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3. Agenda Why the new Section 4(f) Regulation
4(f) reminders and things worth noting
Highlights of the Final Rule:
Approvals
Coordination
Documentation
Applicability
Exceptions
Update on the 6009 Implementation Study
4. Why a New 4(f) Regulation 1971 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe articulated a high standard of compliance
An avoidance alternative must be selected unless it causes:
“uniquely different problems” or
“costs or community disruption of extraordinary magnitude”
Protection of parkland is of paramount importance The leading United States Supreme Court case, commonly known as Overton Park, (Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402 (1971)), held that to find that an alternative (that avoids a 4(f) resource) is not "prudent" one must find that there are unique problems or unusual factors involved with the use of such alternatives. This means that the cost, social, economic and environmental impacts, and/or community disruption resulting from such alternatives reach extraordinary magnitudes. One can use a totality of these circumstances to establish that these unique problems, unusual factors or other impacts reach extraordinary magnitudes. FHWA has incorporated this decision into existing regulations found at 23 C.F.R. 771.135(a)(2). The leading United States Supreme Court case, commonly known as Overton Park, (Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402 (1971)), held that to find that an alternative (that avoids a 4(f) resource) is not "prudent" one must find that there are unique problems or unusual factors involved with the use of such alternatives. This means that the cost, social, economic and environmental impacts, and/or community disruption resulting from such alternatives reach extraordinary magnitudes. One can use a totality of these circumstances to establish that these unique problems, unusual factors or other impacts reach extraordinary magnitudes. FHWA has incorporated this decision into existing regulations found at 23 C.F.R. 771.135(a)(2).
5. “[T]he few green havens that are public parks were not to be lost unless there were truly unusual factors present in a particular case or the cost or community disruption resulting from alternative routes reached extraordinary magnitudes.” Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe 401 U.S. 402 (1971)
401 U.S. 402 (1971)
6. Courts reached varying conclusions on:
How various factors may be considered, and
What weight to assign the factors in deciding if avoidance is feasible and prudent
Some courts took an avoidance at all cost position or “black box” approach
Inconsistencies were addressed in SAFETEA-LU 6009(b) -- “Clarification of Existing Standards” Why a New 4(f) Regulation
7. Directed the Secretary to issue regulations that clarify the:
Factors to be considered and the standards to be applied …
… in determining the feasibility and prudence of avoidance alternatives, and
Application of legal standards to a variety of transportation programs and projects SAFETEA-LU Section 6009(b)
8. How the Rule was Developed Team Approach:
FHWA and FTA - HQ Program Office and Legal Counsel
Resource Center and Division Offices
Office of the Secretary
NPRM issued on July 27, 2006
Comment period closed September 25, 2006
37 responses received on the NPRM
FHWA & FTA Washington Office assembled team that included Resource Center, Division Office, & Office of Secretary representatives
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) issued in Federal Register on July 27, 2006
NPRM solicited comment on clarification of factors & standards, as well as on de minimis & other proposed changes
Comment period closed September 25, 2006
FHWA & FTA Washington Office assembled team that included Resource Center, Division Office, & Office of Secretary representatives
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) issued in Federal Register on July 27, 2006
NPRM solicited comment on clarification of factors & standards, as well as on de minimis & other proposed changes
Comment period closed September 25, 2006
9. Summary of Comments State/regional transportation agencies
Trade associations
AASHTO, ACEC, etc.
National/local advocacy groups
National Trust, Nature Conservancy, RTC, NPRA, NRDC, ED, etc.
Federal agencies (U.S. DOI & ACHP)
One SHPO
Private individuals 37 responses received on NPRM
17 by 20 state/regional transportation agencies
6 by trade associations (AASHTO, American Council of Engineering Companies, etc.)
9 by 11 national/local advocacy groups (National Trust for Historic Preservation, Nature Conservancy, Rails to Trails Conservancy, National Park & Recreation Association, NRDC, Environmental Defense, etc.)
2 from Federal agencies (U.S. DOI & ACHP)
1 from a SHPO
2 from private individuals37 responses received on NPRM
17 by 20 state/regional transportation agencies
6 by trade associations (AASHTO, American Council of Engineering Companies, etc.)
9 by 11 national/local advocacy groups (National Trust for Historic Preservation, Nature Conservancy, Rails to Trails Conservancy, National Park & Recreation Association, NRDC, Environmental Defense, etc.)
2 from Federal agencies (U.S. DOI & ACHP)
1 from a SHPO
2 from private individuals
10. Generally supportive
Specificity and flexibility on various aspects of 4(f)
Improve decisionmaking and expedite environmental review
Protects Section 4(f) properties
Some negative
Inconsistent with SAFETEA-LU
Confusing
May cause more litigation
Will not streamline, etc. NPRM Comments
11. All comments fully considered
Responses included in the preamble to the Final Rule
Coordination with ACHP, DOI and others
Reviewed by OST, OMB, and others
Final Rule published in the Federal Register on March 12, 2008
Effective April 11, 2008 How the Rule was Developed
12. Note Worthy Use is defined in 23 CFR 774.17 --
(1) When land is permanently incorporated into a transportation facility; or
(2) When there is a temporary occupancy of land that is adverse in terms of the statute’s preservation purpose as determined by the criteria in 774.13(d); or
(3) When there is a constructive use of a Section 4(f) property as determined by the criteria in 774.15
13. Constructive Use Added to 23 CFR 771 in 1991 and has withstood the test of time
Minor changes in 23 CFR 774.15
Allows consideration of likely future conditions absent the project
New example: noise impact on wildlife viewing
Additional direction on when vibration and ecological intrusions are a constructive use
14. Historic Properties
SHPO or THPO concurs in writing with Section 106 “no historic properties affected” or “no adverse effect”
Parks, Recreation Areas, Refuges
Use after mitigation does not adversely affect activities, features, and attributes of 4(f) property De Minimis Impacts
15. Final rule preamble stresses the importance of the preservation purpose of statute
Balancing of factors in least harm analysis… … preservation purpose must be given “proper weight” or “thumb on the scale” in favor of protecting the 4(f) properties
Also Worth Noting
16. Reminders Section 6009 amended 49 U.S.C. 303 (all DOT agencies) and 23 U.S.C. 138 (FHWA)
… to include de minimis impact approval
23 CFR 774 applies only to FHWA and FTA
FAA and FRA may adopt or use the rule and any other FHWA/FTA guidance
March 2005 Section 4(f) Policy Paper remains in effect
If a conflict arises - the regulation rules 49 USC 303(c) Approval of Programs and Projects.
-- Subject to subsection (d), the Secretary may approve a transportation program or project …
… only if --
1. there is no prudent and feasible alternative …
2. the program or project includes all possible planning to minimize harm … resulting from the use.
(d) De Minimis Impacts.
49 USC 303(c) Approval of Programs and Projects.
-- Subject to subsection (d), the Secretary may approve a transportation program or project …
… only if --
1. there is no prudent and feasible alternative …
2. the program or project includes all possible planning to minimize harm … resulting from the use.
(d) De Minimis Impacts.
17. Reminders December 2005 De Minimis Impact Guidance remains in effect:
Process and criteria for parks, recreation areas, refuges, and historic sites
All NEPA classes of action
Individual 4(f) property use not project use
Impact after mitigation and/or enhancement
Section 4(f) complete upon Division or Regional Administrator approval of the finding
18. 23 CFR 774 774.1 – Purpose [to implement Section 4(f)]
774.3 – Section 4(f) Approvals
774.5 – Coordination
774.7 – Documentation
774.9 – Timing
774.11 – Applicability
774.13 – Exceptions
774.15 – Constructive Use Determinations
774.17 – Definitions
19. 774.3 - Section 4(f) Approvals
20. De Minimis Impact Determinations No need for alternatives analysis
No need to document all possible planning to minimize harm as a separate step
You can mitigate down to a de minimis impact
22. Applying a Programmatic Evaluation Not available for FTA projects at this time
A simpler and faster process than completing an individual Section 4(f) evaluation
There are 5 programmatic evaluations:
Independent bikeway and walkway projects
Projects using historic bridges
Projects with very minor uses of parks/historic sites
Projects with a net benefit for 4(f) property
Apply each programmatic on its own terms
23. Individual Section 4(f) Evaluations
24. Step One for Individual Evaluations Search for alternatives that avoid all 4(f) use but do not cause other severe problems of a magnitude that substantially outweigh the importance of protecting 4(f) property
“Feasible” has the same meaning, but “prudent” has a new list of considerations
Employ the terminology from the regulation
The no-build alternative must be evaluated
25. “Feasible and Prudent Avoidance Alternative” Imprudence could based upon:
Failure to meet purpose and need
Unacceptable safety or operational problems
Severe impacts to non-4(f) resources after reasonable mitigation
Extraordinary additional cost
Unique problems
An accumulation of problems
26. Is the Avoidance Alternative Prudent?
27. Step One for Individual Evaluations Of note for the prudence test:
Must consider the views of officials with jurisdiction
Can consider impacts to non-4(f) resources, but must assume reasonable mitigation
The drawbacks of avoidance are cumulative
It’s a sliding scale
28. The Least Overall Harm Determination:
When applicable, apply this test in between steps one and two
It’s an additional balancing test that is weighted differently than the feasible and prudent test
The determination weighs the drawbacks and benefits of the “bad” alternatives against each other to select an alternative
The harm to 4(f) properties is weighed more heavily than other drawbacks
Step One for Individual Evaluations
29. The Least Overall Harm Factors Ability to mitigate the adverse impacts to each 4(f) property
Relative severity of harm, after reasonable mitigation, to the 4(f) qualities
Relative significance of each 4(f) property
Views of officials with jurisdiction
Degree that purpose and need is met
Magnitude of adverse impacts, after reasonable mitigation, to non-4(f) resources
Substantial differences in cost
30. Step Two for Individual Evaluations All Possible Planning to Minimize Harm:
Newly defined, located in 774.17
For the selected alternative only
“All reasonable measures identified … must be included in the project.”
No need to look at alternatives
Must consult with the officials with jurisdiction
Take credit for all of your work
31. For Projects Already in Development: Grace period over – 23 CFR 774 is in effect
You will need to add documentation
Pay special attention to:
Feasible and Prudent Avoidance Alternatives
Least overall harm
All possible planning to minimize harm
FHWA and FTA field and HQ offices available for assistance
32. Suggested Procedure
33. 774.3 – Section 4(f) Approvals Wrap-Up
You should be seeing fewer individual Section 4(f) evaluations in the future
Not needed if de minimis impacts
Not needed if a programmatic applies
The broken record on the administrative record: it’s your key to winning in court when your 4(f) approval is challenged
34. 774.5 – Coordination For Individual Evaluations:
45-day minimum comment period retained
May assume lack of objection if comments not received within 15 days of deadline
Coordinate with officials with jurisdiction (defined in 23 CFR 774.17 and on a later slide) and DOI (and HUD & DOA, as appropriate)
35. For Historic De Minimis Determinations:
SHPO or THPO (and ACHP if participating in Section 106 consultation) must concur in writing with finding of “no historic properties affected” or “no adverse effect”
Agency informs these officials of intent to make de minimis impact finding based on their written concurrence
Consider views of consulting parties 774.5 – Coordination
36. For Park/Recreation Area/Refuge De Minimis Determinations:
Public notice and opportunity for review & comment on the project effects to property
Agency informs officials with jurisdiction of intent to make de minimis impact finding
These officials concur in writing that property features, activities, or attributes are not adversely affected (after public opportunity for review & comment) 774.5 – Coordination
37. Application of programmatic evaluation:
Coordinate as specified in programmatic
When Federal encumbrance (lien or claim) exists:
Determine applicable agency’s position on project effect
Determine if other Federal requirements exist
774.5 – Coordination
38. Officials with Jurisdiction For Historic Sites not on Tribal Lands:
State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO)
For Historic Sites on Tribal Lands:
Tribal Historic Preservation Officer (THPO), or
… SHPO (if THPO has not assumed SHPO responsibilities) and designated tribal representative
For Parks/Recreation/Refuges:
Officials of the agency/agencies that own or administer the property and are empowered to represent the agency concerning the property
39. Officials with Jurisdiction For Historic Sites (including de minimis):
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (when involved in consultation)
For National Historic Landmarks:
National Park Service
For Wild and Scenic Rivers:
Officials of the Federal agency (or agencies) that own or administer applicable portions
Include State officials when State-administered
40. 774.7 – Documentation For Individual Evaluations:
Why avoidance is not feasible and prudent
All possible planning to minimize harm
Basis for determining least overall harm if no feasible and prudent avoidance alternative exists
Requirement for legal sufficiency review remains
41. 774.7 – Documentation For De Minimis Determinations:
Basis for deciding impacts qualify as de minimis after considering avoidance, minimization, mitigation, or enhancement measures
Coordination required in 774.5(b)
42. For Tiered EISs:
1st Tier – Preliminary Section 4(f) approval regarding whether impacts are de minimis or whether avoidance is feasible and prudent
2nd Tier – Finalize Section 4(f) approval 774.7 – Documentation
43. 774.9 – Timing Requirements for separate Section 4(f) approvals following CE, FONSI, or ROD
Changes or circumstances resulting in new or substantially increased Section 4(f) uses or degree of impact
Substantial reduction in minimization measures
Section 4(f) is newly found to apply to a property
Will not necessarily require new or supplemental NEPA document (23 CFR 771.130)
Discovery of archeological site during construction
Review process may be expedited
44. 774.11 – Applicability Traditional concepts: significance, multiple use concept, historic and archeological sites, and joint planning scenarios
New to the regulation:
Exemption of Interstate system
Wild & Scenic rivers
Reserved transportation right-of-way that temporarily functions as a Section 4(f) property
45. Certain historic transportation facilities
Archeological sites valuable for data recovery
Certain late designations
Certain temporary occupancies
Federal Lands’ park roads & parkways
Certain trails, paths, bikeways, sidewalks
Certain transportation enhancement and mitigation projects 774.13 – Exceptions
46. Implementation Study 6009(c) Evaluation Studies for Congress requires looking at Section 4(f) changes for:
Efficiencies that may result
Post-construction effectiveness of impact mitigation and avoidance commitments
Quantity of projects with impacts that are considered de minimis, including … … location, size, and cost of the projects
47. 6009(c) requires independent review by TRB committee of the study plan, methodology, and associated conclusions
Two reports to Congress, DOI and ACHP, and make available to the public
No sooner than August 10, 2008
No later than March 1, 2010 Implementation Study
48.
Questions?