Notice of Intent To Prepare Environmental Impact Statement, I-495 & I-270 Managed Lanes Study, Montgomery and Prince George's Counties, Maryland and Fairfax County, Virginia, 11812-11813 [2018-05354]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 52 / Friday, March 16, 2018 / Notices
telephone at (202) 833–9339, fax at (202)
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to section 10(a) (2) of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–
463, 5 U.S.C., App.), notice is hereby
given for a meeting of the Thirty Ninth
RTCA SC–216 Aeronautical Systems
Security Plenary.
The agenda will include the
following:
1. Welcome and Administrative
Remarks
2. Introductions
3. Agenda Review
4. Meeting-Minutes Review
5. Review Joint Action List
6. Review/Resolution of DO–356A/ED–
203A Final Review and
Comment(Frac)/Open Consultation
Comments
7. Decision to Approve Release of DO–
356A/Ed–203A for Presentation to
Program Management Committee/
Council for Publication
8. Schedule Update
9. Potential Future Joint Activities
10. Date, Place and Time of Next
Meeting
11. New Business
12. Adjourn Plenary
Attendance is open to the interested
public but limited to space availability.
With the approval of the chairman,
members of the public may present oral
statements at the meeting. Persons
wishing to present statements or obtain
information should contact the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section. Members of the public
may present a written statement to the
committee at any time.
Issued in Washington, DC on March 13,
2018.
Michelle Swearingen,
Systems and Equipment Standards Branch,
AIR–6B0, Policy and Innovation Division,
AIR–600, Federal Aviation Administration.
[FR Doc. 2018–05344 Filed 3–15–18; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Highway Administration
Notice of Intent To Prepare
Environmental Impact Statement, I–495
& I–270 Managed Lanes Study,
Montgomery and Prince George’s
Counties, Maryland and Fairfax
County, Virginia
Maryland Department of
Transportation State Highway
Administration (MDOT SHA), Federal
Highway Administration (FHWA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
AGENCY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:54 Mar 15, 2018
Jkt 244001
Notice of intent to prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
ACTION:
The FHWA, as the Lead
Federal Agency, and MDOT SHA, as the
Local Project Sponsor, are issuing this
notice to advise the public of our
intention to prepare an EIS for the I–495
& I–270 Managed Lanes Study (Study).
The Study is the first element of a
broader Traffic Relief Plan as
announced by Governor Larry Hogan in
September 2017, which considers
improvements along the entire length of
I–495 (Capital Beltway), as well as the
entire length of I–270 (Dwight D.
Eisenhower Memorial Highway) up to I–
70 in Frederick County, Maryland. This
EIS will evaluate the potential
environmental impacts of alternatives
that address congestion within the
specific Study scope of I–495 from
south of the American Legion Bridge in
Fairfax County, Virginia to east of the
Woodrow Wilson Bridge and on I–270
from I–495 to I–370, including the east
and west I–270 spurs in Montgomery
and Prince George’s Counties,
Maryland. The EIS will be prepared in
accordance with regulations
implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and
provisions of the Fixing America’s
Surface Transportation (FAST) Act and
will include a range of reasonable
alternatives, including a ‘‘No Build’’
alternative.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeanette Mar, Environmental Program
Manager, Federal Highway
Administration, Maryland Division,
George H. Fallon Federal Building 31
Hopkins Plaza, Suite 1520, Baltimore
MD 21201, (410) 779–7152, or email at
jeanette.mar@dot.gov. Lisa B. Choplin,
Project Director, I–495 & I–270 P3
Project Office, Maryland Department of
Transportation State Highway
Administration, 707 North Calvert
Street, Baltimore, MD 21202, (833) 858–
5960, or email at 495-270-P3@
sha.state.md.us.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
purpose of this notice is to: (1) Alert
interested parties to the FHWA and
MDOT SHA plan to prepare the EIS; (2)
provide information on the nature of the
proposed action; (3) solicit public and
agency input regarding the scope of the
EIS, including the purpose and need,
alternatives to be considered, and
impacts to be evaluated; and (4)
announce that public and agency
scoping meetings will be conducted.
The Study limits extend to areas in
Montgomery and Prince George’s
counties, Maryland along I–495 (Capital
Beltway) from south of the American
SUMMARY:
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Frm 00144
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Legion Bridge in Fairfax County,
Virginia, to east of the Woodrow Wilson
Bridge and on I–270 (Dwight D.
Eisenhower Memorial Highway) from I–
495 to I–370 including the east and west
I–270 spurs.
At the present time, high travel
demand from commuter, business, and
recreational trips results in severe
congestion nearly 10 hours a day in the
Study corridors. Travelers place a high
value on reaching their destinations in
a timely manner, and in recent years,
the Study corridors have become so
unreliable that uncertain travel times
are experienced daily. Managed lanes
are needed to provide more dependable
travel times and congestion relief.
Motorists on I–495 and I–270 do not
have an option for efficient travel during
extensive periods of congestion.
Additional roadway management
options are needed to improve travel
choices.
Additional capacity and
improvements to enhance reliability
must be financially viable. MDOT’s
traditional funding sources would be
unable to effectively finance, construct,
operate, and maintain highway systems
of this magnitude. A revenue source that
provides necessary funding, such as
tolling options, is needed to provide
additional capacity and improvements
addressing existing and anticipated high
travel demand. A Public-Private
Partnership (P3) with the state will be
pursued to develop innovative
approaches to design, build, finance,
operate, and maintain the potential
improvements developed through the
NEPA Study.
The intent of the proposed action to
be assessed in the Study is to
accommodate existing traffic and longterm traffic growth, enhance trip
reliability, and provide an additional
roadway travel choice. Additional
roadway options would also
accommodate homeland security needs
and improve the movement of goods
and services throughout the Study
corridor. The EIS will include a review
of existing and future traffic, existing
roadway infrastructure, and existing
environmental conditions to establish
context for the identification of
alternatives and assessment of potential
impacts. The analyses undertaken
during the EIS will result in
identification of the alternative that best
meets the Study purpose and need
while considering the environmental
impacts of that alternative. The
alternatives evaluated in the EIS will
include build alternatives which
provide additional capacity and offer
travel choices for travelers on I–495 and
I–270. The ‘‘No Build’’ alternative will
E:\FR\FM\16MRN1.SGM
16MRN1
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 52 / Friday, March 16, 2018 / Notices
be carried forward for baseline
comparison purposes throughout the
EIS development process.
The EIS will be prepared by MDOT
SHA for FHWA to fulfill the
requirements established in NEPA
pursuant to current FHWA regulations
and guidance. MDOT SHA intends to
recommend a preferred alternative in
the Draft EIS. The FHWA may issue a
single Final EIS and Record of Decision
(Final EIS/ROD), unless FHWA
determines statutory criteria or
consideration precluding issuance of a
combined decision document.
Previous analyses which evaluated
managed lanes in the Study corridors
will be considered and incorporated by
reference, as appropriate. The Study
will consider relevant resource
identification and field investigations
from previous studies. To the extent
consistent with FHWA NEPA
regulations, conclusions reached as part
of previous planning studies could
inform the initial range of alternatives
and focus the alternatives evaluation.
Since 1990, several studies have
examined various sections of I–495 and
I–270 within the current Study limits in
an effort to evaluate potential
congestion relief and operational
improvements. Among other issues,
these studies considered the potential to
provide additional capacity along I–495
and I–270 that could connect with
adjacent transportation facilities.
Recommendations resulting from each
of these studies included the
implementation of managed lanes
(including Express Toll Lanes [ETL],
High-Occupancy vehicle [HOV] lanes,
and High-Occupancy Toll [HOT] lanes)
on I–495 and radial facilities, (i.e., I–270
and I–95). Studies have included: the
Statewide Commuter Assistance Study
Corridor Profile Reports (MDOT, 1990);
the Capital Beltway HOV Feasibility
Study (MDOT, 1992); The Potential for
Circumferential Transit in the
Washington Region (MWCOG, August
1993); the I–270/US 15 Multi-Modal
Corridor Study (MDOT, 2002); the
Capital Beltway Study EIS (VDOT,
2006); Maryland’s Statewide Express
Toll Lanes Network Initiative (MDOT,
2007); the West Side Mobility Study
(MDOT and VDOT, 2009); and the
Purple Line Study and the Capital
Beltway Study (MDOT et al., 2013).
The Maryland’s Statewide Express
Toll Lanes Network Initiative (MDOT,
2007) built on the studies listed above
and provided an overview of the state’s
vision for a Statewide Express Toll
Lanes Network on the State’s busiest
highway segments in the BaltimoreWashington Region, including I–495
and I–270. The major benefit of the
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21:54 Mar 15, 2018
Jkt 244001
Express Toll Lanes cited in the study
was the ability to provide needed
highway lane capacity to ease the
impact of congestion by providing
transportation improvements sooner
than traditional approaches could
otherwise achieve. As a result,
Metropolitan Washington Council of
Governments (MWCOG) recognized this
statewide approach to Express Toll
Lanes as regionally significant and
Express Toll Lanes on I–495 and I–270,
as well as other corridors in the
Baltimore Washington Region, became
part of the Constrained Long-Range
Plan.
In July 2017, the National Capital
Region Transportation Planning Board
at the MWCOG approved a set of ten
regional initiatives for further study,
which includes analyzing managed
lanes on the portions of I–495 and I–270
that are included in the I–495 and I–270
Managed Lanes Study. In September
2017, Maryland Governor Hogan
announced the intent to develop
additional capacity along sections of I–
270, I–495, and the BaltimoreWashington Parkway (MD 295). For I–
495 and I–270, the Governor has
proposed a P3 to design, build, finance,
operate, and maintain this project to
accelerate the delivery of improvements
for congestion relief.
Scoping Process
FHWA and MDOT SHA will
undertake a scoping process for the I–
495 & I–270 Managed Lanes Study that
will solicit input from the public and
interested agencies on the issues that
will be evaluated in EIS. This public
outreach effort will educate and engage
stakeholders regarding the nature and
extent of the proposed action. FHWA
and MDOT SHA will invite all
interested individuals, organizations,
and public agencies to comment on the
scope of the EIS, including the purpose
and need, potential alternatives to be
studied, environmental impacts to be
considered, evaluation methods to be
used, and potential mitigation measures.
More information on public outreach
activities, including future public
workshops, will be available in a project
coordination plan on the Study website.
All public meetings related to the Study
will be held in locations accessible to
persons with disabilities. Any person
who requires special assistance, such as
a language interpreter, should contact
the I–495 & I–270 P3 Office at (833)
858–5960 via email at 495-270-P3@
sha.state.md.us at least 48 hours before
the workshop.
Letters inviting agencies to be
cooperating or participating in the
environmental review process are being
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11813
sent to those agencies that have
jurisdiction or may have an interest in
the EIS. Additionally, FHWA and
MDOT SHA will notify cooperating and
participating agencies of a separate
agency scoping meeting.
DATES: Four initial public workshop
presentations will be held in April 2018
to solicit public input regarding the
scope of issues that will be included in
the EIS. Written comments on the scope
of the EIS should be provided to MDOT
SHA by May 1, 2018, using the email
address or physical mailing address
listed below. Comments may also be
provided in writing at the public
workshops.
ADDRESSES: The public and other
interested parties are encouraged to
comment on-line at the Study’s website
(www.495-270-P3.com), via email at
495-270-P3@sha.state.md.us, or by hard
copy during the public workshops. Hard
copy comments can also be mailed to
the I–495 & I–270 Project Office at 707
North Calvert Street, Baltimore MD
21202.
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 315; 49 CFR 1.48; 23
CFR 771.111 and 771.123.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Number 20.205, Highway Research,
Planning and Construction. The regulations
implementing Executive Order 12372
regarding intergovernmental consultation on
Federal programs and activities apply to this
program.)
Issued on: March 8, 2018.
Gregory Murrill,
Division Administrator, Federal Highway
Administration, Baltimore, Maryland.
[FR Doc. 2018–05354 Filed 3–15–18; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
[Docket No. FHWA–2018–0015]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Request for Comments for a
New Information Collection
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The FHWA has forwarded the
information collection request described
in this notice to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
approval of a new information
collection. We published a Federal
Register Notice with a 60-day public
comment period on this information
collection on June 19, 2017. We are
required to publish this notice in the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\16MRN1.SGM
16MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 52 (Friday, March 16, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11812-11813]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-05354]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Notice of Intent To Prepare Environmental Impact Statement, I-495
& I-270 Managed Lanes Study, Montgomery and Prince George's Counties,
Maryland and Fairfax County, Virginia
AGENCY: Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway
Administration (MDOT SHA), Federal Highway Administration (FHWA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FHWA, as the Lead Federal Agency, and MDOT SHA, as the
Local Project Sponsor, are issuing this notice to advise the public of
our intention to prepare an EIS for the I-495 & I-270 Managed Lanes
Study (Study). The Study is the first element of a broader Traffic
Relief Plan as announced by Governor Larry Hogan in September 2017,
which considers improvements along the entire length of I-495 (Capital
Beltway), as well as the entire length of I-270 (Dwight D. Eisenhower
Memorial Highway) up to I-70 in Frederick County, Maryland. This EIS
will evaluate the potential environmental impacts of alternatives that
address congestion within the specific Study scope of I-495 from south
of the American Legion Bridge in Fairfax County, Virginia to east of
the Woodrow Wilson Bridge and on I-270 from I-495 to I-370, including
the east and west I-270 spurs in Montgomery and Prince George's
Counties, Maryland. The EIS will be prepared in accordance with
regulations implementing the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
and provisions of the Fixing America's Surface Transportation (FAST)
Act and will include a range of reasonable alternatives, including a
``No Build'' alternative.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeanette Mar, Environmental Program
Manager, Federal Highway Administration, Maryland Division, George H.
Fallon Federal Building 31 Hopkins Plaza, Suite 1520, Baltimore MD
21201, (410) 779-7152, or email at [email protected]. Lisa B.
Choplin, Project Director, I-495 & I-270 P3 Project Office, Maryland
Department of Transportation State Highway Administration, 707 North
Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202, (833) 858-5960, or email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The purpose of this notice is to: (1) Alert
interested parties to the FHWA and MDOT SHA plan to prepare the EIS;
(2) provide information on the nature of the proposed action; (3)
solicit public and agency input regarding the scope of the EIS,
including the purpose and need, alternatives to be considered, and
impacts to be evaluated; and (4) announce that public and agency
scoping meetings will be conducted.
The Study limits extend to areas in Montgomery and Prince George's
counties, Maryland along I-495 (Capital Beltway) from south of the
American Legion Bridge in Fairfax County, Virginia, to east of the
Woodrow Wilson Bridge and on I-270 (Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial
Highway) from I-495 to I-370 including the east and west I-270 spurs.
At the present time, high travel demand from commuter, business,
and recreational trips results in severe congestion nearly 10 hours a
day in the Study corridors. Travelers place a high value on reaching
their destinations in a timely manner, and in recent years, the Study
corridors have become so unreliable that uncertain travel times are
experienced daily. Managed lanes are needed to provide more dependable
travel times and congestion relief. Motorists on I-495 and I-270 do not
have an option for efficient travel during extensive periods of
congestion. Additional roadway management options are needed to improve
travel choices.
Additional capacity and improvements to enhance reliability must be
financially viable. MDOT's traditional funding sources would be unable
to effectively finance, construct, operate, and maintain highway
systems of this magnitude. A revenue source that provides necessary
funding, such as tolling options, is needed to provide additional
capacity and improvements addressing existing and anticipated high
travel demand. A Public-Private Partnership (P3) with the state will be
pursued to develop innovative approaches to design, build, finance,
operate, and maintain the potential improvements developed through the
NEPA Study.
The intent of the proposed action to be assessed in the Study is to
accommodate existing traffic and long-term traffic growth, enhance trip
reliability, and provide an additional roadway travel choice.
Additional roadway options would also accommodate homeland security
needs and improve the movement of goods and services throughout the
Study corridor. The EIS will include a review of existing and future
traffic, existing roadway infrastructure, and existing environmental
conditions to establish context for the identification of alternatives
and assessment of potential impacts. The analyses undertaken during the
EIS will result in identification of the alternative that best meets
the Study purpose and need while considering the environmental impacts
of that alternative. The alternatives evaluated in the EIS will include
build alternatives which provide additional capacity and offer travel
choices for travelers on I-495 and I-270. The ``No Build'' alternative
will
[[Page 11813]]
be carried forward for baseline comparison purposes throughout the EIS
development process.
The EIS will be prepared by MDOT SHA for FHWA to fulfill the
requirements established in NEPA pursuant to current FHWA regulations
and guidance. MDOT SHA intends to recommend a preferred alternative in
the Draft EIS. The FHWA may issue a single Final EIS and Record of
Decision (Final EIS/ROD), unless FHWA determines statutory criteria or
consideration precluding issuance of a combined decision document.
Previous analyses which evaluated managed lanes in the Study
corridors will be considered and incorporated by reference, as
appropriate. The Study will consider relevant resource identification
and field investigations from previous studies. To the extent
consistent with FHWA NEPA regulations, conclusions reached as part of
previous planning studies could inform the initial range of
alternatives and focus the alternatives evaluation. Since 1990, several
studies have examined various sections of I-495 and I-270 within the
current Study limits in an effort to evaluate potential congestion
relief and operational improvements. Among other issues, these studies
considered the potential to provide additional capacity along I-495 and
I-270 that could connect with adjacent transportation facilities.
Recommendations resulting from each of these studies included the
implementation of managed lanes (including Express Toll Lanes [ETL],
High-Occupancy vehicle [HOV] lanes, and High-Occupancy Toll [HOT]
lanes) on I-495 and radial facilities, (i.e., I-270 and I-95). Studies
have included: the Statewide Commuter Assistance Study Corridor Profile
Reports (MDOT, 1990); the Capital Beltway HOV Feasibility Study (MDOT,
1992); The Potential for Circumferential Transit in the Washington
Region (MWCOG, August 1993); the I-270/US 15 Multi-Modal Corridor Study
(MDOT, 2002); the Capital Beltway Study EIS (VDOT, 2006); Maryland's
Statewide Express Toll Lanes Network Initiative (MDOT, 2007); the West
Side Mobility Study (MDOT and VDOT, 2009); and the Purple Line Study
and the Capital Beltway Study (MDOT et al., 2013).
The Maryland's Statewide Express Toll Lanes Network Initiative
(MDOT, 2007) built on the studies listed above and provided an overview
of the state's vision for a Statewide Express Toll Lanes Network on the
State's busiest highway segments in the Baltimore-Washington Region,
including I-495 and I-270. The major benefit of the Express Toll Lanes
cited in the study was the ability to provide needed highway lane
capacity to ease the impact of congestion by providing transportation
improvements sooner than traditional approaches could otherwise
achieve. As a result, Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments
(MWCOG) recognized this statewide approach to Express Toll Lanes as
regionally significant and Express Toll Lanes on I-495 and I-270, as
well as other corridors in the Baltimore Washington Region, became part
of the Constrained Long-Range Plan.
In July 2017, the National Capital Region Transportation Planning
Board at the MWCOG approved a set of ten regional initiatives for
further study, which includes analyzing managed lanes on the portions
of I-495 and I-270 that are included in the I-495 and I-270 Managed
Lanes Study. In September 2017, Maryland Governor Hogan announced the
intent to develop additional capacity along sections of I-270, I-495,
and the Baltimore-Washington Parkway (MD 295). For I-495 and I-270, the
Governor has proposed a P3 to design, build, finance, operate, and
maintain this project to accelerate the delivery of improvements for
congestion relief.
Scoping Process
FHWA and MDOT SHA will undertake a scoping process for the I-495 &
I-270 Managed Lanes Study that will solicit input from the public and
interested agencies on the issues that will be evaluated in EIS. This
public outreach effort will educate and engage stakeholders regarding
the nature and extent of the proposed action. FHWA and MDOT SHA will
invite all interested individuals, organizations, and public agencies
to comment on the scope of the EIS, including the purpose and need,
potential alternatives to be studied, environmental impacts to be
considered, evaluation methods to be used, and potential mitigation
measures.
More information on public outreach activities, including future
public workshops, will be available in a project coordination plan on
the Study website. All public meetings related to the Study will be
held in locations accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person
who requires special assistance, such as a language interpreter, should
contact the I-495 & I-270 P3 Office at (833) 858-5960 via email at [email protected] at least 48 hours before the workshop.
Letters inviting agencies to be cooperating or participating in the
environmental review process are being sent to those agencies that have
jurisdiction or may have an interest in the EIS. Additionally, FHWA and
MDOT SHA will notify cooperating and participating agencies of a
separate agency scoping meeting.
DATES: Four initial public workshop presentations will be held in April
2018 to solicit public input regarding the scope of issues that will be
included in the EIS. Written comments on the scope of the EIS should be
provided to MDOT SHA by May 1, 2018, using the email address or
physical mailing address listed below. Comments may also be provided in
writing at the public workshops.
ADDRESSES: The public and other interested parties are encouraged to
comment on-line at the Study's website (www.495-270-P3.com), via email
at [email protected], or by hard copy during the public
workshops. Hard copy comments can also be mailed to the I-495 & I-270
Project Office at 707 North Calvert Street, Baltimore MD 21202.
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 315; 49 CFR 1.48; 23 CFR 771.111 and
771.123.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program Number 20.205,
Highway Research, Planning and Construction. The regulations
implementing Executive Order 12372 regarding intergovernmental
consultation on Federal programs and activities apply to this
program.)
Issued on: March 8, 2018.
Gregory Murrill,
Division Administrator, Federal Highway Administration, Baltimore,
Maryland.
[FR Doc. 2018-05354 Filed 3-15-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-22-P