Notice of Intent To Prepare and Environmental Impact Statement for a Proposed Highway Project, Somerset County, PA and Garrett County, MD, 36355-36359 [2023-11794]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 106 / Friday, June 2, 2023 / Notices
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Administration, 800 Independence
Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20591,
telephone (202) 267–4191; email 9-awaarac@faa.gov. Any committee-related
request should be sent to the person
listed in this section.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The ARAC was created under the
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(FACA), in accordance with Title 5 of
the United States Code (5 U.S.C. App.
2) to provide advice and
recommendations to the FAA
concerning rulemaking activities, such
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agency certification, airworthiness
standards and certification, airports,
maintenance, noise, and training.
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• Status Updates:
Æ Active Working Groups
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• Status Report from the FAA
• Any Other Business
Detailed agenda information will be
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address listed in the ADDRESSES section
at least one week in advance of the
meeting.
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III. Public Participation
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
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CONTACT section.
Issued in Washington, DC, on May 26,
2023.
Brandon Roberts,
Executive Director, Office of Rulemaking.
[FR Doc. 2023–11773 Filed 6–1–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
[Docket No. FHWA–2023–0006]
Notice of Intent To Prepare and
Environmental Impact Statement for a
Proposed Highway Project, Somerset
County, PA and Garrett County, MD
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement.
AGENCY:
FHWA in coordination with
the Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation (PennDOT) and the
Maryland Department of Transportation
State Highway Administration (MDOT
SHA) is issuing the Notice of Intent
(NOI) to solicit comments and advise
SUMMARY:
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36355
the public, agencies, and stakeholders
that an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) will be prepared to study potential
improvements to the US 6219, Section
050 Transportation Improvement Project
from Meyersdale, PA to Old Salisbury
Road, MD. The project includes the
proposed construction of an 8.0 mile (6
miles in Pennsylvania and 2 miles in
Maryland) four-lane limited access
facility on new alignment from the end
of the Meyersdale Bypass in Somerset
County, Pennsylvania to the newly
constructed portion of US 219 in Garrett
County, Maryland. This NOI contains a
summary of the information required in
the Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) regulations. This NOI should be
reviewed together with the
Supplementary NOI Document, which
contains important details about the
proposed project and complements the
information in this NOI. Persons and
agencies who may be interested in or
affected by the proposed project are
encouraged to comment on the
information in this NOI and the
Supplementary NOI Document. All
comments received in response to this
NOI will be considered and any
information presented herein, including
the preliminary purpose and need,
preliminary alternatives and identified
impacts, may be revised in
consideration of the comments.
Comments on the NOI or the
Supplementary NOI Document are to be
received by FHWA through the methods
below by July 3, 2023.
DATES:
This NOI and the
Supplementary NOI Document are also
available in the docket referenced above
at www.regulations.gov and on the
project website located at
www.penndot.pa.gov/
us219meyersdalesouth. The
Supplementary NOI Document will be
mailed upon request. Interested parties
are invited to submit comments by any
of the following methods:
Website: For access to the documents,
go to the Federal eRulemaking Portal
located at www.regulations.gov or the
project website located at
www.penndot.pa.gov/
us219meyersdalesouth. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
Mailing address or for hand delivery
or courier: Jon Crum, Team Leader—
Planning and Environment, Federal
Highway Administration, Pennsylvania
Division Office, 30 North 3rd Street,
Suite 700, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania,
17101–1720.
Email address: Jonathan.Crum@
dot.gov.
ADDRESSES:
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 106 / Friday, June 2, 2023 / Notices
All submissions should include the
agency name and the docket number
that appears in the heading of this
Notice. All comments received will be
posted without change to the
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. A
summary of the comments will be
included in the Draft EIS.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
FHWA: Jon Crum, Team Leader for
Planning and Environment, Federal
Highway Administration—Pennsylvania
Division, 30 North 3rd Street, Suite 700,
Harrisburg, PA 17101–1720; email:
Jonathan.Crum@dot.gov; 717–221–3735.
PennDOT: Nicki Donahoe, PE, Project
Manager, Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation, Engineering District 9–
0, 1620 N. Juniata Street, Hollidaysburg,
PA 16648; email: ndonahoe@pa.gov;
814–317–1650. MDOT: Jeremy Beck,
Senior Project Manager, Maryland
Department of Transportation, State
Highway Administration, Office of
Planning and Preliminary Engineering,
707 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD
21202; email: JBeck@
mdot.maryland.gov; 410–545–8518/
800–548–5026.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: It is
important to note that the FHWA,
PennDOT, and MDOT SHA are
committed to public involvement for
this project. All public comments
received in response to this notice will
be considered and revisions may be
made to the information presented
herein as appropriate. The
environmental review of alternatives for
the transportation project along Section
050 of US 219 will be conducted in
accordance with the requirements of the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) of 1969, as amended (42 U.S.C.
4321, et seq.), 23 U.S.C. 139, CEQ
regulations implementing NEPA (40
CFR 1500–1508), FHWA regulations
implementing NEPA (23 CFR 771.101–
771.139) and all applicable Federal,
State, and local governmental laws and
regulations.
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Background
PennDOT originally studied US 219
improvements south of Somerset,
Pennsylvania, during the 1990s. These
studies identified a five-mile section of
US 219 through Meyersdale,
Pennsylvania, as the area’s most
immediate transportation problem. The
Meyersdale Bypass project was
constructed in 1998 as a four-lane,
limited access highway located west of
existing US 219 in Meyersdale Borough
and Summit Township, Somerset
County, Pennsylvania. This project was
followed by the completion of an 11-
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mile four-lane limited access facility in
2018 from Somerset to Meyersdale,
Pennsylvania. In 2021, MDOT SHA
completed construction of an
approximately 1.4-mile section from
Interstate 68 (I–68) in Maryland to Old
Salisbury Road, just south of the State
line.
Preliminary engineering and a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS)
for US 219 originally began in 2001 but
was put on hold in 2007 due to funding
constraints. As a result, the document
went unpublished. Several alternatives
were evaluated in the DEIS, and these
alternatives served as the starting point
for the 2016 Planning and
Environmental Linkages (PEL) Study for
this project.
The PEL concluded that Alignments E
and E-shift were considered reasonable
and recommended to be evaluated in
future NEPA Studies. However, at the
time of the PEL study, adequate funding
was not available to advance the project
in its entirety. As a result, the team
completed an evaluation to identify
whether any stand-alone projects
existed along the project alignments.
The PEL identified that the MD 1.4mile section both improves the existing
I–68/US 219 interchange and best
addresses the PEL’s Project Vision and
Goals by directly serving near future
planned development (Casselman Farm
Development Site) located in Garrett
County, Maryland’s Smart Growth
Priority Funding Area. This section was
also found to be ‘‘of sufficient length to
address environmental matters on a
broad scope and does not restrict
consideration of alternatives for other
reasonably foreseeable transportation
improvements’’ including the current
study to complete the remaining fourlane US 219 section between the
Meyersdale Interchange in Pennsylvania
and the recently completed 1.4-mile
section in Maryland.
After the PEL, MDOT SHA developed
seven preliminary concepts for the 1.4mile section and presented them at a
public workshop on September 8, 2016,
and an open house on September 9,
2016. A Joint Location/Design Public
Hearing was held on February 6, 2017,
to obtain public input on the
alternatives under consideration. Based
on the evaluation and comparison of the
alternatives, including input from the
public, Alternative 4 Modified was
recommended as the MDOT SHA
Preferred Alternative. This section
received FHWA Preferred Alternative
and Conceptual Mitigation Package/
Categorical Exclusion approval on July
18, 2018, and was subsequently
constructed. The new 1.4-mile section
opened to traffic in May 2021.
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The US 6219, Section 050
Transportation Improvement Project
was re-initiated November 9, 2020,
when the Secretary of Transportation
announced the commitment of funds for
this project.
The following information provided
in the NOI is supplemented with more
detail in the Supplemental NOI
Document.
(a) The Preliminary Purpose and Need
for the Proposed Action
The purpose of the US 6219, Section
050 Transportation Improvement Project
is to complete Corridor N of the
Appalachian Development Highway
System, to improve the system linkage
in the region, provide safe and efficient
access for motorists traveling on US 219,
and provide transportation
infrastructure to support economic
opportunities in existing and planned
communities and employment/business
centers and natural resource-based
industries within the Appalachian
Region.
The project needs identified for this
project are that: (1) existing US 219 does
not provide efficient mobility for trucks
and freight, (2) there are numerous
roadway and geometric deficiencies
present along the existing US 219
alignment, and (3) the existing roadway
infrastructure is a limiting factor in
economic development opportunities in
the Appalachian Region.
The preliminary Purpose and Need
was developed with agency
coordination and public input, as
described in section e; see the
Supplemental NOI Document for details
on the development of the Purpose and
Need. The project purpose and needs
were presented to the Pennsylvania and
Maryland resource agencies at an
agency coordination meeting on
September 22, 2021, a Community
Advisory Committee on November 3,
2021, and to public officials and the
general public at an open house meeting
on June 23, 2022, and a virtual meeting
on June 27, 2022. Resource agencies and
the public were invited to comment on
the Purpose and Need. The Purpose and
Need statement and supporting
documentation, including data and
public input summary, will be available
in the Draft EIS. No comments were
received from either the resource
agencies or public following the
outreach. The Purpose and Need may be
revised based on comments received
during the comment period on this
notice.
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(b) A Preliminary Description of the
Proposed Action and Alternatives the
Environmental Impact Statement Will
Consider
The proposed action is anticipated to
include construction of a new 8.0-mile
(6 miles in Pennsylvania and 2 miles in
Maryland) 4-lane limited-access facility
from the end of the Meyersdale Bypass
in Pennsylvania to the newly
constructed portion of US 219 in
Maryland. Agencies and the public are
invited to comment on the Range of
Alternatives for the proposed action.
Additional information on the Range of
Alternatives is in the Supplementary
NOI Document. The Range of
Alternatives proposed to be considered
in the EIS are the following:
No Build Alternative
The No Build Alternative involves
taking no action, except routine
maintenance along US 219. The existing
two-lane alignment of US 219 between
Meyersdale, Pennsylvania and Garrett
County, Maryland would remain. No
new alignments or additional roadway
would be constructed.
Alignment DA
Alignment DA was delineated using
suggestions by the study area farmers
and Cooperating and Participating
Agencies during former 2001 NEPA
efforts to avoid natural resource impacts
by staying closer to US 219 and
avoiding the mountain slope/ridge.
Alignment DA starts at the southern end
of the Meyersdale Bypass, proceeding in
a southerly direction to just south of the
Mast farm, where it heads westward
toward existing US 219. The alignment
crosses between the Deal and Mast
farms, then turns in a southwesterly
direction, crossing existing US 219 just
south of Salisbury, Pennsylvania.
Alignment DA then travels in a
southerly direction, crossing existing US
219 again just south of the Mason-Dixon
Line and staying close to existing US
219, and ties into the newly constructed
section of US 219.
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Alignment DA-Shift
Alignment DA-Shift resulted from
combining Alignment DA with
Alignment E-Shift. Alignment E-Shift
was suggested by residents during
former 2001 NEPA efforts to move the
alignment further away from residences
along Old Salisbury Road. Alignment
DA-Shift follows the same alignment as
Alignment DA from Meyersdale until
about one mile south of the MasonDixon Line, where the alignment is
shifted eastward, away from Old
Salisbury Road.
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Alignment DU
Alignment DU resulted from
combining suggestions from the US Fish
and Wildlife Service (USFWS) with an
alignment identified during former 2001
NEPA efforts. USFWS suggested an
alternative to avoid the mountain slope/
ridge in Pennsylvania and reduce
potential impacts to terrestrial wildlife.
Alignment DU follows Alignment DA
until Greenville Road, where instead of
continuing southwest towards existing
US 219, the alignment travels south
towards the Mason-Dixon Line.
Alignment DU and Alignment DA
coincide again south of the MasonDixon Line.
Alignment DU-Shift
Like Alignment DA Shift, Alignment
DU-Shift resulted from combining
Alignment DU with Alignment E-Shift
to move the alignment further away
from residences along Old Salisbury
Road. Alignment DU-Shift mimics the
alignment of Alignment DU from
Meyersdale until south of the MasonDixon Line, where the alignment is
shifted eastward and away from Old
Salisbury Road.
Alignment E
Alignment E was suggested during
former 2001 NEPA efforts to avoid
farmland in Pennsylvania and avoid
residential areas along existing US 219.
Alignment E starts at the southern end
of the Meyersdale Bypass and proceeds
in a southerly direction along the face
of Meadow Mountain. At the
Pennsylvania/Maryland border,
Alignment E would extend in a
southwesterly direction, east of the
existing US 219.
Alignment E-Shift
Alignment E-Shift was suggested by
residents along Old Salisbury Road
during former 2001 NEPA efforts and
involves moving Alignment E further
away from the residences on Old
Salisbury Road. Alignment E-Shift
follows Alignment E, with the exception
of a small shift in Maryland, slightly
eastward, away from the homes along
Old Salisbury Road. Alignment E does
not directly impact the homes along Old
Salisbury Road; however, residents
requested an evaluation of a slightly
eastward shift to move the alignment
further from their homes. The trade-off
is that Alignment E-Shift bisects a farm
field that is only slightly impacted by
Alignment E. This shifted section is the
same as the shifted section of Alignment
DA-Shift and Alignment DU-Shift.
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36357
(c) Brief Summary of Expected Impacts
PennDOT and MDOT SHA have
conducted scoping activities for the US
6219, Section 050 Transportation
Improvement Project, such as secondary
source data collection, agency
coordination, and public outreach, to
identify the types of environmental,
cultural, and socio-economic resources
present in the Study Area and those
likely to be impacted. The following
resources will be evaluated in the EIS
and supporting technical studies:
cultural resources (archaeology and
historic architecture); hazardous
materials; air quality; noise-sensitive
areas; natural resources (wildlife and
habitat; threatened, endangered, and
special status species; waters of the US;
water quality; groundwater; floodplains;
and farmlands); visual resources;
Section 4(f) resources (recreational
facilities, historic properties, and State
Game Lands); and socioeconomics, land
use, and right-of-way (communities and
community facilities, population and
housing, economic resources, land use
and right-of-way, and Environmental
Justice).
Based on an analysis completed to
date using both the EPA’s EJScreen Tool
and the Maryland EJScreen Mapper, EJ
populations (low income) are present
within the study area. However, there
are no residential or non-residential EJ
relocations anticipated.
The level of review of the identified
resources for the EIS will be
commensurate with the anticipated
effects to each resource from the
proposed project and will be governed
by the statutory or regulatory
requirements protecting those resources.
The analyses and evaluations conducted
for the EIS will identify the potential for
effects, avoidance measures, whether
the anticipated effects would be
adverse, and mitigation measures for
adverse effects. Additional information
on the expected impacts is provided in
the Supplementary NOI document
available for review in the docket
established for this project and on the
project website as noted in the
ADDRESSES section. Comments on the
expected impacts to be analyzed in the
DEIS are welcomed during the NOI
comment period.
Agencies, stakeholders, and the
public are invited to comment on the
expected impacts. The environmental
impact analysis will not begin until the
Purpose and Need, Range of
Alternatives, and impact categories are
finalized based on public comment on
this notice. The identification of
impacts may be revised due to the
consideration of public comments. See
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the Supplementary NOI Document for a
more detailed description of the
Summary of Expected Impacts. The
studies to identify the impacts, as well
as the analyses of impacts from the
retained alternatives, will be presented
in the Draft EIS.
(d) Anticipated Permits and Other
Authorizations
At the request of the sponsor, the
permitting schedule includes the
following timetable. A Clean Water Act
Section 404 permit decision from the
US Army Corps of Engineers is
anticipated on September 17, 2027.1
Other anticipated State authorizations
include a Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection Section 401
Water Quality Certification/Chapter 105
Standard Permit on September 17, 2027,
and a Maryland Department of the
Environment Joint Federal/State Title 5
Permit Application for the Alteration of
any Floodplain, Waterway, Tidal or
Nontidal Wetland in Maryland on
September 17, 2027. Section 7
consultation under the Endangered
Species Act is expected to be concluded
on June 27, 2023, and Section 106
consultation under the National Historic
Preservation Act is anticipated to be
concluded on December 13, 2023. See
the Supplemental NOI Document for
more detail on the anticipated permits
and other authorizations.
(e) Scoping and Public Review
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Agency Scoping
FHWA, PennDOT, and MDOT SHA
have conducted agency coordination to
inform the purpose and need and
preliminary project alternatives, scoping
meeting, and other elements outlined in
this document. An Agency Coordination
Plan was reviewed and agreed to by the
Pennsylvania and Maryland resource
agencies, including the Cooperating and
Participating agencies. It is a living
document that will be updated through
the EIS process. The resource agency
meetings in Pennsylvania are referred to
as Agency Coordination Meetings
(ACM) and the resource agency
meetings in Maryland are referred to as
Interagency Review Meeting (IRM).
Since PennDOT is the lead agency for
this project, the agency meetings are
typically held on the ACM’s regularly
1 23 U.S.C. 139(d)(10) requires all authorization
decisions necessary for the construction of a major
project be completed no later than 90 days from the
issuance of the ROD for the project. This deadline
may be extended where Federal law prohibits
granting the decision within this period of time, the
project sponsor requests a different timeline, or if
the extension would facilitate the completion of the
environmental review and authorization process for
the project.
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scheduled meeting dates. Some
variation does occur and, in that case,
the same information is presented to
both the ACM and the IRM. The list of
agency coordination meetings held
begins after November 9, 2020, the date
Pennsylvania Transportation Secretary
announced the commitment of funds for
this project.
April 28, 2021 (ACM–PA) and June 16,
2021 (IRM–MD)
• US 219–050: Meyersdale, PA to Old
Salisbury Rd., MD reintroduction
• Summary of the PEL Process
• Current Project Status
• Agency Involvement
September 9, 2021—Joint ACM and IRM
• Process to Move from PEL to NEPA
• ACM/IRM Role
• Cooperating and Participating
Agencies
• Review Purpose and Need/Logical
Termini
• Review PEL Alternatives Studied
• Agency PEL comments to be
addressed in NEPA
November 16, 2021—Joint Scoping
Meeting
• Scoping Meeting Overview
• Review Agency Questions from 9/22/
21 Meeting
• Virtual Scoping using Google Earth
• Comparison of PennDOT & MDOT
SHA NEPA Planning Processes
• Present Technical Methodologies
Matrix
• Review Tentative Project Schedule
May 25, 2022 (ACM–PA) and June 15,
2022 (IRM–MD)
• Recent Activities
• Purpose and Need and Logical
Termini Review
• Proposed NEPA Study Alternatives
• Public and Agency Coordination Plan
Review
• Review agency input received
following from the November 16,
2021, Virtual Field Scoping Meeting
• Review information to be presented at
the June 2 Community Advisory
Committee (CAC) and June 23 Public
Meeting
August 24, 2022—Joint ACM and IRM
• Present results of the CAC meeting,
Public Officials meeting, Open House
meeting and Virtual meeting
• Reviewed secondary source impacts
of Proposed NEPA Study Alternatives
Public Review
PennDOT and MDOT SHA conducted
public outreach activities during the
Pre-NOI phase of the US 6219, Section
050 Transportation Improvement Project
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to present information and collect
public input. However, for purposes of
documenting activities in this NOI, the
start date is November 9, 2020, which is
when the Pennsylvania Transportation
Secretary announced the commitment of
funds for this project.
To date, PennDOT and MDOT SHA
reconvened the CAC that had been
previously established for this project
and have held two CAC meetings. The
purpose of the CAC is to provide an
additional method of communication
between PennDOT, MDOT SHA,
FHWA, and the local communities, and
to provide input into project
development. The CAC serves as an
advisory group to the Project Team to
ensure that local interests and concerns
are considered in a timely manner.
These meetings allowed the CAC the
opportunity to comment on any changes
to the project study area since the 2016
PEL document and the revised Purpose
and Need (November 2021), and to
provide input on the preliminary range
of NEPA alternatives (June 2022).
Additionally, PennDOT and MDOT
SHA offered a public officials meeting
(June 23, 2022), an open house public
meeting (June 23, 2022), and virtual
meeting (June 27, 2022). These meeting
allowed public officials and citizens the
same opportunity to comment on the
information presented at the CAC
meetings and served as the public
scoping meeting. The materials for these
meetings are on the project website.
PennDOT and MDOT SHA will
maintain and update the project
website, as identified in the ADDRESSES
section of this notice, to direct the
public to the scoping meeting
presentation and solicit public input.
Additionally, PennDOT and MDOT
SHA will continue to conduct targeted
outreach to communities in and around
the study area. A 30–day comment
period is being held in association with
the NOI. There will be at least three
more public involvement opportunities
for the US 6219, Section 050
Transportation Improvement Project
from Meyersdale, Pennsylvania to Old
Salisbury Road, Maryland. These will be
public meetings/hearings to receive
input on the detailed alternatives
(public meeting), recommended
preferred alternative and draft EIS
(public hearing), and selected
alternative/conceptual mitigation
(public meeting).
(f) A Schedule for the Decision-Making
Process
Following the issuance of this notice,
FHWA, PennDOT, and MDOT SHA will
coordinate with the Participating and
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Cooperating Agencies to develop study
documentation and the Draft EIS.
• The Draft EIS is anticipated to be
issued in March 2024.
• The combined Final EIS and Record
of Decision is anticipated in February
2025.
• A Section 404 permit decision from
the United States Army Corps of
Engineers is expected in September
2027.
See the Supplemental NOI Document
for additional schedule details.
(g) Request for Identification of
Potential Alternatives, Information, and
Analyses Relevant to the Proposed
Action
To ensure that a full range of issues
related to the study are addressed and
all potential issues are identified,
FHWA invites comments and
suggestions from all interested parties.
The project team requests comments
and suggestions on purpose and need,
potential alternatives and impacts, and
the identification of any relevant
information, studies, or analyses of any
kind concerning impacts affecting the
quality of the human environment. Any
information presented herein, including
the preliminary purpose and need,
preliminary range of alternatives, and
identification of impacts may be revised
after consideration of the comments.
The purpose of this request is to bring
relevant comments, information, and
analyses to the agency’s attention, as
early in the process as possible, to
enable the agency to make maximum
use of this information in decision
making. Comments may be submitted
according to the instructions in the
ADDRESSES section of this Notice.
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(h) Contact Information
FHWA: Jon Crum, Team Leader—
Planning and Environment, Federal
Highway Administration, Pennsylvania
Division Office, 30 North 3rd Street,
Suite 700, Harrisburg, PA 17101–1720;
email address: Jonathan.Crum@dot.gov;
717–221–3735.
PennDOT: Nicki Donahoe, PE, Project
Manager, Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation, Engineering District 9–
0, 1620 N Juniata Street, Hollidaysburg,
PA 16648; email: ndonahoe@pa.gov;
814–317–1650.
MDOT SHA: Jeremy Beck, Senior
Project Manager, Maryland Department
of Transportation, State Highway
Administration, Office of Planning and
Preliminary Engineering, 707 North
Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:34 Jun 01, 2023
Jkt 259001
email: JBeck@mdot.maryland.gov; 410–
545–8518/800–548–5026.
Alicia E. Nolan,
Pennsylvania Division Administrator, Federal
Highway Administration.
[FR Doc. 2023–11794 Filed 6–1–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
[Docket Number FRA–2007–28812]
Petition for Extension of Waiver of
Compliance
Under part 211 of title 49 Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), this
document provides the public notice
that by letters dated March 24, 2023,
and April 27, 2023, BNSF Railway
Company (BNSF) petitioned the Federal
Railroad Administration (FRA) for an
extension of a waiver of compliance
from certain provisions of the Federal
railroad safety regulations contained at
49 CFR parts 215 (Railroad Freight Car
Safety Standards) and 232 (Brake
System Safety Standards for Freight and
Other Non-passenger Trains and
Equipment; End of Train Devices). The
relevant FRA Docket Number is FRA–
2007–28812.
Specifically, BNSF requests a waiver
extension from 49 CFR 232.205, Class 1
brake test—initial terminal inspection,
and certain provisions of part 215
related to the inspection of trains
entering the United States from Mexico
at Eagle Pass, Texas. BNSF seeks to
continue to move trains received in
interchange from Ferrocarril Mexicano,
S.A. (FXE), approximately 12 miles
outside of the community of Eagle Pass,
Texas, to the facilities at Ryan’s Ruin,
Texas, or Horan Siding, where the
required inspections can be performed.
BNSF states that the relief ‘‘has proven
to create a more efficient and safer
operating environment along the U.S.
and Mexico border for over a decade.’’
In support of its request, BNSF explains
that prior to the current relief, trains
‘‘would be blocking the international
bridge and multiple crossings in Eagle
Pass.’’
A copy of the petition, as well as any
written communications concerning the
petition, is available for review online at
www.regulations.gov.
Interested parties are invited to
participate in these proceedings by
submitting written views, data, or
comments. FRA does not anticipate
scheduling a public hearing in
connection with these proceedings since
the facts do not appear to warrant a
PO 00000
Frm 00088
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
36359
hearing. If any interested party desires
an opportunity for oral comment and a
public hearing, they should notify FRA,
in writing, before the end of the
comment period and specify the basis
for their request.
All communications concerning these
proceedings should identify the
appropriate docket number and may be
submitted at https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Communications are requested by
August 1, 2023. Comments received
after that date will be considered if
practicable. FRA reserves the right to
extend the existing relief subject to
subsequent consideration of any
comments submitted to the docket.
Anyone can search the electronic form
of any written communications and
comments received into any of our
dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the
document, if submitted on behalf of an
association, business, labor union, etc.).
Under 5 U.S.C. 553(c), the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT)
solicits comments from the public to
better inform its processes. DOT posts
these comments, without edit, including
any personal information the
commenter provides, to
www.regulations.gov, as described in
the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–
14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
https://www.transportation.gov/privacy.
See also https://www.regulations.gov/
privacy-notice for the privacy notice of
regulations.gov.
Issued in Washington, DC.
John Karl Alexy,
Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety,
Chief Safety Officer.
[FR Doc. 2023–11785 Filed 6–1–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
[Docket Number FRA–2002–11809]
Petition for Extension of Waiver of
Compliance
Under part 211 of title 49 Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), this
document provides the public notice
that by letter received April 7, 2023, the
North County Transit District (NCTD)
petitioned the Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA) for an extension
of a waiver of compliance from certain
provisions of the Federal railroad safety
regulations contained at 49 CFR parts
210 (Railroad Noise Emission
Compliance Regulations); 217 (Railroad
E:\FR\FM\02JNN1.SGM
02JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 106 (Friday, June 2, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 36355-36359]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-11794]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
[Docket No. FHWA-2023-0006]
Notice of Intent To Prepare and Environmental Impact Statement
for a Proposed Highway Project, Somerset County, PA and Garrett County,
MD
AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: FHWA in coordination with the Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation (PennDOT) and the Maryland Department of Transportation
State Highway Administration (MDOT SHA) is issuing the Notice of Intent
(NOI) to solicit comments and advise the public, agencies, and
stakeholders that an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) will be
prepared to study potential improvements to the US 6219, Section 050
Transportation Improvement Project from Meyersdale, PA to Old Salisbury
Road, MD. The project includes the proposed construction of an 8.0 mile
(6 miles in Pennsylvania and 2 miles in Maryland) four-lane limited
access facility on new alignment from the end of the Meyersdale Bypass
in Somerset County, Pennsylvania to the newly constructed portion of US
219 in Garrett County, Maryland. This NOI contains a summary of the
information required in the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ)
regulations. This NOI should be reviewed together with the
Supplementary NOI Document, which contains important details about the
proposed project and complements the information in this NOI. Persons
and agencies who may be interested in or affected by the proposed
project are encouraged to comment on the information in this NOI and
the Supplementary NOI Document. All comments received in response to
this NOI will be considered and any information presented herein,
including the preliminary purpose and need, preliminary alternatives
and identified impacts, may be revised in consideration of the
comments.
DATES: Comments on the NOI or the Supplementary NOI Document are to be
received by FHWA through the methods below by July 3, 2023.
ADDRESSES: This NOI and the Supplementary NOI Document are also
available in the docket referenced above at www.regulations.gov and on
the project website located at www.penndot.pa.gov/us219meyersdalesouth.
The Supplementary NOI Document will be mailed upon request. Interested
parties are invited to submit comments by any of the following methods:
Website: For access to the documents, go to the Federal eRulemaking
Portal located at www.regulations.gov or the project website located at
www.penndot.pa.gov/us219meyersdalesouth. Follow the online instructions
for submitting comments.
Mailing address or for hand delivery or courier: Jon Crum, Team
Leader--Planning and Environment, Federal Highway Administration,
Pennsylvania Division Office, 30 North 3rd Street, Suite 700,
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 17101-1720.
Email address: [email protected].
[[Page 36356]]
All submissions should include the agency name and the docket
number that appears in the heading of this Notice. All comments
received will be posted without change to the www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information provided. A summary of the comments
will be included in the Draft EIS.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: FHWA: Jon Crum, Team Leader for
Planning and Environment, Federal Highway Administration--Pennsylvania
Division, 30 North 3rd Street, Suite 700, Harrisburg, PA 17101-1720;
email: [email protected]; 717-221-3735. PennDOT: Nicki Donahoe, PE,
Project Manager, Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Engineering
District 9-0, 1620 N. Juniata Street, Hollidaysburg, PA 16648; email:
[email protected]; 814-317-1650. MDOT: Jeremy Beck, Senior Project
Manager, Maryland Department of Transportation, State Highway
Administration, Office of Planning and Preliminary Engineering, 707
North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202; email:
[email protected]; 410-545-8518/800-548-5026.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: It is important to note that the FHWA,
PennDOT, and MDOT SHA are committed to public involvement for this
project. All public comments received in response to this notice will
be considered and revisions may be made to the information presented
herein as appropriate. The environmental review of alternatives for the
transportation project along Section 050 of US 219 will be conducted in
accordance with the requirements of the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) of 1969, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq.), 23 U.S.C.
139, CEQ regulations implementing NEPA (40 CFR 1500-1508), FHWA
regulations implementing NEPA (23 CFR 771.101-771.139) and all
applicable Federal, State, and local governmental laws and regulations.
Background
PennDOT originally studied US 219 improvements south of Somerset,
Pennsylvania, during the 1990s. These studies identified a five-mile
section of US 219 through Meyersdale, Pennsylvania, as the area's most
immediate transportation problem. The Meyersdale Bypass project was
constructed in 1998 as a four-lane, limited access highway located west
of existing US 219 in Meyersdale Borough and Summit Township, Somerset
County, Pennsylvania. This project was followed by the completion of an
11-mile four-lane limited access facility in 2018 from Somerset to
Meyersdale, Pennsylvania. In 2021, MDOT SHA completed construction of
an approximately 1.4-mile section from Interstate 68 (I-68) in Maryland
to Old Salisbury Road, just south of the State line.
Preliminary engineering and a Draft Environmental Impact Statement
(DEIS) for US 219 originally began in 2001 but was put on hold in 2007
due to funding constraints. As a result, the document went unpublished.
Several alternatives were evaluated in the DEIS, and these alternatives
served as the starting point for the 2016 Planning and Environmental
Linkages (PEL) Study for this project.
The PEL concluded that Alignments E and E-shift were considered
reasonable and recommended to be evaluated in future NEPA Studies.
However, at the time of the PEL study, adequate funding was not
available to advance the project in its entirety. As a result, the team
completed an evaluation to identify whether any stand-alone projects
existed along the project alignments.
The PEL identified that the MD 1.4-mile section both improves the
existing I-68/US 219 interchange and best addresses the PEL's Project
Vision and Goals by directly serving near future planned development
(Casselman Farm Development Site) located in Garrett County, Maryland's
Smart Growth Priority Funding Area. This section was also found to be
``of sufficient length to address environmental matters on a broad
scope and does not restrict consideration of alternatives for other
reasonably foreseeable transportation improvements'' including the
current study to complete the remaining four-lane US 219 section
between the Meyersdale Interchange in Pennsylvania and the recently
completed 1.4-mile section in Maryland.
After the PEL, MDOT SHA developed seven preliminary concepts for
the 1.4-mile section and presented them at a public workshop on
September 8, 2016, and an open house on September 9, 2016. A Joint
Location/Design Public Hearing was held on February 6, 2017, to obtain
public input on the alternatives under consideration. Based on the
evaluation and comparison of the alternatives, including input from the
public, Alternative 4 Modified was recommended as the MDOT SHA
Preferred Alternative. This section received FHWA Preferred Alternative
and Conceptual Mitigation Package/Categorical Exclusion approval on
July 18, 2018, and was subsequently constructed. The new 1.4-mile
section opened to traffic in May 2021.
The US 6219, Section 050 Transportation Improvement Project was re-
initiated November 9, 2020, when the Secretary of Transportation
announced the commitment of funds for this project.
The following information provided in the NOI is supplemented with
more detail in the Supplemental NOI Document.
(a) The Preliminary Purpose and Need for the Proposed Action
The purpose of the US 6219, Section 050 Transportation Improvement
Project is to complete Corridor N of the Appalachian Development
Highway System, to improve the system linkage in the region, provide
safe and efficient access for motorists traveling on US 219, and
provide transportation infrastructure to support economic opportunities
in existing and planned communities and employment/business centers and
natural resource-based industries within the Appalachian Region.
The project needs identified for this project are that: (1)
existing US 219 does not provide efficient mobility for trucks and
freight, (2) there are numerous roadway and geometric deficiencies
present along the existing US 219 alignment, and (3) the existing
roadway infrastructure is a limiting factor in economic development
opportunities in the Appalachian Region.
The preliminary Purpose and Need was developed with agency
coordination and public input, as described in section e; see the
Supplemental NOI Document for details on the development of the Purpose
and Need. The project purpose and needs were presented to the
Pennsylvania and Maryland resource agencies at an agency coordination
meeting on September 22, 2021, a Community Advisory Committee on
November 3, 2021, and to public officials and the general public at an
open house meeting on June 23, 2022, and a virtual meeting on June 27,
2022. Resource agencies and the public were invited to comment on the
Purpose and Need. The Purpose and Need statement and supporting
documentation, including data and public input summary, will be
available in the Draft EIS. No comments were received from either the
resource agencies or public following the outreach. The Purpose and
Need may be revised based on comments received during the comment
period on this notice.
[[Page 36357]]
(b) A Preliminary Description of the Proposed Action and Alternatives
the Environmental Impact Statement Will Consider
The proposed action is anticipated to include construction of a new
8.0-mile (6 miles in Pennsylvania and 2 miles in Maryland) 4-lane
limited-access facility from the end of the Meyersdale Bypass in
Pennsylvania to the newly constructed portion of US 219 in Maryland.
Agencies and the public are invited to comment on the Range of
Alternatives for the proposed action. Additional information on the
Range of Alternatives is in the Supplementary NOI Document. The Range
of Alternatives proposed to be considered in the EIS are the following:
No Build Alternative
The No Build Alternative involves taking no action, except routine
maintenance along US 219. The existing two-lane alignment of US 219
between Meyersdale, Pennsylvania and Garrett County, Maryland would
remain. No new alignments or additional roadway would be constructed.
Alignment DA
Alignment DA was delineated using suggestions by the study area
farmers and Cooperating and Participating Agencies during former 2001
NEPA efforts to avoid natural resource impacts by staying closer to US
219 and avoiding the mountain slope/ridge. Alignment DA starts at the
southern end of the Meyersdale Bypass, proceeding in a southerly
direction to just south of the Mast farm, where it heads westward
toward existing US 219. The alignment crosses between the Deal and Mast
farms, then turns in a southwesterly direction, crossing existing US
219 just south of Salisbury, Pennsylvania. Alignment DA then travels in
a southerly direction, crossing existing US 219 again just south of the
Mason-Dixon Line and staying close to existing US 219, and ties into
the newly constructed section of US 219.
Alignment DA-Shift
Alignment DA-Shift resulted from combining Alignment DA with
Alignment E-Shift. Alignment E-Shift was suggested by residents during
former 2001 NEPA efforts to move the alignment further away from
residences along Old Salisbury Road. Alignment DA-Shift follows the
same alignment as Alignment DA from Meyersdale until about one mile
south of the Mason-Dixon Line, where the alignment is shifted eastward,
away from Old Salisbury Road.
Alignment DU
Alignment DU resulted from combining suggestions from the US Fish
and Wildlife Service (USFWS) with an alignment identified during former
2001 NEPA efforts. USFWS suggested an alternative to avoid the mountain
slope/ridge in Pennsylvania and reduce potential impacts to terrestrial
wildlife. Alignment DU follows Alignment DA until Greenville Road,
where instead of continuing southwest towards existing US 219, the
alignment travels south towards the Mason-Dixon Line. Alignment DU and
Alignment DA coincide again south of the Mason-Dixon Line.
Alignment DU-Shift
Like Alignment DA Shift, Alignment DU-Shift resulted from combining
Alignment DU with Alignment E-Shift to move the alignment further away
from residences along Old Salisbury Road. Alignment DU-Shift mimics the
alignment of Alignment DU from Meyersdale until south of the Mason-
Dixon Line, where the alignment is shifted eastward and away from Old
Salisbury Road.
Alignment E
Alignment E was suggested during former 2001 NEPA efforts to avoid
farmland in Pennsylvania and avoid residential areas along existing US
219. Alignment E starts at the southern end of the Meyersdale Bypass
and proceeds in a southerly direction along the face of Meadow
Mountain. At the Pennsylvania/Maryland border, Alignment E would extend
in a southwesterly direction, east of the existing US 219.
Alignment E-Shift
Alignment E-Shift was suggested by residents along Old Salisbury
Road during former 2001 NEPA efforts and involves moving Alignment E
further away from the residences on Old Salisbury Road. Alignment E-
Shift follows Alignment E, with the exception of a small shift in
Maryland, slightly eastward, away from the homes along Old Salisbury
Road. Alignment E does not directly impact the homes along Old
Salisbury Road; however, residents requested an evaluation of a
slightly eastward shift to move the alignment further from their homes.
The trade-off is that Alignment E-Shift bisects a farm field that is
only slightly impacted by Alignment E. This shifted section is the same
as the shifted section of Alignment DA-Shift and Alignment DU-Shift.
(c) Brief Summary of Expected Impacts
PennDOT and MDOT SHA have conducted scoping activities for the US
6219, Section 050 Transportation Improvement Project, such as secondary
source data collection, agency coordination, and public outreach, to
identify the types of environmental, cultural, and socio-economic
resources present in the Study Area and those likely to be impacted.
The following resources will be evaluated in the EIS and supporting
technical studies: cultural resources (archaeology and historic
architecture); hazardous materials; air quality; noise-sensitive areas;
natural resources (wildlife and habitat; threatened, endangered, and
special status species; waters of the US; water quality; groundwater;
floodplains; and farmlands); visual resources; Section 4(f) resources
(recreational facilities, historic properties, and State Game Lands);
and socioeconomics, land use, and right-of-way (communities and
community facilities, population and housing, economic resources, land
use and right-of-way, and Environmental Justice).
Based on an analysis completed to date using both the EPA's
EJScreen Tool and the Maryland EJScreen Mapper, EJ populations (low
income) are present within the study area. However, there are no
residential or non-residential EJ relocations anticipated.
The level of review of the identified resources for the EIS will be
commensurate with the anticipated effects to each resource from the
proposed project and will be governed by the statutory or regulatory
requirements protecting those resources. The analyses and evaluations
conducted for the EIS will identify the potential for effects,
avoidance measures, whether the anticipated effects would be adverse,
and mitigation measures for adverse effects. Additional information on
the expected impacts is provided in the Supplementary NOI document
available for review in the docket established for this project and on
the project website as noted in the ADDRESSES section. Comments on the
expected impacts to be analyzed in the DEIS are welcomed during the NOI
comment period.
Agencies, stakeholders, and the public are invited to comment on
the expected impacts. The environmental impact analysis will not begin
until the Purpose and Need, Range of Alternatives, and impact
categories are finalized based on public comment on this notice. The
identification of impacts may be revised due to the consideration of
public comments. See
[[Page 36358]]
the Supplementary NOI Document for a more detailed description of the
Summary of Expected Impacts. The studies to identify the impacts, as
well as the analyses of impacts from the retained alternatives, will be
presented in the Draft EIS.
(d) Anticipated Permits and Other Authorizations
At the request of the sponsor, the permitting schedule includes the
following timetable. A Clean Water Act Section 404 permit decision from
the US Army Corps of Engineers is anticipated on September 17, 2027.\1\
Other anticipated State authorizations include a Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection Section 401 Water Quality
Certification/Chapter 105 Standard Permit on September 17, 2027, and a
Maryland Department of the Environment Joint Federal/State Title 5
Permit Application for the Alteration of any Floodplain, Waterway,
Tidal or Nontidal Wetland in Maryland on September 17, 2027. Section 7
consultation under the Endangered Species Act is expected to be
concluded on June 27, 2023, and Section 106 consultation under the
National Historic Preservation Act is anticipated to be concluded on
December 13, 2023. See the Supplemental NOI Document for more detail on
the anticipated permits and other authorizations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 23 U.S.C. 139(d)(10) requires all authorization decisions
necessary for the construction of a major project be completed no
later than 90 days from the issuance of the ROD for the project.
This deadline may be extended where Federal law prohibits granting
the decision within this period of time, the project sponsor
requests a different timeline, or if the extension would facilitate
the completion of the environmental review and authorization process
for the project.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(e) Scoping and Public Review
Agency Scoping
FHWA, PennDOT, and MDOT SHA have conducted agency coordination to
inform the purpose and need and preliminary project alternatives,
scoping meeting, and other elements outlined in this document. An
Agency Coordination Plan was reviewed and agreed to by the Pennsylvania
and Maryland resource agencies, including the Cooperating and
Participating agencies. It is a living document that will be updated
through the EIS process. The resource agency meetings in Pennsylvania
are referred to as Agency Coordination Meetings (ACM) and the resource
agency meetings in Maryland are referred to as Interagency Review
Meeting (IRM). Since PennDOT is the lead agency for this project, the
agency meetings are typically held on the ACM's regularly scheduled
meeting dates. Some variation does occur and, in that case, the same
information is presented to both the ACM and the IRM. The list of
agency coordination meetings held begins after November 9, 2020, the
date Pennsylvania Transportation Secretary announced the commitment of
funds for this project.
April 28, 2021 (ACM-PA) and June 16, 2021 (IRM-MD)
US 219-050: Meyersdale, PA to Old Salisbury Rd., MD
reintroduction
Summary of the PEL Process
Current Project Status
Agency Involvement
September 9, 2021--Joint ACM and IRM
Process to Move from PEL to NEPA
ACM/IRM Role
Cooperating and Participating Agencies
Review Purpose and Need/Logical Termini
Review PEL Alternatives Studied
Agency PEL comments to be addressed in NEPA
November 16, 2021--Joint Scoping Meeting
Scoping Meeting Overview
Review Agency Questions from 9/22/21 Meeting
Virtual Scoping using Google Earth
Comparison of PennDOT & MDOT SHA NEPA Planning Processes
Present Technical Methodologies Matrix
Review Tentative Project Schedule
May 25, 2022 (ACM-PA) and June 15, 2022 (IRM-MD)
Recent Activities
Purpose and Need and Logical Termini Review
Proposed NEPA Study Alternatives
Public and Agency Coordination Plan Review
Review agency input received following from the November 16,
2021, Virtual Field Scoping Meeting
Review information to be presented at the June 2 Community
Advisory Committee (CAC) and June 23 Public Meeting
August 24, 2022--Joint ACM and IRM
Present results of the CAC meeting, Public Officials meeting,
Open House meeting and Virtual meeting
Reviewed secondary source impacts of Proposed NEPA Study
Alternatives
Public Review
PennDOT and MDOT SHA conducted public outreach activities during
the Pre-NOI phase of the US 6219, Section 050 Transportation
Improvement Project to present information and collect public input.
However, for purposes of documenting activities in this NOI, the start
date is November 9, 2020, which is when the Pennsylvania Transportation
Secretary announced the commitment of funds for this project.
To date, PennDOT and MDOT SHA reconvened the CAC that had been
previously established for this project and have held two CAC meetings.
The purpose of the CAC is to provide an additional method of
communication between PennDOT, MDOT SHA, FHWA, and the local
communities, and to provide input into project development. The CAC
serves as an advisory group to the Project Team to ensure that local
interests and concerns are considered in a timely manner. These
meetings allowed the CAC the opportunity to comment on any changes to
the project study area since the 2016 PEL document and the revised
Purpose and Need (November 2021), and to provide input on the
preliminary range of NEPA alternatives (June 2022). Additionally,
PennDOT and MDOT SHA offered a public officials meeting (June 23,
2022), an open house public meeting (June 23, 2022), and virtual
meeting (June 27, 2022). These meeting allowed public officials and
citizens the same opportunity to comment on the information presented
at the CAC meetings and served as the public scoping meeting. The
materials for these meetings are on the project website.
PennDOT and MDOT SHA will maintain and update the project website,
as identified in the ADDRESSES section of this notice, to direct the
public to the scoping meeting presentation and solicit public input.
Additionally, PennDOT and MDOT SHA will continue to conduct targeted
outreach to communities in and around the study area. A 30-day comment
period is being held in association with the NOI. There will be at
least three more public involvement opportunities for the US 6219,
Section 050 Transportation Improvement Project from Meyersdale,
Pennsylvania to Old Salisbury Road, Maryland. These will be public
meetings/hearings to receive input on the detailed alternatives (public
meeting), recommended preferred alternative and draft EIS (public
hearing), and selected alternative/conceptual mitigation (public
meeting).
(f) A Schedule for the Decision-Making Process
Following the issuance of this notice, FHWA, PennDOT, and MDOT SHA
will coordinate with the Participating and
[[Page 36359]]
Cooperating Agencies to develop study documentation and the Draft EIS.
The Draft EIS is anticipated to be issued in March 2024.
The combined Final EIS and Record of Decision is
anticipated in February 2025.
A Section 404 permit decision from the United States Army
Corps of Engineers is expected in September 2027.
See the Supplemental NOI Document for additional schedule details.
(g) Request for Identification of Potential Alternatives, Information,
and Analyses Relevant to the Proposed Action
To ensure that a full range of issues related to the study are
addressed and all potential issues are identified, FHWA invites
comments and suggestions from all interested parties. The project team
requests comments and suggestions on purpose and need, potential
alternatives and impacts, and the identification of any relevant
information, studies, or analyses of any kind concerning impacts
affecting the quality of the human environment. Any information
presented herein, including the preliminary purpose and need,
preliminary range of alternatives, and identification of impacts may be
revised after consideration of the comments. The purpose of this
request is to bring relevant comments, information, and analyses to the
agency's attention, as early in the process as possible, to enable the
agency to make maximum use of this information in decision making.
Comments may be submitted according to the instructions in the
ADDRESSES section of this Notice.
(h) Contact Information
FHWA: Jon Crum, Team Leader--Planning and Environment, Federal
Highway Administration, Pennsylvania Division Office, 30 North 3rd
Street, Suite 700, Harrisburg, PA 17101-1720; email address:
[email protected]; 717-221-3735.
PennDOT: Nicki Donahoe, PE, Project Manager, Pennsylvania
Department of Transportation, Engineering District 9-0, 1620 N Juniata
Street, Hollidaysburg, PA 16648; email: [email protected]; 814-317-1650.
MDOT SHA: Jeremy Beck, Senior Project Manager, Maryland Department
of Transportation, State Highway Administration, Office of Planning and
Preliminary Engineering, 707 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202;
email: [email protected]; 410-545-8518/800-548-5026.
Alicia E. Nolan,
Pennsylvania Division Administrator, Federal Highway Administration.
[FR Doc. 2023-11794 Filed 6-1-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-22-P