Environmental News Highlights – August 12, 2020

A roundup of headlines curated for state transportation environmental professionals

FEDERAL ACTION

House Passes Fiscal 2021 Transportation Funding Bill – Transport Topics

At EPA, coronavirus disrupts research and raises questions over air quality impact – McClatchy

Climate Hawks Urge Biden to Shun Obama-Era Energy Moderates – Bloomberg Green

U.S. Department of Transportation Announces Nearly $5 Million to 4 New University Transportation Centers – USDOT (Press release)

Harris, Ocasio-Cortez introduce environmental justice bill – The Hill

COVID-19

Is the Subway Risky? It May Be Safer Than You Think – New York Times

New York City sets up quarantine checkpoints as it toughens state travel restrictions – CNBC

Chicago-Area Transit Agency Bosses on COVID-19’s Impact on Transportation – WTTW-TV

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Podcast: AASHTO’s Tymon Talks National Infrastructure Needs – AASHTO Journal

AASHTO’s Tymon Named a ‘Top 25 Newsmaker’ by ENR – AASHTO Journal

What’s in store for the future of infrastructure? – Infrastructure

Road Revenue Plummets – New Ways To Fund Infrastructure Projects Needed – CleanTechnica

NVTA adopts $539M funding program to reduce congestion in the region – Fairfax County Times

FEMA Offers $500M in Resilience Grants. An Opportunity for Microgrids & DERs? – Microgrid Knowledge

Florida Gov. DeSantis: 50 transportation projects were accelerated saving 650 calendar days of construction during COVID-19 pandemic – WTLV-TV

AIR QUALITY

The EPA is taking a ‘first step’ toward addressing Chelsea’s air quality problems – Boston.com

Why climate change is about to make your bad commute worse – Washington Post

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Across America, Five Communities in Search of Environmental Justice – Great Lakes Now

NATURAL RESOURCES

With wildlife corridor plan, Virginia officials hope to reduce highway collisions with animals – Virginia Mercury

Finger Lakes Land Trust says toxic and harmful HABS most pressing threat to water quality – WHCU

New EPA guidelines on cost-benefits analyses are path to better forestry and much more – Crain’s Cleveland Business (Blog)

Judge Tosses Ranchers’ Challenge to Weakened Clean Water Rules – Courthouse News Service

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Historic preservation at Pima Air & Space is Absolutely Arizona – KGUN-TV

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Going Dutch? New bicycle signal is part of a study on bike infrastructure – KGW-TV

Residents complain crosswalks are consuming curb space in ‘parking deprived’ Stamford – Stamford Advocate

The Problem With ‘Mobility as a Service’ – CityLab

Micromobility Isn’t Dead – Bloomberg

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

TRB Webinar: Public Transit Ridership Trends – TRB (Webinar announcement)

Equity Analysis in Regional Transportation Planning Processes, Volume 2: Research Overview – TRB TCRP (Report availability)

TRB Webinar: How Women Fare in the Transit Industry – TRB (Webinar announcement)

Conference on Health and Active Transportation Circular – TRB

National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) soliciting FY2022 problem statement submittals by November 2, 2020 – TRB NCHRP

Rescheduled: Advancing Demand Management in Resort Towns and Communities – FHWA Office of Operations

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Proposed Information Collection Request; Comment Request; General Administrative Requirements for Assistance Programs – EPA (Notice)

Notice of Availability of One Updated Chapter in the Environmental Protection Agency’s Air Pollution Control Cost Manual – EPA (Notice of availability and public comment period)

Public Water System Supervision Program Approval for the State of Illinois – EPA (Notice of tentative approval)

Requests for Nominations: National and Governmental Advisory Committees to the U.S. Representative to the Commission for Environmental Cooperation – EPA (Notice of request for nominations)

Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Regulations for Listing Endangered and Threatened Species and Designating Critical Habitat – National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Proposed rule)

Notice of Indirect Cost Rates for the Damage Assessment, Remediation, and Restoration Program for Fiscal Year 2018 – National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Notice)

Caltrans Commits an Extra $100 million to Bicycle/Pedestrian Projects

The California Department of Transportation plan to invest an extra $100 million into active transportation projects aims to build more non-motorized links between neighboring communities that, for years, have been connected mainly by freeway exit ramps.

[Above photo courtesy of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.]

Some of the funds will be used for stand-alone active transportation projects, while some will go toward introducing walking and biking infrastructure into existing highway projects. Caltrans noted it already has identified 22 projects that now will have additional walking and biking improvements.

The plans “represents a critical step in our effort to build and enhance a transportation system for all users and make our communities more livable and vibrant places,” explained Toks Omishakin, director of Caltrans, in a statement.

Dave Snyder, executive director of the California Bike Coalition (CBC), added that the story behind this “active transportation” investment effort by Caltrans is just as significant as the $100 million the agency is offering to facilitate more walking and biking activity.

Caltrans “already had their set of projects for the next two years approved, and they were ready to go with their package,” Snyder noted. “Then this new director comes in and says, ‘I think we can do better for bicycling and walking.’”

Chris Clark, Caltrans media relations manager, said Snyder’s account is “100 percent accurate. In truth, Toks wanted more than $100 million.”

Photo courtesy of Caltrans

Omishakin, who was appointed director of Caltrans in September 2019 and is widely recognized as an active transportation advocate, told his staff to “value engineer” $4.2 billion of transportation projects in order to get an extra $100 million for bicycling and walking.

“That’s a very significant step,” CBC’s Snyder said.

The exact project identification process will take place at the local level, with each of California’s 12 districts holding public engagement sessions to help develop the District Active Transportation Plans and guide which projects will be constructed.

“They have made a strong statement, and I am impressed,” Snyder added. “What I can’t say yet is that they’re significantly changing the culture in the mid-levels of the agency, where important decisions get made. They have to be willing to prioritize the convenience of walking and biking over the convenience of highways.”

Caltrans’ Clark said he understands Snyder’s reticence, but he stressed that Omishakin has made it very clear “that active transportation is a top priority for the department.”

Other state departments of transportation are also increasing their support for more bicycle and pedestrian options in a number of ways.

The North Dakota Department of Transportation, for one, issued more than $2 million worth of Transportation Alternatives or TA grants to help fund a variety of urban and rural active transportation improvement projects across the state in July.

And in July 2019, the Ohio Department of Transportation noted that ongoing trends in safety, demographics, and demand spurred it to develop its first-ever policy plan for walking and biking – a plan the agency hopes to craft with public input gleaned from a series of stakeholder meetings and online surveys.

report issued by the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy in October 2019 highlighted that there is an overall monetary benefit from investing in projects that shifting short trips from driving to walking and biking via connected active-transportation infrastructure. The organization argued that funding such a “shift” could help generate a return on investment of $73 billion to $138 billion per year in the United States – if such active transportation infrastructure is connected to public transit systems.

However, the organization emphasized in a statement that shifting short car trips in both urban and rural areas to non-motorized ones “will take policy, behavior, and perception change, which can only occur if connected networks of safe and protected walking and bicycling facilities are built all across the nation.”

ETAP Podcast: Arizona DOT’s Steve Olmsted Discusses the Impact of COVID-19

One impact from COVID-19 pandemic being felt by state departments of transportation is the temporary cessation of “traditional” face-to-face public meetings to discuss upcoming transportation projects – with most of such gatherings going virtual.

In this podcast, Steve Olmsted – senior program manager at the Arizona Department of Transportation – discusses how his agency is handling the challenge of engaging the public and moving forward transportation projects during a time of social distancing.

“We call them virtual call-in public hearings,” he said on the podcast. “The meeting was presented by phone only and callers could verbally submit comments … with a court reporter transcribing the comments. The meeting was also simultaneously broadcast on free public radio stations – that is a novel thing for us and credit goes to our community relations team for that.”

To hear more about the “lessons learned” by the Arizona DOT from this process, click here.

Center for Environmental Excellence Updating PAL Database

The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Center for Environmental Excellence (CEE) is looking for state assistance in updating the contents of its Programmatic Agreement Library or PAL database.

[Above photo courtesy of Oregon DOT.]

The PAL database functions as a “central library” or “one-stop-shop” for programmatic agreements between state departments of transportation and/or the Federal Highway Administration in partnership with resource agencies that help streamline compliance with federal environmental laws such as the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the National Historic Preservation Act.

The PAL contains not only the programmatic agreement information; it contains a link to the full agreement and provides on-going access for practitioners to research agreements that meet specific requirements.

However, most of the agreements within the database are 10 years old, so the CEE is asking states to review the documents within the PAL to see if they are still valid, need to be updated, or removed entirely.

State agencies willing to help review those PAL documents can contact the CEE at environment@aashto.org.

Video: Volunteers Help Oregon DOT with Wetland Renewal

Volunteers with Klamath Wingwatchers recently helped the Oregon Department of Transportation resettle “sedges” from the Lost River Wetlands to the Lake Ewauna Trail in Klamath Falls.

“Sedges” are grass-like plants with triangular stems and inconspicuous flowers that typically grow in moist, wet ground. They are a major – often the dominant – plant of many wetland ecosystems throughout the world and their long, strong densely tangled stems and roots can help with erosion control. They also help improve water quality by acting as filters to remove pollutants and sediments; demonstrating the ability to remove a large percentage of nitrogen and significantly sequester metals such as copper.

Moving sedges to the Lake Ewauna Trail – Oregon DOT

Environmental News Highlights – August 5, 2020

A roundup of headlines curated for state transportation environmental professionals

FEDERAL ACTION

COVID-19 Relief Stalls, House Passes THUD Appropriations – AASHTO Journal

New DOJ Guidance Seeks to Limit Federal Enforcement under the Clean Water Act – National Law Review

House Passes New Water Resources Development Bill – Engineering News Record

Senate Democrats introduce environmental justice bill – The Hill

COVID-19

Israel’s ‘smart commuting’ shows what public transport could be like after COVID-19 – World Economic Forum

Transit-Based COVID-19 Monitoring Pilot Launched in Mission District – University of California San Francisco

MTA Announces Installation of Mask Dispensers Inside Buses for Customers to Easily Access Masks When Boarding – MTA (Press release)

G7 High-Level Transportation Principles in Response to COVID-19 – US Department of State

There Is Little Evidence That Mass Transit Poses a Risk of Coronavirus Outbreaks – Scientific American

COVID-19 AND TRANSPORTATION CONSTRUCTION Part 8: Lessons Learned – Getting Prepared for Possible Stimulus Funding – Roads and Bridges

COVID-19 and the Future of Transportation in California – JD Supra

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Caltrans Repaves Roadway with Recycled Plastic Bottles – Caltrans (Press release)

Pritzker administration announces $250 Million in infrastructure grants to Illinois counties, municipalities and townships – Illinois DOT (Press release)

AIR QUALITY

California’s Air Pollution Cops Are Eyeing Uber and Lyft – Wired

Los Angeles Accelerates Efforts to Electrify Its Infamous Traffic – Scientific American

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

‘Who’s this for?’: Without looking at Richmond’s racial disparities, some worry push for ‘open streets’ could widen inequities – Richmond Times-Dispatch

Pollution Is Killing Black Americans. This Community Fought Back. – New York Times

NATURAL RESOURCES

New port brings tourism hope and pollution fears to Alaskan town – Thomson Reuters Foundation

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Why Historic Preservation Needs a New Approach – CityLab

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Revel is shutting down its NYC moped service after another death – CBS News

New Orleans mayor releases updated plan on making French Quarter pedestrian-focused – WDSU-TV

Shared-use roads improve physical distancing, research shows – University of Alberta

From ‘smart mobility hubs’ to crowdsourcing traffic data, Columbus tests new transportation tech – Statescoop

SamTrans Launches Ride Now Taxi Subsidy Pilot Program – SamTrans (Press release)

Electrifying transportation will jumpstart the U.S. economy and protect public health – The Hill (Opinion)

Lyft seeks to ease return-to-work woe with custom ride-share benefit – HR Dive

Mineta Transportation Institute releases study showing carpooling for cash could help clear congestion – Mineta Transportation Institute

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

A Guide to Emergency Management at State Transportation Agencies – TRB

Developing a Guide to Emergency Management at State Transportation Agencies – TRB

Arizona DOT’s Approach to Virtual Public Involvement – AASHTO’s ETAP Podcast

U.S. Department of Transportation Announces Nearly $5 Million to 4 New University Transportation Centers – USDOT (Press Release)

Two AASHTO Management Courses to go Virtual– AASHTO

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Non-Traditional and Emerging Transportation Technology Council – USDOT (Request for comment)

Discretionary Funding Opportunity: Grants for Pilot Program for Expedited Project Delivery – FTA (Notice of funding opportunity)

Environmental Impact Statements; Availability, etc.: Jefferson National Forest; Monroe County, West Virginia; Giles and Montgomery County, Virginia; Mountain Valley Pipeline and Equitrans Expansion Project – EPA (Notice of intent to prepare a supplemental environmental impact statement)

Colorado DOT Works to Minimize Monsoon Impact on Roadways

As state departments of transportation along the East Coast sharpen their disaster plans ahead of the peak point of the 2020 hurricane season – with mid-Atlantic and Northeastern state DOTs already grappling with flooding and high-wind damage cause by tropical storm Isaias – the Colorado Department of Transportation is deploying strategies to combat the summer monsoon season, which typically runs from mid-July until mid-September.

[Above photo courtesy of Colorado DOT.]

Monsoons – a term coined in the 19th century by the British in India to describe the big seasonal winds and heavy rainfall coming from the Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea – can create flash flooding, mudslides, and rock falls that can severely damage affect Colorado roadways; causing major dilemmas for the traveling public and Colorado DOT maintenance crews.  

For example, a seven-day-long flood event in September 2013 left behind a path of destruction over an area of 2,380 square miles, causing $700 million in roadway damage. Colorado also endured a major rock fall event in 2016 during monsoon season that closed I-70 in the Glenwood Canyon for approximately two weeks. 

Those events encouraged state officials to take a deeper look into improving the resilience of Colorado infrastructure. As a result, the Colorado DOT and the Colorado Division Office of Federal Highway Administration worked to develop a plan to proactively identify and address vulnerabilities of the state’s roadway system to threats like flooding and landslides. 

As a part of that plan, the two agencies kick-started the I-70 Risk and Resilience or R&R pilot project August 2016; examining 450 miles of I-70 from the Utah border in the west to the Kansas border to identify the potential for future damage and roadway closures due to extreme weather-related events such as monsoons.

The R&R pilot project – completed in the fall 2017 – provided risk and resilience information for assets along I-70 and helped the Colorado DOT prioritize work at key locations where risk is high and resiliency is currently low. 

One of the areas identified as an important risk factor to road closures was culvert risk mitigation planning. Lizzie Kemp, Colorado DOT’s resiliency program manager, said that the study found flooding is the largest corridor risk when looking at user costs due to delays, with 80 percent of that risk due to minor culvert failure. 

She noted that Colorado has nearly 60,000 culverts that fall into this “minor” category – under 4 feet long – and so the agency first prioritized repairing and/or replacing such culverts found in poor condition along critical routes. To help with that prioritization effort, the agency uses a Geographical Information System or GIS-based Culvert Risk Assessment tool (created by Gerry Shisler for the Colorado DOT) that takes data available statewide and uses it to identify culverts, their condition, and whether they are located on “critical” roadways. 

The Colorado DOT found approximately 1,000 culverts across the state were in poor condition on critical routes and the agency than used that information to development and implement a three-step mitigation plan:

  • Step 1: Maintenance patrols complete an inspection of identified high-risk culverts and update the condition in the minor culvert database tool.
  • Step 2: Identify and document specific proposed mitigation actions for each culvert based on inspection, which could include replacing the culvert or making minor repairs.
  • Step 3: If replacement or repair is too costly or not possible, identify and document a specific operations plan which may include increased cleanout frequency and installation of technology to monitor hydraulic flows.

The Colorado DOT also found that minor culvert damage caused more than $94 million to roadway users from delays on the I-70 corridor alone; representing 80 percent of all user costs due to flooding.  As a result, the agency expects that preventing minor culvert failure during monsoon flooding events should save hundreds of millions in highway user delay costs across the state.

Caltrans Repaves Road with Completely Recycled Material

The California Department of Transportation recently repaved a three-lane, 1,000-foot long section of Highway 162 using recycled asphalt pavement and liquid plastic made with single-use, plastic bottles – the first time the department said it has paved a road using 100 percent recycled materials.

[Above photo courtesy of Caltrans.]

The agency noted that such “plastic” roadways in previous test projects were found to be more durable and last two to three times longer than traditional hot-mixed asphalt pavement.

Using new technology developed by TechniSoil Industrial of Redding, CA, a recycling train of equipment grinds up the top three inches of pavement and then mixes the grindings with a liquid plastic polymer binder that comes from a high amount of recycled, single-use bottles. The new asphalt material is then placed on the top surface of the roadway, eliminating the need for trucks to bring in outside material for a paving operation. By eliminating the need to haul asphalt from the outside, this process can also help cut greenhouse gas emissions.

“This pilot project underscores the department’s commitment to embracing innovative and cost-effective technologies while advancing sustainability and environmental protection efforts,” noted Toks Omishakin, director of Caltrans, in a statement.

“Using waste plastic that was otherwise destined for a landfill will not only reduce the cost of road repair and construction, but also increase the strength and durability of our roads,” added California State Senator Ben Hueso, who has advocated that Caltrans test this material. “California is uniquely positioned to transform the transportation industry once again by using this new technology that could revolutionize the way we look at recycled plastic.”

Caltrans noted currently has a cold in-place asphalt recycling program that uses large machines to remove three to six inches of roadway surface and grind up the asphalt while mixing it with a foamed binding agent made of bitumen, a leftover sludge from oil refining. However, that recycled material used in this process is only durable enough to serve as the roadway base – and trucks must deliver hot-mix asphalt from a production plant located miles away and place a final layer over that base.

That’s why Amarjeet Benipal, director of Caltrans’ District 3, said the new plastic roadway process is better for the environment versus the cold in-place program. “It keeps plastic bottles out of landfills and helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions and reliance on fossil fuels,” he noted.

Several state DOTs are testing a variety of different products to help make roadway pavements more durable and environmentally-friendly.

The Minnesota Department of Transportation, for example, began testing a new asphalt additive along with two private companies in late 2018 along a stretch of Interstate 94 outside Albertville, MN, near the MnROAD research facilities – an additive designed to help highway agencies and contractors use more recycled asphalt and less “virgin” products. That additives – called a “rejuvenator” and made by agricultural conglomerate Cargill and aggregate supplier Hardrives – is a substance that promises to reverse the effects of aging when the existing asphalt roadway is recycled back into the new road.

Environmental News Highlights – July 29, 2020

A roundup of headlines curated for state transportation environmental professionals

FEDERAL ACTION

AASHTO, Industry Letters Highlights Immediate Fiscal Need of State DOTs – AASHTO Journal

Five things Congress can do to save transit – Transportation for America (Blog)

Senate still quiet as House moves forward on infrastructure – Politico

21 state attorneys general sue over new Trump water rule – AP

Environmentalists threaten suit over push to transport liquefied natural gas by rail – The Hill

COVID-19

Transportation safety: A growing COVID-19 concern – Safety+Health

Creating COVID-19 Jobs Through Small Transportation Projects Endorsed – KXAS-TV

COVID-19 quarantines reduce seismic noise across the globe – CNET

NEPA

White House Updates Bedrock Environmental Rules, Setting Up Legal, Legislative Battle Over Energy, Infrastructure Permitting – National Law Review

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Caltrans Releases Freight Plan, Final Two Climate Reports – AASHTO Journal

Florida moves ahead with more electric-vehicle plans – Fresh Take Florida

Illinois River Infrastructure Updates Could Improve Basis – Ag Web

Amtrak Sustainability Report – Amtrak

MnDOT releases annual sustainability report – Minnesota DOT (Press release)

Rhode Island’s First-Ever Infrastructure Report Delivers Mixed Marks – Engineering News-Record

Will Clean Energy Projects Face Troubles That Have Bedeviled Pipelines? – New York Times (Opinion)

Recent gutting of regulations is inhibiting adequate review of renewable energy projects – The Hill (Opinion)

AIR QUALITY

A Surprise Surge in Air Pollution May Be Causing More Coronavirus Complications – Elemental

US says it will adopt global climate standards for aviation – KSAT

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

EPA Must Focus on Environmental Justice, Inspector General Says – Bloomberg Law

NATURAL RESOURCES

Closing a Concocted Clean Water Act Loophole – The Regulatory Review (Opinion)

Conservation Groups Support Lawsuit To Overturn “Waters of the United States” Rule – SGB Media

A community approach to improving water quality – News-Press (Opinion)

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Google Maps just made it way easier to rent a bike in 10 cities – Mashable

DC-area leaders approve transportation network to serve walkers, cyclists – WTOP Radio

Do bicycles slow down cars on low speed, low traffic roads? Latest research says ‘no’ – Portland State University

Teleworking Can Reduce Car Travel – But Not As Much As You May Think – KPBS

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

2021 Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting is Going Virtual – TRB

TRB Webinar: The Relationship between Bicycle Facilities and Increasing Bicycle Trips – TRB (Webinar announcement)

U.S. Transportation Secretary Chao Releases Pathways to the Future of Transportation – USDOT (Press release)

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants Rubber Tire Manufacturing Residual Risk and Technology Review – EPA (Final rule)

Air Plan Approval; WA; Interstate Transport Requirements for the 2010 Sulfur Dioxide National Ambient Air Quality Standards – EPA (Proposed rule)

Intent to Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for a Proposed Landfill Expansion within Wetlands that Drain to Burnetts Mill Creek at the Existing Regional Landfill off Merged U.S. Routes 58, 13, and 460 in Suffolk, Virginia – Army Corp of Engineers (Notice of intent)

Information Collection Request Number 2265.04; Proposed Information Collection Request; Comment Request; Information Collection Activities Associated With the SmartWay Transport Partnership – EPA (Notice)

New California EV Rule Will Phase Out Diesel Trucks by 2045

The iconic image of a smoke-belching big rig growling down the highway will slowly fade into the California sunset, replaced by a smog-free electric vehicle (EV) gently humming down the road starting in 2024.

[Above photo from WikiMedia Commons.]

The California Air Resources Board unanimously approved the Advanced Clean Trucks regulation that requires manufacturers to begin transitioning from diesel trucks and vans to electric zero-emission trucks in 2024. By 2035, at least 40 percent of truck manufacturers’ sales would have to be EV trucks, and every new medium-duty and heavy-duty truck sold in the state would be a zero-emission vehicle by 2045.

The goal of the ruling is to reduce air pollution and help California meet federal air quality standards, “especially in the Los Angeles region and the San Joaquin Valley – areas that suffer the highest levels of air pollution in the nation,” according to a CARB news release.

Although trucking interests were mixed in their opinions of the new rule, environmental groups hailed it as a historic moment. The Sierra Club California said the ruling is “a win for the environment, air quality and the economy” and predicted it will “ensure a steady supply of zero-emission trucks.”

Photo courtesy of Caltrans

Whether it will ensure a steady supply of funding for Caltrans remains to be seen.

Although California leads the nation in EV ownership, EV owners do not pay fuel taxes – a main funding source for Caltrans and other state DOTs across the country. A new registration fee for model year 2020 and newer EVs is only projected to bring in $10.9 million this year, according to the 2020-2021 Caltrans budget.

However, agency officials added that another new fee – an annual assessment of up to $175 per EV – should bring total EV fees up to $50 billion over the next 10 years, with proceeds from EV registration and annual fees helping to pay for infrastructure projects.

By contrast, the 2020-2021 combined diesel excise and sales tax revenues are expected to bring Caltrans $2.2 billion – a number that will surely drop as diesel trucks fade away.

A similar “action plan” is to support broader deployment of EVs is being developed by 15 states and the District of Columbia. It aims to ramp up electrification of medium- and heavy-duty vehicles, including large pickup trucks and vans, delivery trucks, box trucks, school and transit buses and long-haul delivery trucks. In a joint memorandum of understanding issued in mid-July, that coalition aims to ensure that 100 percent of all new medium- and heavy-duty vehicle sales be zero emission vehicles by 2050 with an interim target of 30 percent zero-emission vehicle sales in those vehicle categories of vehicles by 2030.