Early Scoping Notice for Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) Proposed LYNX Silver Line Project in the Charlotte Metropolitan Area, North Carolina, 53903-53904 [2020-19069]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 169 / Monday, August 31, 2020 / Notices
appropriate. The request should also
state what expertise you would bring to
the NPOAG as related to issues and
concerns with aircraft flights over tribal
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service for NPOAG members is 3 years.
On August 13, 2014, the Office of
Management and Budget issued revised
guidance regarding the prohibition
against appointing or not reappointing
federally registered lobbyists to serve on
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Therefore, before appointing an
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they are not a federally registered
lobbyist.
Issued in El Segundo, CA, on August 26,
2020.
Keith Lusk,
Program Manager, Special Programs Staff,
Western-Pacific Region.
[FR Doc. 2020–19064 Filed 8–28–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Early Scoping Notice for Charlotte
Area Transit System (CATS) Proposed
LYNX Silver Line Project in the
Charlotte Metropolitan Area, North
Carolina
Federal Transit Administration,
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Early scoping notice.
AGENCY:
The Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) and the Charlotte
Area Transit System (CATS) issue this
early scoping notice to advise other
agencies and the public that they intend
to explore, through the early scoping
process of the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ), proposed
light rail transit in the West and
Southeast Corridors, now known as the
proposed LYNX Silver Line Project
(SLP).
SUMMARY:
Written comments on the scope
of the ongoing planning analysis,
including previous studies developed
by local planning and transportation
agencies, purpose and need, alternatives
to be considered, potential impacts to be
assessed, and public outreach methods
should be sent to CATS by October 14,
2020. See ADDRESSES below for the
address to which written public
comments may be sent. Instructions for
participating in online and live virtual
early scoping meetings are available at
https://RideTransit.org/LYNXSilverLine,
along with early scoping materials.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:30 Aug 28, 2020
Jkt 250001
CATS will conduct live virtual public
meetings on the following dates:
Tuesday, September 15, 2020 at 5:30
p.m.; Focus Area 1: Wilkinson
Boulevard (City of Belmont to I–485)
Wednesday, September 16, 2020 at 5:30
p.m.; Focus Area 2: Wilkinson
Boulevard (I–485 to West Morehead
Street)
Thursday, September 17, 2020 at 5:30
p.m.; Focus Area 3: Center City (West
Morehead Street to Charlottetowne
Avenue)
Tuesday, September 22, 2020 at 5:30
p.m.; Focus Area 4: Independence
Boulevard (Charlottetowne Avenue to
Idlewild Road)
Thursday, September 24, 2020 at 5:30
p.m.; Focus Area 5: Independence
Boulevard (Idlewild Road to just
south of I–485 at CPCC Levine)
Tuesday, September 29, 2020 at 5:30
p.m.; Focus Area 6: Union County
Extension
Individuals who require special
assistance to participate in early scoping
should contact Ms. Ajonelle Poole,
CATS Public and Community Relations
Specialist, at 704–336–RIDE or
LYNXSilverLine@publicinput.com at
least seven days prior to the meetings.
Ms. Poole can also be contacted for hard
copies of the early scoping materials.
An interagency early scoping meeting
will be conducted virtually on Monday,
September 14, 2020 from 9:30 a.m. to
11:30 a.m. Representatives of Native
American tribal governments and of
Federal, State and local agencies that
may have an interest in the project will
be invited by phone, letter, or email.
In addition to the early scoping
meetings described herein, CATS and
FTA will conduct the scoping activities
required by the subsequent NEPA
process to identify the nature and scope
of environmental issues to be addressed
in the NEPA document. If the proposed
action resulting from the planning
analysis would have significant impacts
requiring an environmental impact
statement (EIS), FTA will publish a
Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare an EIS
in the Federal Register, and that NOI
will announce the dates and locations
for EIS scoping meetings.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be sent to Ms. Ajonelle Poole, CATS
Public and Community Relations
Specialist, 600 E. Fourth Street,
Charlotte, NC 28202, phone: 704–336–
RIDE, email: LYNXSilverLine@
publicinput.com. The details of early
scoping meetings are given above under
DATES.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Julia Walker, Environmental Protection
Specialist, Region 4, Federal Transit
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
53903
Administration, 230 Peachtree Street
NW, Suite 1400, Atlanta, GA 30303,
phone: 404–865–5600, email:
julia.walker@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The early
scoping process will be part of the
ongoing planning analysis required by
Title 49, United States Code (U.S.C.)
Sec. 5309. Early scoping meetings have
been planned and are announced below.
The planning analysis completed to date
has resulted in a locally preferred,
planning-level light rail transit
alternative which was adopted by the
Metropolitan Transit Commission
(MTC) and the metropolitan planning
organizations (MPOs) for the Charlotte
region. CATS recently initiated further
study to refine the locally preferred
alternative, which will then be the
‘‘proposed action’’ subject to
environmental review under the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) and other environmental laws
and regulations.
The SLP Corridor is approximately 26
miles in length. From the City of
Belmont, it traverses through Center
City Charlotte, and the Town of
Matthews, with a potential two-mile
extension into Union County. The
transit improvements passing through
these communities would serve
residential neighborhoods and
employment centers, key destinations
like Charlotte Douglas International
Airport, future Charlotte Gateway
Station (with intercity rail and bus
connections), Bank of America Stadium,
BB&T Ballpark, Ovens Auditorium,
Bojangles Coliseum, Novant Health
Presbyterian and Matthews Medical
Center, and Central Piedmont
Community College, and will connect to
the existing CATS LYNX Blue Line
Light Rail and the CATS CityLYNX
Gold Line Streetcar.
At the conclusion of the planning
analysis, the MTC will adopt a refined
locally preferred planning-level
alternative, which will then be the
‘‘proposed action’’ subject to an
appropriate environmental review
under NEPA. If the proposed action
would have significant impacts, FTA
and CATS would initiate an EIS by
conducting a scoping process to
determine the appropriate scope of the
EIS. In particular, the purpose and need
for the project, the range of alternatives
to be considered in the EIS, the
environmental and community impacts
to be evaluated, and the evaluation
methodologies to be used would be
subject to public and interagency review
and comment, in accordance with 40
CFR parts 1500–1508 and 23 CFR part
771.
E:\FR\FM\31AUN1.SGM
31AUN1
53904
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 169 / Monday, August 31, 2020 / Notices
Previous Studies
Rapid transit has been discussed in
Charlotte for decades, and in 1998, the
City of Charlotte prepared the 2025
Integrated Transit/Land Use Plan. This
was the original transit and land use
plan that proposed using rapid transit to
support focusing future growth in
Charlotte’s key centers and corridors.
The West Corridor (along Wilkinson
Boulevard) and the Southeast Corridor
(along Independence Boulevard) were
two of the identified corridors. Since
1998, there have been various planning
efforts, and the plan has since been
updated to the 2030 Transit System
Plan.
In 2016, CATS completed the
Southeast Corridor Transit Study, which
considered various transit technologies
and alignments. The MTC approved the
recommendation of a light rail locally
preferred alternative for the 13-mile
Southeast Corridor from Center City
Charlotte to the Mecklenburg and Union
County border. The locally preferred
alternative resulted from a detailed
technical evaluation and outreach effort
to the public and stakeholders.
More recently, CATS studied various
technology and alignment alternatives
for the West Corridor and Center City as
part of the LYNX System Update, and in
February 2019, the MTC adopted a light
rail locally preferred alternative for the
West Corridor, and combined the West
and Southeast Corridor locally preferred
alternatives as one continuous 26-mile
light rail corridor from Belmont to
Matthews known as the LYNX Silver
Line. An extension into Union County
will also be evaluated, as directed by the
MTC.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Purpose and Need for Action
Previous planning analysis and
discussions with stakeholders have
helped to identify key transportation
needs in the West and Southeast
Corridors. These needs will be refined
and detailed during planning and
through environmental review, as
analysis continues, and input is
received from the public, stakeholders,
and regulatory agencies. Initially, the
key transportation concerns are
continued population and employment
growth in the Charlotte region, a
congested roadway network with
increased travel times, reduced
reliability of the transportation system,
and local goals to address equity
concerns such as limited transportation
options for transit-dependent
populations, and inadequate
connectivity between and access to
transit, affordable housing, employment,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
22:08 Aug 28, 2020
Jkt 250001
and community services by
environmental justice populations.
The preliminary purpose of the SLP is
to provide high-capacity transit service
in dedicated right-of-way along the US
74 (Wilkinson Boulevard), Cedar Street/
Graham Street, 11th Street, US 74
(Independence Boulevard), and Monroe
Road transportation corridors that:
• Provides a competitive and reliable
alternative to automobiles;
• Improves local connectivity
between and access to transit, housing,
employment, and community services
in the corridor;
• Promotes opportunities for
development consistent with local
vision, goals, plans, and policies;
• Provides a transit system that is
financially sustainable to build, operate,
and maintain; and,
• Preserves and protects the natural
and built environment.
Alternatives
FTA and CATS are considering
refinements to the light rail locally
preferred alternative which came out of
the Southeast Corridor Transit Study
and the LYNX System Update,
including shifts in alignment to address
new opportunities and risks, and
terminus options including an
approximate two-mile extension into
Union County.
In addition to what is described
above, other reasonable alternatives
identified through the early scoping
process will be considered for potential
inclusion in the planning analysis.
FTA Procedures
Early scoping is an optional element
of the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) process that is particularly
useful in situations where, as here,
alignment variations are under
consideration in a broadly-defined
study area. While NEPA scoping
normally begins with issuance of a
Notice of Intent which describes the
proposed action, it ‘‘may be initiated
earlier, as long as there is appropriate
public notice and enough information
available on the proposal so that the
public and relevant agencies can
participate effectively.’’ See the Council
on Environmental Quality’s ‘‘Forty Most
Asked Questions Concerning CEQ’s
National Environmental Policy Act
Regulations,’’ 46 FR 18026, 18030
(1981). In this case, the available
information is more than adequate to
permit the public and relevant agencies
to participate effectively in early
scoping and the planning analysis. Early
scoping can also serve to link
transportation planning and NEPA.
CATS intends to formalize the Federal
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Planning and Environmental Linkages
(PEL) process with the initiation of early
scoping, so that the results of planning
studies may be considered during the
formal NEPA environmental review
process.
CATS may seek New Starts funding
for the proposed project under 49 U.S.C.
Sec. 5309 and will, therefore, be subject
to New Starts regulation (49 CFR part
611). The New Starts regulation requires
a planning analysis that leads to the
selection of a locally preferred
alternative by CATS and the inclusion
of the locally preferred alternative in the
long-range transportation plan adopted
by MPOs. The planning analysis will
examine alignments, station locations,
costs, funding, ridership, economic
development, land use, engineering
feasibility, and environmental factors in
the study area. The New Starts
regulation also requires the submission
of certain project-justification
information in support of a request to
initiate the engineering phase.
Authority: 49 CFR 622.101, 23 CFR
771.111, and 40 CFR 1501.7.
Yvette Taylor,
Regional Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2020–19069 Filed 8–28–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–57–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Open Meeting of the Federal Advisory
Committee on Insurance
Departmental Offices, U.S.
Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
This notice announces that
the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s
Federal Advisory Committee on
Insurance (‘‘Committee’’) will meet via
teleconference on Tuesday, September
29, 2020 from 12:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time. The meeting is
open to the public.
DATES: The meeting will be held via
teleconference on Tuesday, September
29, 2020, from 12:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m.
Eastern Time.
ADDRESSES: The Committee meeting
will be held via teleconference and is
open to the public. The public can
attend remotely via live webcast at
www.yorkcast.com/treasury/events/
2020/09/29/faci. The webcast will also
be available through the Committee’s
website at https://home.treasury.gov/
policy-issues/financial-marketsfinancial-institutions-and-fiscal-service/
federal-insurance-office/federaladvisory-committee-on-insurance-faci.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\31AUN1.SGM
31AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 169 (Monday, August 31, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 53903-53904]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-19069]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Early Scoping Notice for Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS)
Proposed LYNX Silver Line Project in the Charlotte Metropolitan Area,
North Carolina
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration, Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Early scoping notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) and the Charlotte
Area Transit System (CATS) issue this early scoping notice to advise
other agencies and the public that they intend to explore, through the
early scoping process of the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ),
proposed light rail transit in the West and Southeast Corridors, now
known as the proposed LYNX Silver Line Project (SLP).
DATES: Written comments on the scope of the ongoing planning analysis,
including previous studies developed by local planning and
transportation agencies, purpose and need, alternatives to be
considered, potential impacts to be assessed, and public outreach
methods should be sent to CATS by October 14, 2020. See ADDRESSES below
for the address to which written public comments may be sent.
Instructions for participating in online and live virtual early scoping
meetings are available at https://RideTransit.org/LYNXSilverLine, along
with early scoping materials. CATS will conduct live virtual public
meetings on the following dates:
Tuesday, September 15, 2020 at 5:30 p.m.; Focus Area 1: Wilkinson
Boulevard (City of Belmont to I-485)
Wednesday, September 16, 2020 at 5:30 p.m.; Focus Area 2: Wilkinson
Boulevard (I-485 to West Morehead Street)
Thursday, September 17, 2020 at 5:30 p.m.; Focus Area 3: Center City
(West Morehead Street to Charlottetowne Avenue)
Tuesday, September 22, 2020 at 5:30 p.m.; Focus Area 4: Independence
Boulevard (Charlottetowne Avenue to Idlewild Road)
Thursday, September 24, 2020 at 5:30 p.m.; Focus Area 5: Independence
Boulevard (Idlewild Road to just south of I-485 at CPCC Levine)
Tuesday, September 29, 2020 at 5:30 p.m.; Focus Area 6: Union County
Extension
Individuals who require special assistance to participate in early
scoping should contact Ms. Ajonelle Poole, CATS Public and Community
Relations Specialist, at 704-336-RIDE or [email protected]
at least seven days prior to the meetings. Ms. Poole can also be
contacted for hard copies of the early scoping materials.
An interagency early scoping meeting will be conducted virtually on
Monday, September 14, 2020 from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Representatives
of Native American tribal governments and of Federal, State and local
agencies that may have an interest in the project will be invited by
phone, letter, or email.
In addition to the early scoping meetings described herein, CATS
and FTA will conduct the scoping activities required by the subsequent
NEPA process to identify the nature and scope of environmental issues
to be addressed in the NEPA document. If the proposed action resulting
from the planning analysis would have significant impacts requiring an
environmental impact statement (EIS), FTA will publish a Notice of
Intent (NOI) to prepare an EIS in the Federal Register, and that NOI
will announce the dates and locations for EIS scoping meetings.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should be sent to Ms. Ajonelle Poole, CATS
Public and Community Relations Specialist, 600 E. Fourth Street,
Charlotte, NC 28202, phone: 704-336-RIDE, email:
[email protected]. The details of early scoping meetings
are given above under DATES.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Julia Walker, Environmental
Protection Specialist, Region 4, Federal Transit Administration, 230
Peachtree Street NW, Suite 1400, Atlanta, GA 30303, phone: 404-865-
5600, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The early scoping process will be part of
the ongoing planning analysis required by Title 49, United States Code
(U.S.C.) Sec. 5309. Early scoping meetings have been planned and are
announced below. The planning analysis completed to date has resulted
in a locally preferred, planning-level light rail transit alternative
which was adopted by the Metropolitan Transit Commission (MTC) and the
metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) for the Charlotte region.
CATS recently initiated further study to refine the locally preferred
alternative, which will then be the ``proposed action'' subject to
environmental review under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
and other environmental laws and regulations.
The SLP Corridor is approximately 26 miles in length. From the City
of Belmont, it traverses through Center City Charlotte, and the Town of
Matthews, with a potential two-mile extension into Union County. The
transit improvements passing through these communities would serve
residential neighborhoods and employment centers, key destinations like
Charlotte Douglas International Airport, future Charlotte Gateway
Station (with intercity rail and bus connections), Bank of America
Stadium, BB&T Ballpark, Ovens Auditorium, Bojangles Coliseum, Novant
Health Presbyterian and Matthews Medical Center, and Central Piedmont
Community College, and will connect to the existing CATS LYNX Blue Line
Light Rail and the CATS CityLYNX Gold Line Streetcar.
At the conclusion of the planning analysis, the MTC will adopt a
refined locally preferred planning-level alternative, which will then
be the ``proposed action'' subject to an appropriate environmental
review under NEPA. If the proposed action would have significant
impacts, FTA and CATS would initiate an EIS by conducting a scoping
process to determine the appropriate scope of the EIS. In particular,
the purpose and need for the project, the range of alternatives to be
considered in the EIS, the environmental and community impacts to be
evaluated, and the evaluation methodologies to be used would be subject
to public and interagency review and comment, in accordance with 40 CFR
parts 1500-1508 and 23 CFR part 771.
[[Page 53904]]
Previous Studies
Rapid transit has been discussed in Charlotte for decades, and in
1998, the City of Charlotte prepared the 2025 Integrated Transit/Land
Use Plan. This was the original transit and land use plan that proposed
using rapid transit to support focusing future growth in Charlotte's
key centers and corridors. The West Corridor (along Wilkinson
Boulevard) and the Southeast Corridor (along Independence Boulevard)
were two of the identified corridors. Since 1998, there have been
various planning efforts, and the plan has since been updated to the
2030 Transit System Plan.
In 2016, CATS completed the Southeast Corridor Transit Study, which
considered various transit technologies and alignments. The MTC
approved the recommendation of a light rail locally preferred
alternative for the 13-mile Southeast Corridor from Center City
Charlotte to the Mecklenburg and Union County border. The locally
preferred alternative resulted from a detailed technical evaluation and
outreach effort to the public and stakeholders.
More recently, CATS studied various technology and alignment
alternatives for the West Corridor and Center City as part of the LYNX
System Update, and in February 2019, the MTC adopted a light rail
locally preferred alternative for the West Corridor, and combined the
West and Southeast Corridor locally preferred alternatives as one
continuous 26-mile light rail corridor from Belmont to Matthews known
as the LYNX Silver Line. An extension into Union County will also be
evaluated, as directed by the MTC.
Purpose and Need for Action
Previous planning analysis and discussions with stakeholders have
helped to identify key transportation needs in the West and Southeast
Corridors. These needs will be refined and detailed during planning and
through environmental review, as analysis continues, and input is
received from the public, stakeholders, and regulatory agencies.
Initially, the key transportation concerns are continued population and
employment growth in the Charlotte region, a congested roadway network
with increased travel times, reduced reliability of the transportation
system, and local goals to address equity concerns such as limited
transportation options for transit-dependent populations, and
inadequate connectivity between and access to transit, affordable
housing, employment, and community services by environmental justice
populations.
The preliminary purpose of the SLP is to provide high-capacity
transit service in dedicated right-of-way along the US 74 (Wilkinson
Boulevard), Cedar Street/Graham Street, 11th Street, US 74
(Independence Boulevard), and Monroe Road transportation corridors
that:
Provides a competitive and reliable alternative to
automobiles;
Improves local connectivity between and access to transit,
housing, employment, and community services in the corridor;
Promotes opportunities for development consistent with
local vision, goals, plans, and policies;
Provides a transit system that is financially sustainable
to build, operate, and maintain; and,
Preserves and protects the natural and built environment.
Alternatives
FTA and CATS are considering refinements to the light rail locally
preferred alternative which came out of the Southeast Corridor Transit
Study and the LYNX System Update, including shifts in alignment to
address new opportunities and risks, and terminus options including an
approximate two-mile extension into Union County.
In addition to what is described above, other reasonable
alternatives identified through the early scoping process will be
considered for potential inclusion in the planning analysis.
FTA Procedures
Early scoping is an optional element of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) process that is particularly useful in situations
where, as here, alignment variations are under consideration in a
broadly-defined study area. While NEPA scoping normally begins with
issuance of a Notice of Intent which describes the proposed action, it
``may be initiated earlier, as long as there is appropriate public
notice and enough information available on the proposal so that the
public and relevant agencies can participate effectively.'' See the
Council on Environmental Quality's ``Forty Most Asked Questions
Concerning CEQ's National Environmental Policy Act Regulations,'' 46 FR
18026, 18030 (1981). In this case, the available information is more
than adequate to permit the public and relevant agencies to participate
effectively in early scoping and the planning analysis. Early scoping
can also serve to link transportation planning and NEPA. CATS intends
to formalize the Federal Planning and Environmental Linkages (PEL)
process with the initiation of early scoping, so that the results of
planning studies may be considered during the formal NEPA environmental
review process.
CATS may seek New Starts funding for the proposed project under 49
U.S.C. Sec. 5309 and will, therefore, be subject to New Starts
regulation (49 CFR part 611). The New Starts regulation requires a
planning analysis that leads to the selection of a locally preferred
alternative by CATS and the inclusion of the locally preferred
alternative in the long-range transportation plan adopted by MPOs. The
planning analysis will examine alignments, station locations, costs,
funding, ridership, economic development, land use, engineering
feasibility, and environmental factors in the study area. The New
Starts regulation also requires the submission of certain project-
justification information in support of a request to initiate the
engineering phase.
Authority: 49 CFR 622.101, 23 CFR 771.111, and 40 CFR 1501.7.
Yvette Taylor,
Regional Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2020-19069 Filed 8-28-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-57-P