Environmental News Highlights – August 16, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

Your City’s Guide To Going Electric – National League of Cities

Is it cheaper to refuel your EV battery or gas tank? We did the math in all 50 states. – Washington Post

Government Can’t Be Agile? Don’t Tell Pennsylvania’s Bridge-Fixers. – Governing (commentary)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Michigan Launches Grant Program to Promote Electric Boats on Great Lakes – The Maritime Executive

Pittsburgh region’s locks and dams, crucial to commodity transportation, struggle for funding and recognition – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

DelDOT Receives Grant from Energize Delaware – Delaware DOT (media release)

Georgia Takes Lead in Preparations for Hydrogen Fueling Stations – Georgia Governor’s Office (media release)

 

AIR QUALITY

What is carbon accounting? – Whatis.com

EPA slaps Sinister Diesel with $1M emissions fine amid crackdown – Green Car Reports

Google is helping pilots route flights to create fewer contrails, which is better for the climate – The Verge

EPA approves Washington’s Smoke Management Plan to allow strategic use of prescribed fires to manage forest health and protect air quality – EPA (media release)

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Rulemaking process underway for new environmental justice areas – Minnesota Public Radio

NATURAL RESOURCES

Ethan Hawke Stars in Latest TxDOT Anti-Littering Video – AASHTO Journal

The future of East Coast wind power could ride on this Jersey beach town – Washington Post

Ivy, dandelions and other common wildflowers are often seen as weeds – but they’re a crucial resource for pollinating insects – The Conversation

 

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Seattle to Build Landmark Maritime Innovation Center – Cruise Industry News



Nickelback’s hometown removes iconic signs celebrating Alberta’s biggest rock stars – CBC News

 

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Creating Safe Communities and Options for Walk-Bike-Ride Transportation in New Jersey – New Jersey Future

Manhattan Beach Council directs MBPD: no more e-bike warnings – Easy Reader &
Peninsula Magazine

Baltimore Water Trail Network Brings New Access For Paddle Sports – Chesapeake Bay Magazine

Law Requiring Searchable Citywide Bike Map Passes in NYC City Council – BK Reader

E-bike programs and other green transit efforts are sprouting throughout California. Will they catch on? – Los Angeles Times

Houston’s Vision Zero report for 2022 shows traffic fatalities were down, but not by much – Houston Public Media

Hanford active transportation plan looking to build on walking, biking infrastructure – Hanford Sentinel

Here are the benefits of non-auto modes of transportation – KHON-TV

Maine expanding ‘Rail Trail’ network near New Hampshire border – AP

The Loop Comes Full Circle – D Magazine

 

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

The 2023 West Virginia Bridge Design & Build ContestAASHTO (special report)

Highway Safety Behavioral Strategies for Rural and Tribal Areas: A Guide – BTSCRP

Highway Safety Behavioral Strategies for Rural Areas – BTSCRP

Address Climate Change and Breathe Easier with Research on Transportation Emissions – TRB

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

FY 2023 Competitive Funding Opportunity: Pilot Program for Transit- Oriented Development Planning – FTA (Notice)

Notice of Final Federal Agency Action on the Rocky Flats NWR Trails and Rocky Mountain Greenway Connections Project in Colorado FHWA (Notice of limitation on claims for judicial review of actions by FHWA and other Federal agencies)

Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) Program Compliance; Notification of Webinar – EPA (Notification of webinar)

Clean Water Act Section 404 Tribal and State Program Regulation – EPA (Proposed rule)

Revisions to the Air Emissions Reporting Requirements – (EPA (Proposed rule)

Air Plan Approval; CA; San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District; Removal of Excess Emissions Provisions – EPA (Proposed rule)

Air Plan Approval; Washington; Southwest Clean Air Agency; Emission Standards and Controls for Sources Emitting Gasoline Vapors EPA (Proposed rule)

Notice of Intent To Amend the Resource Management Plan for the Proposed GridLiance West Core Upgrades Transmission Line Project in Nye and Clark Counties, Nevada and Prepare an Associated Environmental Impact Statement – Bureau of Land Management (Notice)

Evaluation of New Jersey Coastal Management Program; Notice of Public Meeting; Request for Comments – NOAA (Notice)



Board Meeting (8/29/23) – U.S. Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board (Notice)



Board Meeting (8/30/23) – U.S. Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board (Notice)

 

ETAP Podcast: The Lehigh Valley Planning Commission

The latest episode of the Environmental Technical Assistance Program or ETAP podcast features Becky Bradley (above at left), executive director of the Lehigh Valley Planning Commission or LVPC, to highlight her organization’s efforts spearheading environmentally sound and resilient transportation infrastructure projects in the Lehigh Valley region on eastern Pennsylvania.

[Above photo via the LVPC]

The ETAP podcast – an AASHTO technical service program for state departments of transportation– explores a wide array of environmental topics that affect transportation and infrastructure programs.

In this episode, Bradley details how LPVC – Metropolitan Planning Organization or MPO, originally formed in 1961 – coordinates transportation infrastructure projects with local community leaders and businesses. Their goal is to attain economic benefits and enhance the quality of life for the region while simultaneously protecting public health and the environment. To achieve this objective, LVPC offers a variety of resources and services – including technical assistance, research programs, and publications covering topics such as mapping through Geographic Information Systems or GIS, fitting local ordinances within comprehensive transportation plans, and much more. 

To listen to the full podcast, click here.

KYTC Transforms Fallen Trees into Valuable Mulch

A recent video from the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet illustrates how it worked with the Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet and other state agencies on a “debris-to-mulch” project that turned thousands of trees downed by major flooding across Eastern Kentucky earlier this year into beneficial mulch.

[Above image via the KYTC]

For the first few weeks after the flooding, KYTC crews focused on removed debris while re-opening several roads and bridges – repairing and replacing damaged bridges with temporary structures.

That work removed more than 403,000 tons of debris from waterways and rights-of-way in Eastern Kentucky as part of the agency’s flood cleanup efforts. The initiative eliminated debris from 48 damaged vehicles while clearing 615 miles of streams and creeks.

Nearly 100,000 tons of wood debris were sent to one of two Kentucky mulching facilities for re-use as part of this program, KYTC noted in the video.

That wood debris ultimately produced about 160,000 cubic yards of mulch; equivalent to almost 2.1 million bags of the mulch product typically sold in home improvement stores, the agency said.

Environmental News Highlights – August 9, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

Joint Office of Energy and Transportation establishes new EV working group -Green Car Congress

Biden Administration Split over Ethanol’s Role in Aviation Fuel Subsidy Program –Reuters

In national race to build EV chargers, a few states emerge as big winners -Route Fifty

6 months after the East Palestine train derailment, Congress is deadlocked on new rules for safety –AP

Tesla Seeks Nearly $100 Million In Gov’t Funds To Create California-Texas Electric Semi Charging Network –Carscoops

 

COVID-19

Downtown Travel Has Not Recovered from COVID-19, Data Shows -Government Technology

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Love Field Airport harnessing wind gusts from planes to make energy -KERA Radio

This Development Wants Residents to Ditch Their Cars. In Phoenix. –Bloomberg

Charging infrastructure ‘biggest bump in the road’ for electric vehicle take-up –Reuters

AI-Assisted Mapmaking: The Future of Cartography and Geographic Visualization –CityLife

Well-attended meeting sparks extended comment period on Humboldt Bay offshore wind terminal plans -Times-Standard

North America’s First Solar Panel Recycling Plant Opens in Yuma, Arizona -EnergyPortal.eu

 

AIR QUALITY

Buttigieg says US ‘green corridors’ initiative is key to cutting shipping industry emissions –AP



Illinois transit bill includes reduced fares, requires zero-emission busesWMAQ-TV

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

Talking Geotechnical Investigations with OKDOT -AASHTO re:source Q & A Podcast

EPA’s National Plastics Plan Flouts Sea Pollution, Chemical Use -Bloomberg Law

Gowanus Canal Visit Offers an Educational Opportunity to Environmental Science and Policy Student -Columbia University

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Some U.S. national parks are trying to go carbon-free. What does that mean for visitors? -National Geographic

Say no to pesticides, yes to goats: Austin nonprofit uses goats to manage invasive plants along Lady Bird Lake Trail -Daily Texan

One of America’s most famous streets is getting its biggest makeover since 1974 -Washington Post (opinion)

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

New utility bridge could impact Harrisburg cyclists and pedestrians for the better -WPMT-TV

Why San Francisco. bicyclists are divided over a new bikeway in the Mission District -San Francisco Chronicle

Proposed bike highways could make biking easier, more accessible across Metro Vancouver (BC)Vancouver Sun


North American cities need to push for secure bicycle parking -Momentum (commentary)

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Integrating Resilience Concepts and Strategies into Transportation Planning: A Guide –NCHRP

Telework Transportation Research in Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic –TRB

Webinar to focus on active transportation planning in communities -Pennsylvania State University

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

National Environmental Policy Act Implementing Regulations Revisions Phase 2Council on Environmental Quality (Notice of proposed rulemaking)

FY 2023 Emergency Relief Grants for Public Transportation Systems Affected by Major Declared Disasters in Calendar Years 2017, 2020, 2021, and 2022 -FTA (Notice of re-opening application submissions and revised requirements)

Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) Program: Standards for 2023–2025 and Other Changes; Correction -EPA (Final rule; correction)

Notice of Adoption of Policy Statement on Climate Change and Historic Preservation -Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (Notice)

Water Resources Development Act 2020, Section 128 Harmful Algal Bloom Demonstration Program Draft Environmental Assessment -Army Corps of Engineers (Notice of availability; request for comment)

Extension of Comment Period for Notice of Intent To Prepare a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the Matagorda Ship Channel Improvement Project, Calhoun and Matagorda Counties, TX -Army Corps of Engineers (Notice)

Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Assessment for Commercial Wind Lease Issuance and Site Assessment Activities on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf Offshore Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia -Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (Notice; request for comments)

Request for Information: Center for Maritime Innovation -MARAD (Notice)

Request for Information: National Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean Economy -Office of Science and Technology Policy (Notice; extension of comment deadline)

National Navigation Safety Advisory Committee; Vacancies -Coast Guard (Request for applications)

 

Georgia DOT’s Prescribed Burns Help Pitcher Plant

A recent video posted by the Georgia Department of Transportation details how the agency is helping “rejuvenate” a rare species of vegetation commonly known as the “​Pitcher Plant” along State Route 177 on the way to Okefenokee Swamp Park by using “prescribed burns.”

[Above photo by Georgia DOT]

The closely monitored burn occurred in 2022 during the winter on roadside right-of-way and mimics nature’s own cycle of rejuvenation. It’s also the first time Georgia DOT has used a prescribed burn to manage vegetation in this way.

The agency noted that such prescribed burns are conducted under strict safety regulations and in partnership with the Georgia Forestry Commission and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.

The Georgia DOT added in a blog post that the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge in Sou​theast Georgia is a vast, mysterious wilderness of bogs, forests and swampy prairies, home to wild species that evoke fauna and flora of primeval times. Rare carnivorous plants like the Sarracenia, or “Pitcher Plant,” entrap insects and use digestive enzymes to dissolve prey.

[Editor’s note: A 2021 episode of the Environmental Technical Assistance Program or ETAP Podcast featured Matthew Quirey – a  landscape design and research fellow with The Ray – discussing how roadside landscapes, more often termed the “right-of-way,” are now being viewed as “habitat assets” instead of maintenance burdens among state departments of transportation.]

Okefenokee – a 438,000-acre wetland that is the largest blackwater wetland in North America – draws around 100,000 visitors from around the globe each year.

To reach its entrance, visitors must travel along a four-mile stretch of SR 177 that is becoming a Georgia DOT living laboratory for innovative vegetative management practices designed to protect plants in the environmentally sensitive area while simultaneously ensuring public safety.

The agency has been involved in a number of plant and pollinator support efforts in recent years.

For example, in 2021, Georgia DOT the Georgia Association of Conservation Districts or GACD installed 15 pollinator habitat sites in designated locations as part of a joint effort to educate state residents about the important role “pollinators” such as bees, butterflies, and other insects play in Georgia’s agricultural sector.

WSDOT Salutes 79-Year-Old Adopt A Highway Volunteer

The Washington Department of Transportation recently devoted a blog post to 79-year-old Paul Hampton, who has been cleaning up debris along state roadways as an Adopt-A-Highway volunteer for the last 27 years.

[Above photo by WSDOT]

Hampton originally decided to volunteer his time to pick up litter as part of the Adopt-A-Highway program in his community in 1996 – joining a volunteer litter cleanup crew organized by the Forks Elks Lodge.

Paul Hampton, second from left. Photo by WSDOT.

Hampton moved to Washington State from Florida in 1980 and began getting involved in his local Elks Lodge, attracted to the group’s vision for ongoing community service.

He soon learned about WSDOT’s Adopt-A-Highway program and decided the Forks Elks Lodge needed to adopt a local stretch of highway in town to help keep their little corner of the Evergreen State clean and welcoming to visitors.

“It started as a group of people picking up trash along US 101 in town,” Hampton explained. “Then the local hospital thought it was a good idea to adopt a small stretch too.”

The community soon rallied around the idea of being part of something bigger and committed to routine litter cleanups. Before Hampton knew it, he said people from all across the Olympic Peninsula recognized the value in picking up litter.

“A group of women decided to participate in the Adopt-A-Highway program, so we had a friendly competition going with them too,” he pointed out.

Why do all this? Hampton explained that it’s part of the creed he lives by as a retired Navy veteran and from working for the Washington State Department of Natural Resources – “help people and make the world a better place,” he said.

WSDOT noted that in 2022 alone, agency crews, partners, and volunteers collected 1,402 tons of trash along state highway rights of way – roughly 152,500 bags of litter.

As of July 20, 202023, WSDOT said that – again, along with its partners and volunteers – it has collected 1,800 tons of trash and expects to surpass the total amount of trash gathered in 2022.

Environmental News Highlights – August 2, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

Governors Discuss Infrastructure Issues at Annual Meeting -AASHTO Journal

Federal agencies plan to spend $770M ramping up their electric vehicle usage this year -Nextgov/FCW

Rural States, Groups Tell EPA of Emissions Proposal Concerns -Transport Topics

Americans prefer cars to walking, other transportation –NewsNation

Infrastructure remains a top priority for cities -Route Fifty

Transportation Engineer’s Solution to America’s Worst Bottleneck -Wall Street Journal (video)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Illinois DOT Staff Rally for Town’s Tornado Recovery Effort -AASHTO Journal

Huge amounts of hazardous materials pass through Midwest every day. How safe are residents? -Indianapolis Star

Purdue University Engineers Develop Pothole Detection Sensors -WWBL Radio


After East Palestine Derailment, Are Railroads Any Safer? -NPR’s Consider This

A New Class of Heavy-Duty Vehicle Goes Electric in Hawaii -Government Technology

Sensory Overload And The Case For Quieter Airports -Runway Girl Network (op-ed)

 

AIR QUALITY

People are using Google Maps to cut down tailpipe pollution -The Verge

Sacramento Region Greenhouse Gas Reduction Pilot Program – Sacramento Area Council of Governments (media release)

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Poor infrastructure in Houston’s Black neighborhoods has caused a disproportionate number of pedestrian crashes, new study says -Houston Public Media

Agencies propose 3 new wildlife bridges in northern Arizona to reduce accidents -KTVK/KPHO-TV

33 Years of the ADA – Connecting New Yorkers One Subway Station at a Time -Mass Transit (commentary)

Amtrak Invests $770 Million to Advance Accessibility Projects Across the Country – Amtrak (media release)

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

Mass. denies Pilgrim nuclear plant wastewater discharge plan -WBTS-TV

Illegal firewood collectors fined -New South Wales Government

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Could historic preservation be a tool for environmental justice? Richmond to find out. -Greater Greater Washington

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Lyft, the Largest Bikeshare Operator in North America, Wants Out of the Business –Vice

Granbury hopeful for grant to improve transportation, recreation -Hood County News

Old Railroad Infrastructure Removed as Work on Humboldt Bay Trail South Continues in California -Lost Coast Outpost

San Antonio grapples with alarming rate of pedestrian involved accidents -WOAI-TV

Miami Beach puzzles over how bikes and pedestrians can share a path -Miami Today

As e-bikes proliferate, so do deadly fires blamed on exploding lithium-ion batteries –AP

 

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Assessing Air Pollution Dispersion Models for Emissions Regulation –NCHRP

Recycled Plastics in Infrastructure: Current Practices, Understanding, and Opportunities –TRB

TRB Webinar: Climate-Resilient, Low-Volume Road Design and Management –TRB

Using Traffic Signals to Decongest Cities May Be Simpler Than We Thought -National Institute for Congestion Reduction (webinar)

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Notice of Intent To Prepare an Integrated Feasibility Report and Environmental Impact Statement for the San Francisco Waterfront Coastal Flood Study, San Francisco County, California -Army Corps of Engineers (Notice)

Sunshine Act Meetings; Agency Holding the Meetings: Mississippi River Commission -Army Corps of Engineers (Notice)

Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Revisions to the California State Implementation Plan; San Francisco Bay Area -EPA (Proposed rule)


Federal ‘‘Good Neighbor Plan’’ for the 2015 Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards; Response to Judicial Stays of SIP Disapproval Action for Certain States -EPA (Interim final rule; request for comment)

Women of Trucking Advisory Board (WOTAB); Notice of Public Meeting -Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (Notice)

National Environmental Policy Act Implementing Regulations Revisions Phase 2 -Council on Environmental Quality (Notice of proposed rulemaking)

Preservation Technology and Training Board Notice of Public Meeting -National Park Service (Notice)

Public Meeting of the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Work Group -Bureau of Reclamation (Notice)

 

Letter Outlines AASHTO, State DOT Equity Efforts

A comment letter sent to the U.S. Department of Transportation on June 29 outlines how the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials and its members are working to advance equity, diversity, and inclusion or DEI protocols within the transportation industry – and recommended ways USDOT could support such DEI-focused efforts now and in the future.

[Above photo by AASHTO]

“In order to improve safety, mobility, and access for everyone, we are promoting diversity in all AASHTO activities and collaborating with traditional and non-traditional partners to support equity and social justice objectives,” AASHTO noted in its letter.

The foundation of the organization’s ongoing DEI initiatives is an “Equity Resolution” passed unanimously by the AASHTO Board of Directors in November 2020. That resolution affirms AASHTO’s commitment to anti-discrimination in the delivery of all programs and services. That “affirmation” included improving contracting and procurement practices to assist disadvantaged business enterprises or DBEs, focusing efforts on recruitment, promotion, and training so that the state departments of transportation can “better reflect the communities they serve” while also ensuring establishment of inclusive workplaces.

To implement the Equity Resolution, AASHTO developed a multimodal, multidisciplinary Equity Task Force that has provided equity resources and information to state DOT executive leadership, developed partnerships with equity stakeholders, and obtained funding for equity research.

In 2023, the Task Force focused on improving internal and external state DOT equity communications; helping state DOTs develop diverse, inclusive, and equitable workforces, while also enhancing public engagement to improve transportation decision-making. The Task Force developed an Equity Communications Work Group – consisting of equity and communications staff within the state DOTs – to assist states with internal and external equity communications and messaging.

That Work Group is developing the Task Force’s web presence, collecting successful practices for making intentional choices to use inclusive communications in language, style guides, images and media, and then developing model language and templates for strategic internal and external agency communications. Additionally, the Task Force is working with the AASHTO Subcommittee on Transportation Workforce Management Subcommittee and the AASHTO Committee on Human Resources to collect and share successful strategies to improve recruitment, hiring, promotion, training, leadership development and retention of—and support for—a workforce at all levels that reflect the communities served by the state DOTs.

AASHTO noted in its letter that all of the information being collected will be integrated into a new Transportation Workforce Management Playbook – a publication currently under development – to ensure that equity is a key component of transportation workforce planning and management. The Task Force will also partner with the AASHTO Committees on Planning, Environment, Civil Rights, and others, as well as external stakeholders, to collect and compile effective public engagement practices in underserved and marginalized communities. That includes practices related to developing ongoing community and stakeholder relationships, as well as developing community partnering agreements for all stages of a particular transportation project or program.

The organization also noted in its letter that USDOT’s “Power of Community” focus area directly aligns with the AASHTO Equity Resolution, and also can help advance equity at the local level. AASHTO also recommended that USDOT consider ways to support broader community engagement on transportation related priorities and needs – particularly on long-term relationship building and partnerships, especially in underserved and marginalized communities.

“Such an expanded approach will support increased and more active participation of underserved and marginalized populations, which may not have the tools, resources and/or ability to have a voice in decisions that impact their communities,” AASHTO said. “USDOT should further support these efforts through increased funding flexibility for long-term public community engagement and partnerships.”

That includes tapping into specific equity-focused datasets, said AASHTO, such as United for ALICE – short for “Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed” – data, which looks at employed community members that are unable to afford housing, child care, food, transportation, health care and technology.

AASHTO also recommended that USDOT explore using “County Health Rankings and Roadmaps” datasets, which support community-based efforts to improve health equity. That group’s 2023 National Findings Report explores several measures related to civic infrastructure and census participation across the country. This report could be used to enhance USDOT’s Equitable Transportation Community or ETC Explorer Tool as well, AASHTO said.

Finally, the Washington State Department of Health created the Washington Environmental Health Disparities or EHD Map Tool; an interactive mapping program that compares demographic and ecological data in communities across the state to identify environmental health disparities.

That map program provides insight into where public investments may be prioritized to mitigate environmental health impacts. USDOT could use the EHD Map Tool to update and enhance its environmental justice screening and mapping or EJScreen tool.

AASHTO also suggested that USDOT provide guidance to state DOTs regarding which tools should be used for various transportation planning, programming and project evaluation efforts. That guidance should outline the circumstances for appropriate use of the USDOT ETC Explorer, the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool, the Transportation Disadvantaged Census Tracts Tool, the Electric Vehicle Charging Justice40 Map, the EJScreen, and other relevant tools.  

For example, AASHTO noted that Washington State’s EHD Map Tool provides example of how federal agencies can partner with state agencies in using local tools to supplement nationwide demographic tools and more accurately identify and address disparities in the health sector and beyond. For instance, using such “local tools” to enhance the Four Factor Analysis could provide more accurate identification of Limited English Proficiency or LEP populations, which would better allow important documents to be translated and better support public engagement.

FTA Issues $20M from Persistent Poverty Program

The Federal Transit Administration plans to award $20 million to 47 communities to help improve public transportation options in areas that are experiencing, in the agency’s words, “long-term economic distress.”

[Above image by the FTA]

The FTA said its Areas of Persistent Poverty or AoPP program provides support to state and local governments, transit agencies, and nonprofit organizations to create better transit for residents with limited or no transportation options.

The agency said AoPP-funded investments can be used to support efforts to initiate transit service as well as improve service and modernize transit vehicle fleets, from procuring low- and no-emission buses to launching scheduling applications for smart devices and improving bus stops.  
“Transit is the great equalizer, providing rides for those who do not have a car or cannot drive, and particularly in rural and Tribal areas, having access to an affordable, reliable bus ride can mean the difference between isolation and opportunity,” said FTA Administrator Nuria Fernandez in a statement. “[Our] AoPP program is about forging connections for people who need accessible transit the most.”

The grants are specifically awarded for studies to improve transit in Census-defined low-income areas, the agency added, while also supporting coordinated human service transportation planning to improve mobility and access or provide new services – including paratransit services. 

Three state departments of transportation and one state DOT transit division received funds from this round of AoPP disbursements:

  • The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities received $785,400 to conduct a statewide transit study that assesses transportation needs statewide, with a focus on small, tribal and disadvantaged communities. The assessment will list barriers to access and recommend solutions to reconnect communities and will identify capital projects alongside equity considerations.
  • The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority – a division of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation – received $127,367 to complete the design of on-route battery-electric bus chargers at the Ashmont bus station. This station serves as a major transportation hub, facilitating connections between the subway, trolley, and 11 bus routes. The project will support transit reliability for the neighboring disadvantaged communities these stations serve and contribute toward the MBTA’s ambitious target of electrifying the entire bus fleet by 2040.
  • The Maine Department of Transportation received $650,462 to help two rural public transit agencies create a community-based transportation model that will aggregate transportation services, including non-emergency medical transportation and taxi companies. It will also automate its dispatch operations and fare card system with real-time data, which will allow the systems to expand and provide more service.
  • The Montana Department of Transportation received $451,500 to plan for new transit services in the city of Bozeman. The project will incorporate climate change, racial equity, and environmental justice into the transit development plan, as well as generate a financing plan that will provide a long-term sustainable funding source for these new services.

Environmental News Highlights – July 26, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

New Jersey Sues Federal Government Over Congestion Pricing in New York City -New York Times

House Republicans propose ambitious reforestation plan in response to climate change -AP

‘Massive emissions ramifications’: Forthcoming hydrogen policy stirs intense debate -The Hill

Resilience Improvement Plans: Best Practices & Requirements -FHWA (webinar)

Federal Fleets: Zero-Emission Vehicle Implementation -GAO (media release)

U.S. Should Expand and Standardize Plastics Collection and Recycling, Study Potential Uses in Infrastructure, Says New Report -National Academies (media release)

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

State DOTs Respond to Major East Coast Flooding -AASHTO Journal

Nevada roads, highways can withstand extreme heat due to NDOT planning -KVVU-TV

Is the Sumner Tunnel closure a transit success story? -WGBH-TV

Major U.S. cities leading in transit electrification -Mass Transit

Study addresses safer oil rail transport -Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A Charging Facility in Michigan Aims to Reinvent the American Truck Stop -Government Technology

CSX yields encouraging results from soybean oil-based fuel tests -Progressive Railroading

AIR QUALITY

Oregon joins West Coast states seeking millions to create zero-emission truck fueling network -Oregon Capital Chronicle


N.Y.’s public transit systems display alerts as state’s air quality concerns continue -Spectrum News 1

EPA Gets Tougher on Truck Emissions. Are Its Targets Achievable? -SupplyChainBrain

Nevada Residents – and Programs – Push for Cleaner Transportation and Air -Las Vegas Weekly

What Is the Most Eco-Friendly Way to Travel? -Wanderu (blog)

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Connecticut mapping tool aims to bring visibility to environmental justice communities -Energy News Network

Turning a desert into an oasis; how transportation deserts are impacting Milwaukee – WTMJ-TV

EVs Are Sending Toxic Tire Particles Into the Water, Soil, and Air -The Atlantic

More money going toward electric vehicle infrastructure in New York State -WCAX-TV

NATURAL RESOURCES

Freshwater management techniques can benefit both inland and coastal wetlands stressed by climate change Phys.org

Los Angeles World Airports prohibits sale of single-use plastic water bottles -LAWA (media release)

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Recycling America’s Railroads into Trails – Urbanist (podcast)

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Bike lane on Richmond-San Rafael Bridge seen as major cause of pollution – PIX-TV (video)

The many benefits of more walkable streets -American City & County

Disability advocates push for robotaxi expansion -Axios San Francisco

Improving Transit Access to Parks and Trails -Planetizen

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

TRB Webinar: Successful Environmental Justice Planning -TRB

Recycled Plastics in Infrastructure: Current Practices, Understanding, and Opportunities -TRB

Integrating Freight and Active Transportation into Policies, Programs, Plans, and Project Development -NCHRP

Leveraging Social Media Data for Emergency Preparedness and Response -NCHRP

Telecommuting, Remote Work, and Hybrid Schedules: Managing the Shift to a Flexible Work Future -NCHRP

Valuation and Compensation for Accommodating Utility and Communications Installations in Public Rights-of-Way -NCHRP

PFAS Source Differentiation Guide for Airports -ACHRP

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Limited Approval, Limited Disapproval of California Air Plan Revisions, Mojave Desert Air Quality Management District -EPA (Proposed rule)

National Advisory Council -FEMA (Committee management; request for applicants for appointment to a subcommittee of the National Advisory Council)

Call for Nominations for the California Desert District Advisory Council, the Central California Resource Advisory Council, and the Northern California Resource Advisory Council -Bureau of Land Management (Notice)

Streamlining U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Permitting of Rights-of-Way Across National Wildlife Refuges and Other U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Administered Lands -Fish and Wildlife Service (Proposed rule; revisions and reopening of the comment period)