS will be made available for
review and comment by the public,
government agencies, and other
interested parties. OEA will prepare a
Final EIS that considers and responds to
comments on the Draft EIS. In reaching
its decision in this case, the Board will
consider the Draft EIS, the Final EIS, all
environmental comments received, and
OEA’s final recommendations regarding
environmental mitigation measures.
EPA is participating as a cooperating
agency in this EIS based on its special
expertise of environmental matters at
the site and jurisdiction by law
consistent with 40 CFR 1501.6.
Throughout the development of the EIS,
OEA will coordinate with EPA as the
CERCLA process progresses for the
project site. In addition, OEA will be
consulting with various federal, state
and local agencies with specific
knowledge of the potential
environmental impacts that may be
associated with the proposed project.
OEA is also initiating government-togovernment consultation with
potentially affected tribes, including but
not limited to: Narragansett Indian
Tribe, Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, and
Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head
(Aquinnah).
Filing Environmental Comments:
Scoping comments submitted by mail
should be addressed to: Danielle
Gosselin, Office of Environmental
Analysis, Surface Transportation Board,
395 E Street SW., Washington, DC
20423–0001, Attention: Docket No. FD
34797 (Sub–No. 1).
Comments may also be submitted
electronically via email through the
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project email address,
NewEnglandTransrailEIS@icf.com.
Please refer to Docket No. FD 34797
(Sub–No. 1) in all correspondence,
including emails regarding this project.
Scoping Comments are due by
November 29, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Danielle Gosselin by mail at Office of
Environmental Analysis, Surface
Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423–0001, or call
OEA’s toll-free number for the project at
877–573–8930. Assistance for the
hearing impaired is available through
the Federal Information Relay Service
(FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339. The Web site
for the Board is www.stb.gov. For further
information about the proposed project,
the Board’s environmental review
process, or this EIS, you may also visit
the Board-sponsored project Web site at
www.newenglandtransraileis.com. The
project Web site includes a map of the
project area including NET’s proposed
project.
Draft Scope of Study for the EIS
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Purpose and Need
According to NET, the principal
purpose of the proposed project is to
add rail transloading capacity close to
the center of the Boston metropolitan
area. Further, NET states that the
proposed facility would allow for lower
rail rates and improved service
scheduling for customers.
The proposed project involves a
request by NET for a license or approval
from the Board. The proposed project is
not a federal government-proposed or
sponsored project. Thus, the project’s
purpose and need should be informed
by both the applicant’s goals and the
agency’s enabling statute, here, 49
U.S.C. 10901. Section 10901 provides
that the Board must approve a
construction request unless it finds that
the construction is ‘‘inconsistent with
the public convenience and necessity.’’
Therefore, the statute creates a
presumption that rail construction is in
the public interest and will be
approved.
Proposed Action and Alternatives
NET’s proposed project involves the
acquisition of 5,727 feet of existing
track, the rehabilitation and
construction of a combined 10,838 feet
of new track, and operation as a rail
carrier over the total 16,565 feet of track.
Other major elements of the proposed
project would include demolishing
existing buildings, constructing
transloading facilities and warehouses,
and moving goods and materials and
transloading them from rail cars directly
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onto trucks, into holding tanks, or into
a warehouse on site for temporary
storage.
NET estimates that it would operate
two round trip trains per day with
approximately 30 rail cars. NET also
estimates that approximately 400 round
trip vehicle trips per day (365 truck
trips per day and 35 employee vehicle
trips) could be generated at the height
of operations. Train operations are
expected to occur between 11:00 p.m.
and 6:00 a.m., and truck deliveries are
expected to occur outside weekday
morning and evening commuter peak
hours.
The EIS will analyze and compare the
potential impacts of (1) acquisition,
construction and operation for the
proposed project, (2) any reasonable and
feasible alternatives that could allow
NET to meet its purpose and need, and
(3) the no-action alternative (denial of
the application).
Environmental Impact Analysis
Proposed Acquisition, Construction and
Operation
Analyses in the EIS will address the
proposed activities associated with the
acquisition, construction and operation
of the project and their potential
environmental impacts, as appropriate.
Impact Categories
The EIS will analyze potential direct,
indirect, and cumulative impacts 9 of
NET’s proposed acquisition,
construction and operation activities, or
in the case of the no-action alternative,
the absence of these activities.
Impact areas addressed will include
an analysis of transportation systems,
safety, land use, recreation, biological
resources, water resources, including
wetlands and other waters of the U.S.,
geology and soils, air quality and
climate, noise and vibration, energy
resources, socioeconomics as they relate
to physical changes in the environment,
cultural and historic resources,
aesthetics and environmental justice.
Other categories of potential impacts
may also be included as a result of
comments received during the scoping
process or on the Draft EIS. The EIS will
include a discussion of each of these
categories as they currently exist in the
project area and will address the
potential direct, indirect, and
9 NEPA requires the Board to consider direct,
indirect, and cumulative impacts. Direct and
indirect impacts are both caused by the action. 40
CFR 1508.8(a)–(b). A cumulative impact is the
‘‘incremental impact of the action when added to
other past, present, and reasonably foreseeable
future actions regardless of what agency (Federal or
non-federal) or person undertakes such other
actions.’’ 40 CFR 1508.7.
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cumulative impacts of each alternative
being studied in detail on each category,
as described below:
1. Transportation Systems
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the potential impacts
resulting from the proposed project on
the existing transportation network in
the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts to transportation
systems, as appropriate.
2. Safety
The EIS will:
a. Describe existing road/rail grade
crossing safety and analyze the potential
for an increase in accidents related to
the proposed operation, as appropriate.
b. Describe existing rail operations
and analyze the potential for increased
probability of train accidents, as
appropriate.
c. Evaluate the potential for
disruption and delays to the movement
of emergency vehicles.
d. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts to safety, as appropriate.
3. Land Use
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the potential impacts of
each alternative on existing land use
patterns within the project area and
identify those land uses that would be
potentially impacted by the proposed
project.
b. Analyze the potential impacts
associated with each alternative to land
uses identified within the project area.
c. Evaluate consistency with Coastal
Zone Management Program, as
applicable.
d. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
impacts to land use, as appropriate.
4. Recreation
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate existing conditions and
the potential impacts of the proposed
project on recreational areas and
opportunities for recreational activities
provided in the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts on recreational areas
and opportunities for recreational
activities, as appropriate.
5. Biological Resources
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the existing biological
resources within the project area,
including vegetative communities,
wildlife, fisheries, wetlands, and federal
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and state threatened or endangered
species, and the potential impacts to
these resources resulting from the
proposed project.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize, eliminate, or
compensate for potential impacts to
biological resources, as appropriate.
6. Water Resources
The EIS will:
a. Describe the existing surface water
and groundwater resources within the
project area, including lakes, rivers,
streams, ponds, wetlands, and
floodplains and analyze the potential
impacts on these resources.
b. Describe the permitting
requirements with regard to wetlands,
river crossings, water quality,
floodplains, and erosion control.
c. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize, eliminate, or
compensate for potential project
impacts to water resources, as
appropriate.
d. Describe EPA’s CERCLA process as
it relates to on and off-site water
resources.
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7. Geology and Soils
The EIS will:
a. Describe the geology, soils, and
seismic conditions found within the
project area, including unique or
problematic geologic formations or soils,
prime farmland, and hydric soils, and
analyze the potential impacts on these
resources resulting from each
alternative.
b. Evaluate any potential measures to
avoid or construct through unique or
problematic geologic formations or soils.
c. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts to geology and soils, as
appropriate.
d. Describe EPA’s CERCLA process as
it relates to geology and soils.
8. Air Quality and Climate
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the air emissions from the
potential operation of the proposed
project including potential greenhouse
gas emissions, as appropriate.
b. Evaluate the potential air quality
impacts resulting from the proposed
project construction activities.
c. Evaluate the potential impacts of
the proposed project on global climate
change and the potential impacts of
global climate change on the proposed
project.
d. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts, as appropriate.
9. Noise and Vibration
The EIS will:
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a. Describe the potential noise and
vibration impacts during the proposed
project construction.
b. Describe the potential noise and
vibration impacts of the proposed
project operation.
c. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts to sensitive noise
receptors, as appropriate.
10. Energy Resources
The EIS will:
a. Describe and evaluate the potential
impact of the proposed project on the
distribution of energy resources in the
project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts to energy resources, as
appropriate.
11. Socioeconomics
The EIS will:
a. Analyze the effects of the potential
temporary influx of construction
workers and creation of permanent rail
facilities jobs to the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project-related adverse impacts to social
and economic resources, as appropriate.
12. Cultural and Historic Resources
The EIS will:
a. Identify historic buildings,
structures, sites, objects, or districts
eligible for listing on or listed on the
National Register of Historic Places
(historic properties) within the area of
potential effects for each alternative.
The cultural resources identified will be
categorized into three major groups:
Tribal resources, archaeological
resources, and built resources.
b. Consult with federally recognized
Native American tribes to identify
properties with religious and cultural
significance to the tribes within the area
of potential effects for each alternative
(tribal resources), and analyze potential
project impacts to them.
c. Identify prehistoric-era and
historic-era archaeological resources by
using professionals who meet the
Secretary of the Interior Professional
Qualifications Standards (SOIPQS) in
the discipline of archaeology, and
analyze potential project impacts to
them.
d. Identify built resources by using
professionals who meet the SOIPQS in
the disciplines of history or
architectural history, and analyze
potential project impacts to them.
e. Propose measures to avoid,
minimize, or mitigate potentially
adverse project impacts to tribal
resources, built resources, and
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67419
archaeological resources that are
historic properties, as appropriate.
13. Aesthetics
The EIS will:
a. Describe the potential impacts of
the proposed project on any areas
identified or determined to be of high
visual quality.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts on aesthetics, as
appropriate.
14. Environmental Justice
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the potential impacts
resulting from the proposed project on
local and regional minority and lowincome populations.
b. Propose mitigation measures to
avoid, minimize or eliminate potential
project impacts on environmental
justice populations, as appropriate.
Decided: September 27, 2016.
By the Board, Victoria Rutson, Director,
Office of Environmental Analysis
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2016–23692 Filed 9–29–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
[Docket No. FD 36062]
Lehigh Railway, LLC—Lease
Exemption Containing Interchange
Commitment—Norfolk Southern
Railway Company
Lehigh Railway, LLC (LRWY), a Class
III rail carrier, has filed a verified notice
of exemption under 49 CFR 1150.41 to
continue to lease from Norfolk Southern
Railway Company (NSR), and to
operate, approximately 56.0 miles of rail
line between milepost IS 269.5 at
Athens, Pa., and milepost IS 213.5 at
Mehoopany, Pa., in Bradford and
Wyoming Counties, Pa., including any
sidings, sidetracks, yards, or facilities
presently owned by NSR that are
accessed via the line.
LRWY states that LRWY and NSR
have entered into an amended lease
agreement 1 (Amended Lease) which
served to renew the original lease
agreement (Original Lease) that the
parties had previously entered into on
1 LRWY filed a confidential, complete version of
the Amended Lease with its notice of exemption to
be kept confidential by the Board under 49 CFR
1104.14(a) without need for the filing of an
accompanying motion for protective order under 49
CFR 1104.14(b).
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[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 190 (Friday, September 30, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67416-67419]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-23692]
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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
[Docket No. FD 34797 (Sub-No. 1)]
New England Transrail, LLC, d/b/a Wilmington & Woburn Terminal
Railway--Construction, Acquisition and Operation Exemption--in
Wilmington and Woburn, Mass.
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement;
notice of availability of the draft scope of study for the
environmental impact statement; notice of scoping meeting; and request
for comments on draft scope.
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SUMMARY: On June 24, 2016, New England Transrail, LLC (NET) filed a
petition for exemption with the Surface Transportation Board (Board)
pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 10502 and 10901 in Docket No. FD 34797 (Sub-No.
1). NET intends to acquire, construct and operate various rail lines
and construct and operate transloading facilities, where goods and
materials are transferred from rail to truck, in the towns of
Wilmington and Woburn, Massachusetts. NET proposes to acquire 5,727
feet of existing track, to rehabilitate or construct a combined 10,838
feet of track, and to operate as a rail carrier over the total 16,565
feet of track on and adjacent to property currently owned by the Olin
Corporation at 51 Eames Street in Wilmington.\1\ NET anticipates moving
goods and materials (e.g. bricks, newspaper, steel, glycols, biofuels,
liquid natural gas, vegetable oils, wood chips, sand, and gravel) and
transloading them from rail cars directly onto trucks, into holding
tanks, or into a warehouse on site for temporary storage.
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\1\ Generally, Board authorization is not required for proposals
by existing carriers to acquire or construct rail facilities and
``excepted'' ancillary track (spur, industrial or side tracks used
to support line-haul services). 49 U.S.C. 10906; Nicholson v. ICC,
711 F.2d 364, 367-8 (D.C. Cir. 1983); but see Effingham R.R.--Pet.
for Declaratory Order--Constr. at Effingham, Ill., 2 S.T.B. 606,
609-10 (1997) (Board has licensing authority over proposal by new
carrier to construct and operate over Sec. 10906 track that would
constitute its entire operation).
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Because this project has the potential to result in significant
environmental impacts, the Board's Office of Environmental Analysis
(OEA) has determined that the preparation of an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) is appropriate pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).\2\ The
purpose of this Notice of Intent is to inform stakeholders--including
members of the public; Tribes; federal, state, and local agencies;
environmental groups; potential shippers and other parties--interested
in or potentially affected by the proposed project of the decision to
prepare an EIS. OEA will hold a public scoping meeting as part of the
NEPA process. Oral and written comments submitted during scoping will
assist OEA in issuing a Final Scope of Study that defines the range of
actions, alternatives, and impacts to be considered in the EIS. The
date and location for the public meeting, along with the Draft Scope of
Study for review and comment, are provided below.
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\2\ See New Eng. Transrail, LLC--Constr., Acquis., & Operation
Exemption--in Wilmington & Woburn, Mass., (2016 Decision) FD 34797,
slip op. at 5 (STB served May 17, 2016).
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Background
I. The Prior Proceedings. In December 2003, NET filed its original
petition for exemption for authority to acquire, construct and operate
track to use in conjunction with a reload facility at the Olin site in
Docket No. FD 34391. OEA \3\ conducted an environmental review and
issued an Environmental Assessment (EA) in August 2004 and a Post-EA in
December 2004. After issuance of the Post-EA, a number of parties
informed the Board that NET had modified its proposed project to
include, among other changes, the processing of municipal solid waste
(MSW) at the facility without notifying OEA and that therefore, the
environmental review was incomplete.
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\3\ OEA was formerly known as the Board's Section of
Environmental Analysis (SEA).
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In May 2005, the Board issued a decision dismissing the case
without prejudice to NET filing a new petition or application based on
its current project plans. The Board concluded that the project had
changed significantly from the proposal presented in the petition and
that NET had not informed OEA of the changes until after the
environmental review had been completed. Because the petition was
modified to the point that analysis already performed by the Board
became substantially deficient and required extensive revision, the
Board found that it was appropriate to terminate the proceeding.\4\
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\4\ See New Eng. Transrail, LLC--Constr., Acquis., & Operation
Exemption--in Wilmington & Woburn, Mass., FD 34391 (STB served May
3, 2005).
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In December 2005, NET filed its petition for exemption in a new
docket, Docket No. FD 34797, for acquisition, construction, and
operation authority. NET outlined its plans to rehabilitate the
existing track on the property and to construct new sections of track
to support a facility to handle construction and demolition debris
(C&D) and MSW. Following NET's filing, opposing parties argued that
some or all of NET's planned activities would not constitute ``rail
transportation,'' and in 2006, a coalition of parties asked the Board
to address the threshold issue of the extent of this agency's
jurisdiction over the proposed project. Additionally, in 2006, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) added the project site to the
National Priorities List (NPL) under the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
[[Page 67417]]
Act (CERCLA or Superfund). EPA suggested that, in order to fully
address the proposal's effect on potentially contaminated soil and
groundwater, the Board defer issuing even a preliminary analysis under
NEPA of the potential environmental impacts of NET's proposal until EPA
had completed the relevant portion of its Remedial Investigation and
Feasibility Study (RI/FS) of the site.
In July 2007, the Board issued a decision finding that NET would,
if authorized, become a rail carrier subject to the Board's
jurisdiction and thus would need authority to acquire, construct and
operate the track. The Board also addressed the extent to which the
handling of C&D and MSW would come within the scope of the Board's
jurisdiction, but the issue was not decided because the Board deferred
environmental review until EPA had completed the relevant portion of
its RI/FS Study at the site.\5\ In May 2016, the Board lifted the
deferral after EPA submitted a letter stating that the facts no longer
supported continuing to defer the Board's environmental review in the
case.\6\ The Board also directed NET to file an updated petition for
exemption in a new sub-docket detailing its current plans for the
site.\7\
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\5\ See New Eng. Transrail, LLC--Constr., Acquis., & Operation
Exemption--in Wilmington & Woburn, Mass., FD 34797 (STB served July
10, 2007).
\6\ See Letter from EPA (Nov. 6, 2015).
\7\ See 2016 Decision.
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II. The Instant Proceeding. On June 24, 2016, NET filed an updated
petition for exemption outlining its current proposal with the Board in
Docket No. FD 34797 (Sub-No. 1).\8\ As stated above, NET proposes to
acquire, construct and operate track and to construct and operate
transloading facilities on and adjacent to the Olin site. NET plans to
move goods and materials, including bricks, newspaper, steel, glycols,
biofuels, liquid natural gas, vegetable oils, wood chips, sand, and
gravel and transload them from rail cars directly onto trucks, into
holding tanks, or into a warehouse on site for temporary storage. This
Notice of Intent initiates the EIS process and scoping for this
proceeding.
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\8\ NET's current plans do not include operating a municipal
solid waste transfer station at the facility.
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Date and Location of Public Scoping Meeting: The public scoping
meeting will be held at the following location on the date listed:
October 25, 2016; 5:30-8:00 p.m. at Wilmington Middle School,
25 Carter Lane, Wilmington, MA 01887
The scoping meeting will be held in an open house format for the
first half hour followed by a brief presentation by OEA. After the
presentation, interested parties will be provided an opportunity for
public comment at an open microphone for the balance of the scoping
meeting. A court reporter will transcribe the public comments.
The meeting location complies with the Americans with Disabilities
Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq.). Persons that need special
accommodations should telephone OEA's toll-free number for this project
at 877-573-8930.
OEA invites written public comments on all aspects of the Draft
Scope of Study and is providing a 60-day public comment period which
begins on September 30, 2016. These written comments may be submitted
(1) during the scoping meetings, or (2) by mailing or submitting
comments electronically using the filing instructions below. Comments
should be submitted by November 29, 2016 to assure full consideration
during the scoping process. OEA will issue a Final Scope of Study after
the close of the scoping comment period
Summary of the Board's Environmental Review Process: The NEPA
process is intended to assist the Board and the public in identifying
and assessing the potential environmental consequences of a proposed
action before a decision on the proposed action is made. OEA is
responsible for ensuring that the Board complies with NEPA and related
environmental statutes. The first stage of the EIS process is scoping.
Scoping is an open process for determining the range of actions,
alternatives and the potential scope of environmental issues to be
addressed in the EIS. As part of the scoping process, OEA has
developed, and has made available for public comment in this notice, a
Draft Scope of Study for the EIS. A scoping meeting will be held in the
project area to provide further opportunities for public involvement
and input during the scoping process at the time and location set out
above. In addition to comments on the Draft Scope of Study, interested
parties are encouraged to comment on potential alternatives for the
proposed project, including the no-action alternative.
To assist OEA in identifying a range of reasonable and feasible
alternatives that could meet the purpose and need for the proposed
project, OEA requested detailed information from NET on the alternative
sites that were examined as part of project site selection in a letter
dated August 29, 2016. NET states in its response, dated September 7,
2016, that it examined alternative sites in Tewksbury, MA, and another
in North Billerica, MA. NET determined that the Tewksbury site would be
too small for the development of a multi-commodity freight facility.
NET also found the North Billerica site unsuitable because of its
location away from the center of the region and concerns regarding
highway accessibility. OEA invites the public to comment on any
potential, reasonable and feasible alternatives that could meet the
purpose and need for NET's proposed project.
At the conclusion of the scoping comment period, OEA will issue a
Final Scope of Study for the EIS. After issuing the Final Scope of
Study, OEA will prepare a Draft EIS for the project. The Draft EIS will
address the environmental issues and concerns identified during the
scoping process and assess all reasonable and feasible alternatives,
including the no-action alternative. The Draft EIS will also contain
OEA's preliminary recommendations for environmental mitigation
measures. Upon completion, the Draft EIS will be made available for
review and comment by the public, government agencies, and other
interested parties. OEA will prepare a Final EIS that considers and
responds to comments on the Draft EIS. In reaching its decision in this
case, the Board will consider the Draft EIS, the Final EIS, all
environmental comments received, and OEA's final recommendations
regarding environmental mitigation measures.
EPA is participating as a cooperating agency in this EIS based on
its special expertise of environmental matters at the site and
jurisdiction by law consistent with 40 CFR 1501.6. Throughout the
development of the EIS, OEA will coordinate with EPA as the CERCLA
process progresses for the project site. In addition, OEA will be
consulting with various federal, state and local agencies with specific
knowledge of the potential environmental impacts that may be associated
with the proposed project. OEA is also initiating government-to-
government consultation with potentially affected tribes, including but
not limited to: Narragansett Indian Tribe, Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, and
Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah).
Filing Environmental Comments: Scoping comments submitted by mail
should be addressed to: Danielle Gosselin, Office of Environmental
Analysis, Surface Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW., Washington,
DC 20423-0001, Attention: Docket No. FD 34797 (Sub-No. 1).
Comments may also be submitted electronically via email through the
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project email address, NewEnglandTransrailEIS@icf.com.
Please refer to Docket No. FD 34797 (Sub-No. 1) in all
correspondence, including emails regarding this project.
Scoping Comments are due by November 29, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Danielle Gosselin by mail at Office of
Environmental Analysis, Surface Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423-0001, or call OEA's toll-free number for the
project at 877-573-8930. Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-
800-877-8339. The Web site for the Board is www.stb.gov. For further
information about the proposed project, the Board's environmental
review process, or this EIS, you may also visit the Board-sponsored
project Web site at www.newenglandtransraileis.com. The project Web
site includes a map of the project area including NET's proposed
project.
Draft Scope of Study for the EIS
Purpose and Need
According to NET, the principal purpose of the proposed project is
to add rail transloading capacity close to the center of the Boston
metropolitan area. Further, NET states that the proposed facility would
allow for lower rail rates and improved service scheduling for
customers.
The proposed project involves a request by NET for a license or
approval from the Board. The proposed project is not a federal
government-proposed or sponsored project. Thus, the project's purpose
and need should be informed by both the applicant's goals and the
agency's enabling statute, here, 49 U.S.C. 10901. Section 10901
provides that the Board must approve a construction request unless it
finds that the construction is ``inconsistent with the public
convenience and necessity.'' Therefore, the statute creates a
presumption that rail construction is in the public interest and will
be approved.
Proposed Action and Alternatives
NET's proposed project involves the acquisition of 5,727 feet of
existing track, the rehabilitation and construction of a combined
10,838 feet of new track, and operation as a rail carrier over the
total 16,565 feet of track. Other major elements of the proposed
project would include demolishing existing buildings, constructing
transloading facilities and warehouses, and moving goods and materials
and transloading them from rail cars directly onto trucks, into holding
tanks, or into a warehouse on site for temporary storage.
NET estimates that it would operate two round trip trains per day
with approximately 30 rail cars. NET also estimates that approximately
400 round trip vehicle trips per day (365 truck trips per day and 35
employee vehicle trips) could be generated at the height of operations.
Train operations are expected to occur between 11:00 p.m. and 6:00
a.m., and truck deliveries are expected to occur outside weekday
morning and evening commuter peak hours.
The EIS will analyze and compare the potential impacts of (1)
acquisition, construction and operation for the proposed project, (2)
any reasonable and feasible alternatives that could allow NET to meet
its purpose and need, and (3) the no-action alternative (denial of the
application).
Environmental Impact Analysis
Proposed Acquisition, Construction and Operation
Analyses in the EIS will address the proposed activities associated
with the acquisition, construction and operation of the project and
their potential environmental impacts, as appropriate.
Impact Categories
The EIS will analyze potential direct, indirect, and cumulative
impacts \9\ of NET's proposed acquisition, construction and operation
activities, or in the case of the no-action alternative, the absence of
these activities.
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\9\ NEPA requires the Board to consider direct, indirect, and
cumulative impacts. Direct and indirect impacts are both caused by
the action. 40 CFR 1508.8(a)-(b). A cumulative impact is the
``incremental impact of the action when added to other past,
present, and reasonably foreseeable future actions regardless of
what agency (Federal or non-federal) or person undertakes such other
actions.'' 40 CFR 1508.7.
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Impact areas addressed will include an analysis of transportation
systems, safety, land use, recreation, biological resources, water
resources, including wetlands and other waters of the U.S., geology and
soils, air quality and climate, noise and vibration, energy resources,
socioeconomics as they relate to physical changes in the environment,
cultural and historic resources, aesthetics and environmental justice.
Other categories of potential impacts may also be included as a result
of comments received during the scoping process or on the Draft EIS.
The EIS will include a discussion of each of these categories as they
currently exist in the project area and will address the potential
direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts of each alternative being
studied in detail on each category, as described below:
1. Transportation Systems
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the potential impacts resulting from the proposed
project on the existing transportation network in the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts to transportation systems, as appropriate.
2. Safety
The EIS will:
a. Describe existing road/rail grade crossing safety and analyze
the potential for an increase in accidents related to the proposed
operation, as appropriate.
b. Describe existing rail operations and analyze the potential for
increased probability of train accidents, as appropriate.
c. Evaluate the potential for disruption and delays to the movement
of emergency vehicles.
d. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts to safety, as appropriate.
3. Land Use
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the potential impacts of each alternative on existing
land use patterns within the project area and identify those land uses
that would be potentially impacted by the proposed project.
b. Analyze the potential impacts associated with each alternative
to land uses identified within the project area.
c. Evaluate consistency with Coastal Zone Management Program, as
applicable.
d. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential impacts to land use, as appropriate.
4. Recreation
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate existing conditions and the potential impacts of the
proposed project on recreational areas and opportunities for
recreational activities provided in the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts on recreational areas and opportunities for
recreational activities, as appropriate.
5. Biological Resources
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the existing biological resources within the project
area, including vegetative communities, wildlife, fisheries, wetlands,
and federal
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and state threatened or endangered species, and the potential impacts
to these resources resulting from the proposed project.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize, eliminate, or
compensate for potential impacts to biological resources, as
appropriate.
6. Water Resources
The EIS will:
a. Describe the existing surface water and groundwater resources
within the project area, including lakes, rivers, streams, ponds,
wetlands, and floodplains and analyze the potential impacts on these
resources.
b. Describe the permitting requirements with regard to wetlands,
river crossings, water quality, floodplains, and erosion control.
c. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize, eliminate, or
compensate for potential project impacts to water resources, as
appropriate.
d. Describe EPA's CERCLA process as it relates to on and off-site
water resources.
7. Geology and Soils
The EIS will:
a. Describe the geology, soils, and seismic conditions found within
the project area, including unique or problematic geologic formations
or soils, prime farmland, and hydric soils, and analyze the potential
impacts on these resources resulting from each alternative.
b. Evaluate any potential measures to avoid or construct through
unique or problematic geologic formations or soils.
c. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts to geology and soils, as appropriate.
d. Describe EPA's CERCLA process as it relates to geology and
soils.
8. Air Quality and Climate
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the air emissions from the potential operation of the
proposed project including potential greenhouse gas emissions, as
appropriate.
b. Evaluate the potential air quality impacts resulting from the
proposed project construction activities.
c. Evaluate the potential impacts of the proposed project on global
climate change and the potential impacts of global climate change on
the proposed project.
d. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts, as appropriate.
9. Noise and Vibration
The EIS will:
a. Describe the potential noise and vibration impacts during the
proposed project construction.
b. Describe the potential noise and vibration impacts of the
proposed project operation.
c. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts to sensitive noise receptors, as appropriate.
10. Energy Resources
The EIS will:
a. Describe and evaluate the potential impact of the proposed
project on the distribution of energy resources in the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts to energy resources, as appropriate.
11. Socioeconomics
The EIS will:
a. Analyze the effects of the potential temporary influx of
construction workers and creation of permanent rail facilities jobs to
the project area.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project-related adverse impacts to social and economic
resources, as appropriate.
12. Cultural and Historic Resources
The EIS will:
a. Identify historic buildings, structures, sites, objects, or
districts eligible for listing on or listed on the National Register of
Historic Places (historic properties) within the area of potential
effects for each alternative. The cultural resources identified will be
categorized into three major groups: Tribal resources, archaeological
resources, and built resources.
b. Consult with federally recognized Native American tribes to
identify properties with religious and cultural significance to the
tribes within the area of potential effects for each alternative
(tribal resources), and analyze potential project impacts to them.
c. Identify prehistoric-era and historic-era archaeological
resources by using professionals who meet the Secretary of the Interior
Professional Qualifications Standards (SOIPQS) in the discipline of
archaeology, and analyze potential project impacts to them.
d. Identify built resources by using professionals who meet the
SOIPQS in the disciplines of history or architectural history, and
analyze potential project impacts to them.
e. Propose measures to avoid, minimize, or mitigate potentially
adverse project impacts to tribal resources, built resources, and
archaeological resources that are historic properties, as appropriate.
13. Aesthetics
The EIS will:
a. Describe the potential impacts of the proposed project on any
areas identified or determined to be of high visual quality.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts on aesthetics, as appropriate.
14. Environmental Justice
The EIS will:
a. Evaluate the potential impacts resulting from the proposed
project on local and regional minority and low-income populations.
b. Propose mitigation measures to avoid, minimize or eliminate
potential project impacts on environmental justice populations, as
appropriate.
Decided: September 27, 2016.
By the Board, Victoria Rutson, Director, Office of Environmental
Analysis
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2016-23692 Filed 9-29-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P