Current through Register Vol. 18, September 20, 2024
(2) The following
actions meet the criteria for categorical exclusions and normally do not
require further approvals by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) when a
federal action occurs:
(a) activities which
do not involve or lead directly to construction, such as planning and research
activities; grants for training; engineering to define the elements of a
proposed action or alternatives so that social, economic, and environmental
effects can be assessed; and federal-aid system revisions which establish
classes of highways on the federal-aid highway system;
(b) approval of utility installations along
or across a transportation facility;
(c) construction of bicycle and pedestrian
lanes, paths, and facilities;
(d)
activities included in the state's highway safety plan under
23 U.S.C.
402;
(e) transfer of federal lands pursuant to
23 U.S.C.
107 (d) and/or
23 U.S.C.
317 when the land transfer is in support of
an action that is not otherwise subject to FHWA review under the National
Environmental Policy Act;
(f) the
installation of noise barriers or alterations to existing publicly owned
buildings to provide for noise reduction;
(g) landscaping;
(h) installation of fencing, signs, pavement
markings, small passenger shelters, traffic signals, and railroad warning
devices where no substantial land acquisition or traffic disruption will occur;
(i) the following actions for
transportation facilities damaged by an incident resulting in an emergency
declared by the Governor of Montana and concurred in by the Secretary, or a
disaster or emergency declared by the President pursuant to the Robert T.
Stafford Act (42 U.S.C.
5121) :
(i)
emergency repairs under 23
U.S.C. 125; and
(ii) the repair, reconstruction, restoration,
retrofitting, or replacement of any road, highway, bridge, tunnel, or transit
facility (such as a ferry dock or bus transfer station), including ancillary
transportation facilities (such as pedestrian/bicycle paths and bike lanes),
that is in operation or under construction when damaged and the action:
(A) occurs within the existing right-of-way
and in a manner that substantially conforms to the preexisting design,
function, and location as the original (which may include upgrades to meet
existing codes and standards as well as upgrades warranted to address
conditions that have changed since the original construction); and
(B) is commenced within a two-year period
beginning on the date of the declaration;
(j) acquisition of scenic easements;
(k) determination of payback under
23 U.S.C.
156 for property previously acquired with
federal-aid participation;
(l)
improvements to existing rest areas and truck weigh stations;
(m) ridesharing activities;
(n) bus and rail car rehabilitation;
(o) alterations to facilities or
vehicles in order to make them accessible for elderly and handicapped persons;
(p) program administration,
technical assistance activities, and operating assistance to transit
authorities to continue existing service or increase service to meet routine
changes in demand;
(q) the
purchase of vehicles by a federal transit fund applicant where the use of these
vehicles can be accommodated by existing facilities or by new facilities which
themselves are within a CE;
(r)
track and railbed maintenance and improvements when carried out within the
existing right-of-way;
(s)
purchase and installation of operating or maintenance equipment to be located
within the transit facility and with no significant impacts off the site;
(t) promulgation of rules,
regulations, and directives;
(u)
deployment of electronics, photonics, communications, or information processing
used singly or in combination, or as components of a fully integrated system,
to improve the efficiency or safety of a surface transportation system or to
enhance security or passenger convenience. Examples include, but are not
limited to, traffic control and detector devices, lane management systems,
electronic payment equipment, automatic vehicle locaters, automated passenger
counters, computer-aided dispatching systems, radio communications systems,
dynamic message signs, and security equipment including surveillance and
detection cameras on roadways and in transit facilities and on buses;
(v) projects, as defined in
23 U.S.C.
101, that would take place entirely within
the existing operational right-of-way. Existing operational right-of-way refers
to right-of-way that has been disturbed for an existing transportation facility
or is maintained for a transportation purpose. This area includes the features
associated with the physical footprint of the transportation facility
(including the roadway, bridges, interchanges, culverts, drainage, fixed
guideways, mitigation areas, etc.) and other areas maintained for
transportation purposes such as clear zone, traffic control signage,
landscaping, any rest areas with direct access to a controlled access highway,
areas maintained for safety and security of a transportation facility, parking
facilities with direct access to an existing transportation facility, transit
power substations, transit venting structures, and transit maintenance
facilities. Portions of the right-of-way that have not been disturbed or that
are not maintained for transportation purposes are not in the existing
operational right-of-way;
(w)
federally funded projects:
(i) that receive
less than $5,000,000 of federal funds; or
(ii) with a total estimated cost of not more
than $30,000,000 and federal funds comprising less than 15 percent of the total
estimated project cost;
(x) localized geotechnical and other
investigation to provide information for preliminary design and for
environmental analyses and permitting purposes, such as drilling test bores for
soil sampling; archeological investigations for archeology resources assessment
of similar survey; and wetland surveys;
(y) environmental restoration and pollution
abatement actions to minimize or mitigate the impacts of any existing
transportation facility (including retrofitting and construction of stormwater
treatment systems to meet federal and state requirements under sections 401 and
402 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (
33 U.S.C.
1341; 1342)) carried out to address water
pollution or environmental degradation;
(z) modernization of a highway by
resurfacing, restoration, rehabilitation, reconstruction, adding shoulders, or
adding auxiliary lanes (including parking, weaving, turning, and climbing
lanes), if the action meets the constraints in (4);
(aa) highway safety or traffic operations
improvement projects, including the installation of ramp metering control
devices and lighting, if the project meets the constraints in (4);
(ab) bridge rehabilitation, reconstruction,
or replacement, or the construction of grade separation to replace existing
at-grade railroad crossings, if the actions meet the constraints in (4);
(ac) purchase, construction,
replacement, or rehabilitation of ferry vessels (including improvements to
ferry vessel safety, navigation, and security systems) that would not require a
change in the function of the ferry terminals and can be accommodated by
existing facilities or by new facilities which themselves are within a CE; or
(ad) rehabilitation or
reconstruction of existing ferry facilities that occupy substantially the same
geographic footprint, do not result in a change in their functional use, and do
not result in a substantial increase in the existing facility's capacity.
Example actions include work on pedestrian and vehicle transfer structures and
associated utilities, buildings, and terminals.
(3) Additional actions which meet the
criteria for a CE may be designated as CEs only after the FHWA approval when a
federal action occurs. Documentation must be submitted to FHWA for approval
when a federal action occurs which demonstrates that the specific conditions or
criteria for these CEs are satisfied and that significant environmental effects
will not result. Examples of such actions include but are not limited to:
(a) transportation corridor fringe parking
facilities;
(b) construction of new
truck weigh stations or rest areas;
(c) approvals for disposal of excess
right-of-way or for joint or limited use of right-of-way, where the proposed
use does not have significant adverse impacts;
(d) approvals for changes in access
control;
(e) construction of new
bus storage and maintenance facilities in areas used predominantly for
industrial or transportation purposes where such construction is not
inconsistent with existing zoning and located on or near a street with adequate
capacity to handle anticipated bus and support vehicle traffic;
(f) rehabilitation or reconstruction of
existing rail and bus buildings and ancillary facilities where only minor
amounts of additional land are required and there is not a substantial increase
in the number of users;
(g)
construction of bus transfer facilities (an open area consisting of passenger
shelters, boarding areas, kiosks and related street improvements) when located
in a commercial area or other high activity center in which there is adequate
street capacity for projected bus traffic;
(h) construction of rail storage and
maintenance facilities in areas used predominantly for industrial or
transportation purposes where such construction is not inconsistent with
existing zoning and where there is no significant noise impact on the
surrounding community;
(i)
acquisition of land for hardship or protective purposes. Hardship and
protective buying will be permitted only for a particular parcel or a limited
number of parcels. These types of land acquisition qualify for a CE only where
the acquisition will not limit the evaluation of alternatives, including shifts
in alignment for planned construction projects, which may be required in the
MEPA process. No project development on such land may proceed until the MEPA
process has been completed:
(i) Hardship
acquisition is early acquisition of property by the applicant at the property
owner's request to alleviate particular hardship to the owner, in contrast to
others, because of an inability to sell his property. This is justified when
the property owner can document on the basis of health, safety, or financial
reasons that remaining in the property poses an undue hardship compared to
others;
(ii) Protective
acquisition is done to prevent imminent development of a parcel which may be
needed for a proposed transportation corridor or site. Documentation must
clearly demonstrate that development of the land would preclude future
transportation use and that such development is imminent. Advance acquisition
is not permitted for the sole purpose of reducing the cost of property for a
proposed project; or
(j) actions described in (2)(z), (2)(aa), and
(2)(ab) that do not meet the constraints in (4).
(4) Actions described in (2)(z), (2)(aa), and
(2)(ab) may not be processed as CEs under (2) if they involve:
(a) an acquisition of more than a minor
amount of right-of-way or that would result in any residential or
nonresidential displacements;
(b)
an action that does not meet the terms and conditions of a U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers nationwide or general permit under section 404 of the Clean Water Act
and/or section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899;
(c) a finding of ''adverse effect'' to
historic properties under the National Historic Preservation Act, the use of a
resource protected under 23
U.S.C. 138 or
49 U.S.C.
303 (section 4(f)) except for actions
resulting in de minimis impacts, or a finding of ''may affect, likely to
adversely affect'' threatened or endangered species or critical habitat under
the Endangered Species Act;
(d)
construction of temporary access, or the closure of existing road, bridge, or
ramps, that would result in major traffic disruptions;
(e) changes in access control; or
(f) a floodplain encroachment other than
functionally dependent uses (e.g., bridges, wetlands) or actions that
facilitate open space use (e.g., recreational trails, bicycle and pedestrian
paths); or construction activities in, across, or adjacent to a river component
designated or proposed for inclusion in the National System of Wild and Scenic
Rivers.
(5) The
preparation of an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement
will be required if the project involves any of the following extraordinary
circumstances:
(a) significant impact on
publicly owned parklands, recreation areas, wildlife or waterfowl refuges, or
any significant historic site;
(b)
significant impact on wetlands or prime farmlands;
(c) significant impact on the human
environment that may result from large acquisitions of right-of-way,
relocations of persons or businesses, changes in traffic patterns, changes in
grade, or other types of changes;
(d) significant impact on air, noise, or
water quality.;
(e) substantial
controversy on environmental grounds; or
(f) any other kind of significant
environmental impact.
Sec.
75-1-103,
75-1-201, MCA; IMP, Sec.
75-1-103,
75-1-201,
MCA;