WSDOT Illustrates Archeology, Transportation Connections

A recent blog post from the Washington Department of Transportation illustrated the important connections between the sciences of archeology and transportation infrastructure construction.

[Above photo of Jason Cooper by WSDOT]

Federal and state laws mandate that all transportation projects, particularly ones that disturb the ground, be evaluated for their effects on cultural resources. WSDOT goes a step further with a policy commitment to avoid, minimize or mitigate its adverse impacts on “cultural resources” – which include areas, structures, and objects that are at least 50 years old – and help preserve such historical finds as well.

Enter Jason Cooper, WSDOT cultural resources lead. A veteran archeologist with 32 years of experience, Cooper has spent the last six working for WSDOT and leads a team that studies human history and pre-history on and below state roads and waterways, helping WSDOT construction and environmental teams preserve culturally important places.

WSDOT’s cultural resources team also works closely with tribes in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho, along with cities and counties across the state to preserve things like historic bridges and landmarks, archeologically and anthropologically sensitive sites and spaces/things of cultural significance. WSDOT noted that they research, for example, whether a highway project might trample on old tribal burial grounds or anything else of historical value.

Photo by WSDOT

Cooper explained in the blog post that he is “driven by the belief” that every artifact, no matter the size or shape, has a story to tell and that his team’s cultural resources work provides valuable insights into the lives of “those who came before us.”

After getting a bachelor of arts in history and minor in anthropology at San Diego State University – and later a master’s in anthropology from the University of Nevada-Las Vegas – Cooper worked on archeological excavations in the U.S. and worldwide spending time in in Jordan and Cyprus studying the Neolithic period (some 6,000 years before today) and, in Egypt, focused on old stone age, early “hominid” survey work. Hominids are all modern and extinct Great Apes, Cooper noted – that is, modern humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, etc., plus all their immediate ancestors.

Cooper noted that the WSDOT cultural resources team operates on a three-part system as part of the pre-planning process for transportation construction work. The work entailed by those steps includes: 

  • Identification: Before any large-scale ground disturbance is planned, Cooper and his team identify areas with possible archeological significance through desktop research (checking maps, combing through archives, reading books, scanning online records, etc.) and surveying (digging holes or test probes to examine a site). Frequently, Cooper and a team of subcontractors will do several shovel probes of the ground. Sometimes only a few dozen probes are dug, other times there can be hundreds or thousands.
  • Evaluate: Next, WSDOT archeologists and subcontractors evaluate by screening the soils removed from these test probes or holes to see if they find anything historical or “pre-contact” – a term used to describe times before Europeans arrived and contacted Native Americans already living in North America.
  • Determine for Eligibility: Cooper and his team determine if any items found during the digging process are eligible as an archeological finding. If so, he writes reports on which the culture the artifact/object belongs to and next steps, such as returning it to the ground, relocating the construction project or finding a new home for the object.

WSDOT noted that while this three-step system typically takes place before ground is disturbed, it can take place at any time, particularly if something unusual is discovered by our crews during excavation.

As an aside, WSDOT’s Cooper has written more than 150 cultural resources reports for Washington State alone and has come across “numerous” interesting archeological discoveries, such as:

  • In 2022, as part of a debris flow project on SR 410 near Crystal Mountain Resort where the washed-out road was repaired, Cooper and his team studied if the temporary repairs would affect cultural resources after the Nisqually Tribe requested a survey. During the work, Jason’s team found pre-contact impacts (such as a piece of a stone tool), culturally modified trees (a tree Native Americans had removed bark from) and a segment of the old McLellan Highway, which was the old state route to Crystal Mountain.
  • While new culverts were being installed under SR 169 between Renton and Maple Valley in 2021, Cooper was brought in after on-site crews discovered a long section of buried wood planks. He determined the planks belong to an original road built by King County in the 1920s between Renton and Maple Valley.
  • Recently, at the I-90/SR 18 Deep Creek Interchange Improvements project work site near Snoqualmie, a bone was discovered by work crews. Cooper was able to determine the bone likely came from a quadruped/ungulate (likely elk) and was not human – and that quick determination helped keep the project on schedule, WSDOT added.
  • While the tree is no longer there as of July 2023, five years ago Cooper determined that a willow tree on Seattle Housing Authority land near I-5 and James Street was a cloned descendant of a willow tree that is near the French dictator Napoleon’s grave site at St. Helena’s Island.
  • Historical records determined the site of SR 92 roadwork near Granite Falls likely had archeological sites, so the road was routed around the city instead through those sites. Cooper – at the time still an on-call consultant – and his team found thousands of human-made artifacts – human manufactured stone tools, arrow heads, cutting devices, etc. – many of them thousands of years old. The sites were part of the Olcott archeological sites, which predates the first known pyramids in Egypt.

Other state departments of transportation are engaged in a variety of archeological endeavors as well.

For example, in October 2022, the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet helped establish a new website highlighting more than 100 prehistoric and historic archaeological sites across the state’s 64 counties. KYTC launched the new website – Discover Kentucky Archaeology – in collaboration with the Kentucky Heritage Council-State Historic Preservation Office, an agency of the Kentucky Tourism, Arts, and Heritage Cabinet.

And in January 2022, the Colorado Department of Transportation debuted a documentary called “Durango 550 – Path of the Ancestral Puebloans” to show how the agency worked with archaeologists and regional Native American tribes to document, study, and ultimately share the discoveries unearthed near Durango in southwest Colorado. That archaeological excavation took place in 2018 and 2019 ahead of construction on the US 550-US 160 Connection South project in 2020.

USDOT, DOE Issue EV “Tool Kit” as a Free Resource

The U.S. Department of Transportation, in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy and the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation, released a new free technical resource to help larger communities take full advantage of federal funding for electric vehicle charging stations and other forms of electric transportation.

[Above photo by the USDOT]

The new guide – called “Charging Forward: A Toolkit for Planning and Funding Urban Electric Mobility Infrastructure” – provides a comprehensive resource for communities, metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs), transportation providers, businesses, and property owners and developers by including information on how to scope, plan, and identify ways to best leverage billions of dollars in funding from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act or IIJA.

It follows on the heels of the Rural EV toolkit originally issued by the USDOT in 2022 and later updated in 2023. 

The toolkit builds on the efforts of the Joint Office to provide states and communities across America with information and assistance to accelerate an electrified transportation system that is convenient, affordable, reliable, and equitable. It also includes guidance to help urban areas implement other forms of electric transportation, such as public transit, electric bikes and scooters, and ride-share services, USDOT said.  

In a statement, the USDOT said building an affordable and accessible public charging network will help make electric forms of transportation more convenient for the 71 percent of Americans who live in communities with a population over 50,000. While many EV owners can charge their vehicles at home or work, people who live in higher density areas, especially those living in apartments and condos, may not have easy access to a garage or the space for a private charger, which means they are more reliant on public charging options.  

In 2022, USDOT approved plans from all 50 states, Washington D.C., and Puerto Rico to build a nationwide network of EV chargers, supported by $5 billion from the IIJA’s National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure or NEVI program.

This spring, USDOT began the application process for the first $700 million of the total $2.5 billion in funding to build EV charging infrastructure in communities and neighborhoods across the country through the Charging and Fueling Infrastructure or CFI grant program.

Environmental News Highlights – July 19, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

Northeastern State DOT Projects Win Regional Awards -AASHTO Journal

Judge freezes WOTUS fight until Biden issues new rule -E&E News


We fixed I-95 in 12 days. Here are our lessons for U.S. infrastructure. -Washington Post (opinion)


NPS seeks public input on the potential impacts of e-bikes in parks across the National Park System -National Park Service (media release)


Building on the Success of USDOT’s Rural EV Toolkit to Help Communities Build Out EV Charging Infrastructure, DOT Releases New Edition for Urban Areas -USDOT (media release)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Underground Heat Is Shifting Chicago’s Foundations -New York Times



Colorado DOT installs permanent avalanche control equipment on Red Mountain Pass -Durango Herald


Vermont Prepared for Epic Flooding. It Wasn’t Enough -Bloomberg Green


NH’s infrastructure is aging. How will it hold up with predictions of more flooding and extreme weather? -New Hampshire Public Radio


ADOT plans to add 7 EV charging stations to state highways -KTAR Radio

 

AIR QUALITY

State AGs at odds over proposed EPA tailpipe emissions rules -Route Fifty


Nevada governor pulls state out of US climate alliance -KSNV-TV

The Wind Is in Hydrogen’s Sails; Politics Could Change That -Government Technology


3 Airlines and the FAA Join Google to Assess Flight Emissions –Skift


FAA Invests Nearly $92 Million to Help Airports Reach President’s Goal of Net Zero-Emissions by 2050 -FAA (media release)

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Collective Imagination: A Hopeful Force at the Center of Climate Justice -Harvard University


Transportation Apps Can Help People With Disabilities Navigate Public Transit But Accessibility Lags Behind -The Conversation


Biden’s EV charger rollout has begun. Will it deliver on environmental justice? –Grist

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

The Real Harm of Dust Storms -WILL Radio (link to audio)


NASA Tests Mobile Air Traffic Kit During Wildfire Prevention Operations -NASA (media release)

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Pittsburgh and the Great Migration: Black Mobility and the Automobile -The Frick Pittsburgh


Montreal tourism outlets concerned about halted Amtrak line from New York City -CBC News


Facebook Censors WYDOT For Humorous Sasquatch Post -Cowboy State Daily

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Hawaii plans rapid rollout of raised pedestrian crosswalks, citing encouraging new data –Hawaii News Now

San Jose, California Looks To AI To Stop Pedestrian Traffic Deaths -KGO-TV


Mackinac Island Impounded More Than 50 Illegal E-Bikes In Just Three Weeks –Jalopnik


Transit Advocates Fear On-Demand Microtransit Undermines Bus Service –Planetizen


Pilot programs show support for microtransit services in smaller Virginia cities, rural areas -WCAV-TV

 

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

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


TRB Webinar: Life-Cycle Assessment for Pavements and Transportation Infrastructure –TRB


TRB International Conference on Low Volume Roads –TRB


An Assessment of Native Seed Needs and the Capacity for Their Supply: Final Report -National Academies

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Grant Programs for Urbanized Areas: Program Guidance and Application Instructions, Proposed Circular -FTA (Notice of availability of proposed circular and request for comments)


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


National Environmental Justice Advisory Council; Notification of Public Meeting -EPA (Notice)


Rescinding the Rule on Increasing Consistency and Transparency in Considering Benefits and Costs in the Clean Air Act Rulemaking Process -EPA (Final rule)



Request for Comments on the Federal Aviation Administration’s Review the Civil Aviation Noise Policy; Extension of Comment Period -FAA (Notice of public meeting; Request for comments)


Notice of Availability of a Joint Record of Decision (ROD) for the Ocean Wind LLC Proposed Wind Energy Facility Offshore New Jersey -Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (Notice)


Board on Coastal Engineering Research -Army Corps of Engineers (Notice of advisory committee meeting)


Safety Zone; Hurricanes and Tropical Storms in Captain of the Port Zone North Carolina -Coast Guard (Notice of proposed rulemaking)


Advisory Committee on Earthquake Hazards Reduction Meeting -National Institute of Standards and Technology (Notice of open meeting)

 

ETAP Podcast: WSDOT Stormwater Management

The latest episode of the Environmental Technical Assistance Program or ETAP podcast digs into the innovative stormwater management practices of the Washington State Department of Transportation.

[Above photo of Tony Bush via WSDOT]

The ETAP podcast – a technical service program for state departments of transportation provided by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials – explores a wide array of environmental topics that affect transportation and infrastructure programs.

In this episode, Tony Bush (above) – stormwater branch manager for WSDOT – explains how the agency historically managed stormwater runoff from a safety and road preservation perspective and how it then later built in environmental stewardship and regulatory practices to support that stewardship into its processes.

Bush also goes into a current WSDOT research effort regarding the environmental impact of a contaminant called 6PPd-quinone from old vehicle tires and how that contaminant might affect salmon populations. To listen to this episode of the ETAP podcast, click here.

Tennessee Litter Grant Program Notches 40 Years

The Tennessee Department of Transportation recently celebrated the 40th anniversary of its “Litter Grant Program.” That program – started in 1983 – provides funding to all 95 counties within the state to pay for a wide variety of litter-related efforts, such as litter and tarp law enforcement; cleanup and recycling events; and litter prevention education campaigns.

[Above photo by Tennessee DOT]

Those funds also help county governments participate in multijurisdictional and statewide collaborations with Tennessee DOT’s “Nobody Trashes Tennessee” litter prevention campaign, conducted jointly with Keep Tennessee Beautiful and its local affiliates.

“[Our] litter grant funding model ensures a comprehensive and collaborative approach to litter abatement and is making a real difference in keeping the state of Tennessee safe and beautiful,” explained Denise Baker, transportation supervisor for the Tennessee DOT, in a statement.

“By providing funding at the county level, communities across the state organize litter cleanups on roadways and river ways based on their specific needs,” she added. “We are thrilled to celebrate the 40th year of the program.”

Collectively, the agency’s litter grant program is responsible for removing an average of 11,243 tons of roadway trash annually and, in 2022 alone, nearly 29 percent of that statewide total was diverted from landfills and recycled. Additionally, 3,480 illegal dumpsites were cleaned up. All told, more than 435,529 tons of litter have been removed from Tennessee roadways since the program’s inception four decades ago, Tennessee DOT said.

The program’s impact is further amplified through local government partners that invest additional resources in trash cleanup and removal, as well as by individuals who contribute tens of thousands of volunteer hours.

This makes the program extremely efficient, saving communities and the state critical funds when compared to the costs of contracted litter pickup. For example, the agency said the 2022 statewide average cost of litter grant-funded cleanup totaled $14.40 per mile, while contracted litter pickup routinely costs Tennessee DOT more than $500 a mile.

On a yearly basis, the agency said it allocated $5.5 million via its Litter Grant Program – a total that has remained the same since 2017. The amount each county receives is based on a formula accounting for population and road miles. The current series of litter grant contracts includes just over $3.8 million for local litter pickup operations and over $1.6 million for litter prevention education.

The Tennessee DOT noted its litter grant contracts require that 20 percent to 35 percent of each county’s total funding is budgeted for litter prevention education efforts. Counties are also required to tackle litter prevention education in three of five designated categories: students, public, media, business, and government.

The grants also fund Keep Tennessee Beautiful, which provides litter prevention education, community engagement, and the promotion of volunteers for beautification projects, the agency said.

Environmental News Highlights – July 12, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

USDOT Streamlines Community Infrastructure Programs -AASHTO Journal

As Downtowns Struggle, Businesses Learn to Love Bike Lanes –Bloomberg

The Little-Known Provision That Could Revolutionize Highway Travel -New York Times (essay)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Washington State DOT’s Stormwater Management Innovations -AASHTO’s ETAP Podcast

NOAA Using Drones to Improve Hurricane Forecasting -AASHTO Journal



Making Offshore Wind Transmission Work for Communities -Regional Plan Association

California lawmakers OK governor’s push to build energy, water and transportation projects faster -KCRA-TV

EPA announces $3M grant for climate mitigation planning in Hawaiʻi -Maui News

Swiss project places solar panels along railroad tracks -Sustainability Times

Is America’s Infrastructure Turning A Corner? -Thinking Transportation (podcast)

Pandemic-era ‘slow streets’ offer an opportunity to improve road safetySmart City Dive

 

AIR QUALITY

Europe Targets Missing Emissions That Could Bust Climate Goals –Bloomberg

EPA methane rules need flexibility, balance to achieve lower emissions -The Hill (opinion)

EPA Proposes Updates to Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reporting Requirements for the Oil and Gas Sector -EPA (media release)

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Will Environmental Justice Programs Be Affected by SCOTUS’s Affirmative Action Decisions? -National Law Review (opinion)

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

Building California: How will the infrastructure deal affect development, wildlife? -Lompoc Record

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Massachusetts Rolls Out Interactive Rail-Trail Map For Users -Daily Hampshire Gazette

Motorcyclist discovering West Virginia featured on West Virginia DOT’s “WV on the DOT” 150th podcast episode -West Virginia DOT (media release)

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Transportation plan seeks to make Rochester safer for pedestrians and cyclists -WXXI Radio

The Untapped Power of E-Bike Rebates –CityLab

The Rise In Pedestrian Fatalities -CBS Sunday Morning (video)

Salt Lake City’s wide streets are a pedestrian problem, but also an opportunity -KUER Radio

Seattle DOT getting closer to more accessible waterfront with new bike lane design -KIRO-TV

Could new Israeli technology prevent bicycle accidents? -Jerusalem Post

 

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pathways to an Equitable and Just Energy Transition -National Academies

Electric Vehicle Charging: Strategies and Programs –NCHRP

Use of Unmanned Aerial Systems for Inspection of Stormwater Best Management Practices –NCHRP

Ridesharing Institute Conversation July 2023: A Tale of Two US Washingtons -Ridesharing Institute (link to webinar registration)

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Announcement of Fiscal Year 2023 Low or No Emission Program and Grants for Buses and Bus Facilities Program and Project Selections -FTA (Notice; Announcement of Project Selections)

Evaluation of Alabama State Coastal Management Program; Notice of Public Meeting; Request for Comment -NOAA (Notice)

Technical Mapping Advisory Council -FEMA (Request for applicants)

Draft National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) General Permit for the Eastern Portion of the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) of the Gulf of Mexico (GEG460000); Availability of Draft National Environmental Policy (NEPA) Categorial Exclusion… -EPA (Notice of proposed reissuance of NPDES general permit; extension of public comment period)

Decommissioning and Disposition of the National Historic Landmark Nuclear Ship Savannah; Notice of Public Meeting -Maritime Administration (Notice)

MassDOT Helps Provide Trail Improvement Funding

The Massachusetts Department of Transportation recently helped provide some $11.6 million in funding through the MassTrails Grant Program to support 68 trail improvement projects statewide.

[Above photo via MassDOT]

Those projects seek to expand and connect the state’s network of off-road, shared-use pathways and trails to use for recreation, exercise, and environmentally friendly commuting.

The MassTrails Grant Program provides matching grants, technical assistance, and resources to individuals, municipalities, non-profits, and other public entities. Funding for those grants come from two sources: The Massachusetts Department of Conservation & Recreation capital budget and Federal Highway Administration Recreational Trails Program grants, managed at the state level by MassDOT.

Program funds go toward the design, construction, and maintenance of diverse, high-quality trails, including hiking trails, bikeways, and shared-use paths, noted MassDOT.

“Outdoor recreation is directly tied to the economic prosperity of our state,” said Governor Maura Healey (D) in a statement.

“By investing in our trails system, we can give our residents opportunities to get outside, commute for free, and showcase all the natural assets Massachusetts has to offer,” she added. “This is how we grow our economy, cut emissions, and improve health outcomes all at the same time.” 

“Bicycle and pedestrian paths are a key part of … providing safe and equitable transportation networks which support the state’s transit, economic, climate and public health goals,” said MassDOT Secretary and CEO Gina Fiandaca.

“This grant money for 68 projects will help cities and towns build out the framework for creating a state-wide trails network and we look forward to seeing the positive impacts new trail construction will have for all those who live in, come to visit, or traverse through our state for work or pleasure,” she added.

Additionally, MassDOT recently announced the new, interactive Priority Trails Network Vision Map for statewide shared-use paths.

That map provides a centralized inventory of key rail trail projects that will help support an envisioned comprehensive statewide transportation trail network.

It specifically identifies approximately 320 miles of trails that have been constructed and are in use, another 24 trails that are currently under construction, plus an additional 60 miles of proposed paths that have been funded but not yet constructed.

The map also lists priority shared-use path project locations that either have been proposed for consideration or will be pursued for funding and development to help address key gaps in the network.   

Maryland DOT Supporting ‘Five Million Tree’ Effort

The Maryland Department of Transportation is “branching out” in its commitment to support the state’s goal of planting five million trees over the next eight years with initiatives that should add thousands of new trees annually statewide via plantings, grants for community-based efforts and programs that encourage support for the Maryland Forest Service.

[Above photo by the Maryland DOT]

The Maryland DOT is one of several state agencies involved in the “Growing 5 Million Trees in Maryland” program; a plan designed to help the state meet its goal to plant and maintain five million native trees in Maryland by the end of calendar year 2031.

The initiative, led by a commission chaired by the Maryland Department of the Environment, stems from the Tree Solutions Now Act, passed by the Maryland General Assembly in 2021.

“We’re working every day to mitigate and reduce the impact of greenhouse gas emissions from transportation – now and for the future,” Maryland DOT Secretary Paul Wiedefeld recently explained in a statement.

“As we strive to create and maintain a transportation network that’s cleaner and more efficient, our partnerships with other agencies and stakeholders in the ‘5 Million Trees’ initiative will make a generational impact on those goals,” he added.

Maryland DOT noted it routinely plants trees as part of highway, bridge, transit and other projects, but since those plantings largely mitigate the impact of those projects, they don’t count toward the “5 Million Trees” initiative.

However, led by its Office of Climate Change Resilience and Adaptation, the Maryland DOT pointed out that it does conduct other tree planting programs, including:

  • The Urban Tree Grant Program: A Maryland DOT partnership with the Maryland Urban and Community Forest Committee and the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, this program awards grants of up to $5,000 for tree plantings and more than $5,000 for pocket forest projects. The grants can be used by nonprofits, schools, local business associations, youth and civic groups and others, and can help areas affected by environmental justice issues or heat island effect – such as urban areas with little tree canopy.
  • The Tree Planting Donation: Operated by the Maryland Department of Motor Vehicles, a division of the Maryland DOT, this initiative allows state residents to make a voluntary donation of $1, or more, when registering or renewing a vehicle registration, to the Maryland Forest Service to plant trees.
  • The Urban Forestry Partnership: Overseen by the Maryland Port Administration, another Maryland DOT division this partnership works with communities to restore tree canopy on streets and parks in Baltimore City. Between 2018 and 2020, the Partnership planted 1,500 trees in neighborhoods across Baltimore.​ 

In April, the Maryland Department of the Environment launched an online “tracking tool” and hub site for tree plantings and planting initiatives across Maryland. From community-based projects to agency efforts, the tool will track the trees and the progress toward the “5 Million Trees” goal.

The hub site also provides a resource library that includes tree planting tips and guides, a map of statewide tree planting assistance and rebate programs, and volunteer and training opportunities to get more people involved in tree plantings across Maryland.

Environmental News Highlights – July 5, 2023

FEDERAL ACTION

USDOT Issues More Than $2.2B in RAISE Grants -AASHTO Journal



USDOT Offering Over $5B in Multimodal Project Grants -AASHTO Journal



PHMSA Proposes HazMat Rail Shipment Reporting Rule -AASHTO Journal



FTA Announces Nearly $1.7 Billion to Help Put Better, Cleaner Buses on the Roads in Communities Across the Country -FTA (media release)

 

COVID-19

When COVID rules kept humans home, wildlife roamed more freely, international study shows –CBC

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Re:source Podcast: Hawaii Paving Industry Talks Plastic Roads -AASHTO Journal



NYC Is Cleared for First-in-US Congestion Tolls as Soon as April –Bloomberg



Indianapolis Int’l Pioneers Use of Carbon Capture for Runway Project -Airport Improvement



These States Are Doing the Most to Electrify Transportation –Governing



AIR QUALITY

The Hazy Days of Summer -The New Yorker

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

EPA closes civil rights investigation into Louisiana pollution -Washington Post



NATURAL RESOURCES

Biden administration provides greater flexibility to protect endangered species -The Hill



Legislature overrides veto of bill cutting wetland regulation -Coastalreview.org



Researchers demo geotargeted wildfire alerts sent to vehicles -Route Fifty

 

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Miami Air International Plans A Pan Am Museum In Its 1920s Hangar -Simply Flying



The Forgotten History Of Highway Photologs -MIT Technology Review



CB Radios Not Yet Obsolete; Veteran Truckers Say They’re Still Useful -Cowboy State Daily



Feds deny Knoxville’s $25 million grant request to build new pedestrian bridge across Tennessee River -WBIR-TV



New York Politicians Urge Governor To End Non-essential Helicopter Flights -Quiet Communities (blog)

 

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Connecticut offering vouchers for residents to buy e-bikes -New Haven Independent



Pedestrians occupying bike lanes on Oahu raising safety concerns -KHNL/KGMB-TV



NYC gets $25M for e-bike charging stations, seeking to prevent deadly battery fires –AP



Street lighting is crucial for cyclists and pedestrians -North Shore News



City holds ‘pop up’ event to get input on Pensacola’s Active Transportation Plan -WKRG-TV



FAA Still Silent on Dulles Airport Noise Concerns –LoudonNow



New U.S. Bicycle Route connects Hope and East Hope, Idaho -Bonner County Daily Bee

 

TRB RESOURCES/ANNOUNCEMENTS

TRB Webinar: Fostering Sustainability through Freight-Efficient Land Uses –NCHRP



Pollinator Habitat Conservation Along Roadways, Volume 13: Rocky Mountains –NCHRP



Pollinator Habitat Conservation Along Roadways, Volume 14: Southeast –NCHRP



Pollinator Habitat Conservation Along Roadways, Volume 15: Southern Plains –NCHRP



Pollinator Habitat Conservation Along Roadways, Volume 16: Southwest –NCHRP



Risk Assessment Techniques for Transportation Asset Management –NCHRP



Advancing Health and Resilience in the Gulf of Mexico Region: Roadmap for Progress -National Academies

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Notice of Final Federal Agency Actions on the Central Business District Tolling Program, New York, New York -FHWA (Notice of limitation on claims for judicial review of actions by FHWA and other Federal agencies)



Testing Provisions for Air Emission Sources; Correction -EPA (Final rule; correcting amendment)



Pipeline Safety: Gas Pipeline Leak Detection and Repair -Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (Notice of proposed rule)



Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Designation of Experimental Populations -Fish and Wildlife Service (Final rule)



Notice of Availability of Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for Next Generation Delivery Vehicles Acquisitions -United States Postal Service (Notice)

 

States Add New Routes to U.S. Bicycle Route System

The Adventure Cycling Association recently announced major expansions to the U.S. Bicycle Route System or USBRS, including three completely new routes and a connection from Alaska to the lower 48 states.

[Above photo by AASHTO]

The U.S. Bicycle Route System is a developing national network of officially designated, numbered, and signed routes that use existing roads, trails, and other facilities appropriate for bike travel, the association noted – eventually encompassing 50,000 miles of routes nationwide.

The three new routes are USBR 610 in Idaho, USBR 11 in Pennsylvania, and USBR 121 in Tennessee. In Minnesota, USBR 20 has been extended and USBR 45 and USBR 45A have been adjusted to incorporate new trails and improve safety.

Meanwhile, Alaska’s network now connects to Washington State via the Alaska Marine Highway System using ferries; the first time a ferry has been designated as part of a U.S. bicycle route.

“It’s exciting to see how the U.S. Bicycle Route System mirrors our European counterpart bicycle travel network, EuroVelo in a new way” by connecting to ferries, noted Jennifer O’Dell, executive director of Adventure Cycling, in a statement.

“By incorporating the Alaska Marine Highway System into the USBRS, cyclists’ horizons are widened beyond the Lower 48,” she added.

Jim Tymon, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, noted that state departments of transportation play a significant role in the expansion of the USBRS by designating new routes twice every year.

“Those bike routes are critical to enhancing and expanding the active transportation opportunities within the nation’s multimodal mobility network,” he said. “State DOTs play a key role in helping foster more and safer bicycle travel options for all Americans and goes to the heart of AASHTO’s longstanding partnership with the Adventure Cycling Association.”

[Editor’s note: AASHTO and Adventure Cycling formalized their nearly two-decade partnership by signing a memorandum of understanding in February 2021.]

Digital maps for all designated U.S. Bicycle Routes are available to the public for free on the Adventure Cycling Association website.

With the new designation and realignments, the USBRS now boasts nearly 20,000 miles of routes in 34 states and Washington, D.C. At least 38 states are currently developing additional bike routes, Adventure Cycling noted.