MassDOT Issues $37M in Regional Transit Grants

The Massachusetts Department of Transportation recently issued some $37 million through two separate state grant programs to support regional public transportation providers.

[Above photo by MassDOT]

The agency said this funding will go to Regional Transit Authorities (RTA), Councils on Aging, and other entities to support transit fleet electrification, enhance and expand existing transit services, expand service hours, improve rural connectivity, and assist with operating and capital expenses.

Almost $20 million from the state’s Community Transit Grant Program or CTGP will be used to purchase vehicles for public transportation needs, with an additional $2 million awarded through a separate CTGP entity for projects expanding mobility for older adults, people with disabilities, and low-income individuals. 

Finally, $15 million is being provided to increase operating and capital funding for transit providers through the Regional Transit Innovation Grant program.

“We are excited to announce these grant funds because we know the money will go a long way to supporting the needs of organizations that provide mobility options across the state,” said Governor Maura Healey (D) in a statement.

“Public transportation plays a crucial role when it comes to accessibility, community connectivity, and economic growth and we will work to ensure that all residents have access to the transportation services they need,” she added.

“This grant funding will help our transit providers do more, including adding service, expanding routes, and purchasing electric vehicles so more mobility options can be offered to senior citizens, people with disabilities, and individuals who cannot afford to own a car,” noted Monica Tibbits-Nutt, MassDOT secretary and CEO.

Environmental News Highlights – May 29, 2024

FEDERAL ACTION

Federal Judge Signs Off on $600M Ohio Train Derailment Settlement –AP



51% of Americans Support a Mileage Fee if the Rate Varies by How Much the Vehicle Pollutes -Mineta Transportation Institute



US study establishes the costs benefits of electric school buses -Air Quality News



How airlines are working to create sustainable fuel to reduce aviation’s carbon footprint -PBS News Hour



FTA Administration Announces Nearly $10.5 Million Funding Opportunity to Plan Housing Near Transit -FTA (media release)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Garden City panel slams brakes on project backed by Federal Highway AdministrationSavannah Morning News



EVs now beat rail as the largest electricity consumer in the US transport sector –Electrek



Six Reasons Cities Should be Designed for Micromobility -The Weekly Journal (opinion)



Maine Governor Signs Executive Order to Establish Commission on Infrastructure Rebuilding and Resilience -Maine Governor’s Office (media release)

 

AIR QUALITY

Montgomery County, Md., releases Zero Emission Bus Transition Plan -Mass Transit



New Hampshire Plan Aims To Improve Public Transit, Cut Emissions -Granite State News Cooperative



Some Cities Are Actually Cutting Transportation Emissions. Here’s How. -Governing (opinion)

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE/EQUITY

Philadelphia Infrastructure to Flourish with USDOT’s Thriving Communities Program Support –Hoodline

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

North Carolina governor vetoes transportation bill that would have led to a loss of more trees, native plants -NC Newsline



Measuring pollution levels in the Port of Baltimore after the bridge collapse -NOAA Research

 

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Curbs in Hoboken, N.J., Get Ready to Be ‘Reimagined’ -Government Technology



Discover the Joy of Downtown’s Walkable Neighborhoods -Move Minneapolis (webinar)

 

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Dayton installs hostile landscaping by transit hub to curtail loitering, incivility -Dayton Daily News



Boston plans to add 10 miles of bike lanes over next year -WCVB-TV



Bikeshare Beat: Ridership surges in April -Greater Greater Washington



Bicycling grew more in Chicago than in any other major American city in the last five years –Momentum

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Notice of Solicitation of Applications for Stakeholder Representative Members of the Missouri River Recovery Implementation Committee -U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Notice)



Investigation Into Conditions Affecting United States Carriers in Connection With Canadian Ballast Water Regulation in the United States/Canada Great Lakes Trade -Federal Maritime Commission (Notice of investigation and request for comments)



Adequacy Status of the New Jersey Portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island and Pennsylvania- Delaware Areas Submitted PM 2.5 Limited Maintenance Plan, 2006 24 Hour PM2.5 Maintenance Area -EPA (Notice of adequacy)



FY 2024 Competitive Funding Opportunity: Pilot Program for Transit-Oriented Development PlanningFTA (Notice)



Evaluation of Wisconsin Coastal Management Program; Notice of Public Meeting; Request for Comments -NOAA (Notice)



Safety Zone; Hurricanes, Tropical Storms, and Other Storms With High Winds; Captain of the Port Zone Sector Delaware Bay -Coast Guard (Notice of proposed rulemaking)



Solicitation for Applications for Advisory Councils Established Pursuant to the National Marine Sanctuaries Act and Executive Order -Office of National Marine Sanctuaries (Notice of solicitation)



Land Acquisition Nomination and Ranking Process for Funds Made Available Through the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act Reauthorization of 2018 -Bureau of Land Management (Notice)

 

TxDOT Developing Statewide Active Transportation Plan

The Texas Department of Transportation is developing a Statewide Active Transportation Plan or SATP to gather recommendations for improving bicycling, walking, and rolling conditions across the Lone Star state.

[Above image by TxDOT]

The agency noted in a statement that its SATP focuses on community needs to identify mobility priority areas while making and improving connections between trails, paths, and transit services in order to offer  safe and efficient multimodal options for personal travel. 

TxDOT added the SATP is being integrated with its other long-range mobility plans to help it maintain a safe, accessible, connected, and fully integrated multimodal transportation system for the future, since the population of Texas is expected to grow by 28 percent by 2050.

[Editor’s note: The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials recently appointed Nancy Daubenberger – commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Transportation – and Rob Bedenbaugh, director of the Office of Engineering Support for the South Carolina Department of Transportation, to two-year terms as chair and vice chair, respectively, for the AASHTO Council on Active Transportation. AASHTO’s Council on Active Transportation addresses issues related to using human-powered means of travel, which includes walking and bicycling, with or without the use of mobility aids; and may also include using other human-scaled or micro-mobility devices that may be electric-powered or electric-assisted, such as e-bikes and e-scooters.]

In the fall of 2023, TxDOT said it held virtual and in-person meetings statewide to gather input from more than 4,800 people, stakeholders, and other groups to help shape the SATP. Through this outreach, people were encouraged to provide input on their top priorities when it comes to active transportation. Common themes included:

  • Increased safety. Almost 75 percent of those surveyed don’t feel safe using active transportation. They want to see lower speed limits and additional lighting on sidewalks and bike lanes.
  • Better access and connections to trails and continuous bike lanes along with connections to places that are frequently visited destinations.
  • Sidewalk improvements, including curb maintenance and the removal of physical barriers.
  • Roadway crossing improvements to help Texans feel more confident crossing the street.

With one round of outreach complete, TxDOT said it is now focused on analyzing community feedback and individual input to fine-tune the SATP. This plan is evaluating best practices, specific case studies and research for improving biking, walking and rolling. Through recommended strategies and actions, the plan will work to integrate safety, accessibility, comfort, connectivity, community needs, health and economic vitality.

TxDOT noted that it is working on the SATP in conjunction with its Statewide Multimodal Transit Plan and will collect additional public input on a draft plan to be released in the fall of 2024. The agency pointed out that the public will have the opportunity to evaluate recommendations and provide input on the SATP’s draft plan before it is presented to the Texas Transportation Commission in late 2024.

In November 2023, the Texas Transportation Commission approved over $345 million for new sidewalks, bikeways, and other types of active transportation infrastructure projects statewide.

That funding supported 83 projects designed to improve bicycle and pedestrian access while providing safety enhancements and mobility options to schools, jobs, public transit systems, and local destinations, the commission said. TxDOT noted that some the projects approved by the commission include sidewalks connecting to schools and transit options, shared-use paths benefiting both pedestrians and cyclists, new pedestrian bridges, and 15 planning studies.

Several state departments of transportation across the country have also introduced active transportation-specific plans in recent years.

For example, the Kansas Department of Transportation unveiled a revised active transportation plan in May 2023 to boost walking, bicycling, safe wheelchair use, skateboarding, and non-motorized vehicle mobility options across the state.

The Oklahoma Department of Transportation also began working on its first-ever active transportation plan in 2023 – a policy toolkit the agency said can be used internally and by Oklahoma counties and towns as engineers and designers look to develop more people-friendly infrastructure.

The plan will address walking, biking, “wheelchairs and mobility scooters, pedal and electric scooters, electric bikes, skateboards, and other similar wheeled vehicles,” according to a website developed by the agency that details the plan’s contents.

Meanwhile, the Washington State Department of Transportation unveiled a formal Active Transportation Plan in December 2021 – a plan that subsequently won the 2022 America’s Transportation Awards contest’s “People’s Choice Award.”

Utah DOT Issues $95M to Begin Building Utah Trail Network

The Utah Department of Transportation recently issued nearly $95 million to support 19 trail projects – including the construction of new paved trails as well as funding for planning efforts to fill in existing trail gaps – as part of creating a regional “Utah Trail Network” across the state. 

[Above photo by Utah DOT]

That agency said that it collaborated with communities statewide regarding the allocation of that funding – approved by the Utah Transportation Commission – to select the key projects for this statewide trail network. 

Of the projects selected for this inaugural round of funding, 13 are considered construction ready and could get underway as soon as 2025, the agency said – depending on contractor schedules, supply availability and other factors like weather.

“Generations from now people will look back at this moment and realize how pivotal the Utah Trail Network was in changing the way we travel,” noted Carlos Braceras, executive director of the Utah DOT, in a statement. “These projects will connect communities in ways that provide transportation choices for everyone to commute, recreate, and enjoy.”

Braceras noted that, in 2022, Governor Spencer Cox (R) supported the vision for a statewide trail network that would connect state residents of all ages and abilities to their destinations and communities throughout the state. Then, in 2023, the state legislature created the Active Transportation Investment Fund to help support Utah’s trail-building endeavor.

“We have heard the public asking for more trails and are inspired by the trail planning and development efforts across the state,” Braceras said. “These efforts are bringing people together, and we want to do our part by connecting communities through a state funded program that will build trails as part of the state’s transportation system.”

Other state departments of transportation are engaged in similar efforts.

For example, Governor Ned Lamont (D) and the Connecticut Department of Transportation recently hosted a grand opening event for the Putnam Bridge Trail Connection, which provides non-motorized access across the Connecticut River by linking the shared-use path on the Putnam Bridge to Great Meadow Road in Wethersfield and Naubuc Avenue in Glastonbury.

Built by the agency and funded by the state, the expanded trail connection provides a safe, convenient, and functional active transportation option for the traveling public, the governor noted in a statement.

“The Putnam Bridge Trail Connection gives bicyclists and pedestrians a new option of crossing the Connecticut River without needing a motor vehicle, linking the active communities of Wethersfield and Glastonbury,” Gov. Lamont pointed out.

“We anticipate that people will find this trail to be a convenient way of getting to work, exploring local shops and restaurants, or just enjoying a scenic recreational opportunity – all while being able to leave the car at home,” he said.

“This collaborative effort demonstrates the need to build alternative routes for all road users to decrease injuries and fatalities on our roadways,” added Garrett Eucalitto, commissioner of the Connecticut DOT.

There are significant economic benefits to making such trail investments as well.

According to a recent episode of the “Talking Michigan Transportation” podcast – produced by the Michigan Department of Transportation –Julie Clark, chief executive officer for the Traverse Area Recreation and Transportation or TART Trails advocacy group, discussed how trail networks can enhance quality of life for residents while also providing an economic boost.

The economic value of trail networks comes from the key role they play in outdoor recreation, Clark said. For example, in 2021, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis released statistics estimating that outdoor recreation accounted for $862 billion in economic output or consumer spending), 1.9 percent or $454 billion of gross domestic product, and supported 4.5 million jobs. 

Environmental News Highlights – May 22, 2024

FEDERAL ACTION

Here come Biden’s environment rules. Now courts will have their say. -E&E News

Federal Investigations Into Baltimore Bridge Collapse Consider Wider Threats to Infrastructure -Engineering News-Record

Biden-Harris Administration Selects 99 Communities for Grants Aimed at Making Local Roads Safer; Invites Applications for Future Rounds of Funding -USDOT (media release)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

New York City Nabs Stretch of Brooklyn Coastline to Redevelop –CityLab

Oakland, California becomes first district nationwide with 100% electric school buses -KRON-TV

NREL’s Open-Source Vehicle and Mobility Tools Offer Routes to Reduce Transportation Energy Use, Emissions -National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Opposition grows to speedy electric truck transition –FreightWaves

Cleveland port’s ‘electrification hub’ expected to anchor progress toward net-zero emissions -Energy News Network

 

AIR QUALITY

Coal dust concerns mount after Baltimore bridge collapse –Politico



New technology captures harmful ship emissions at the Port of Oakland -KPIX-TV


Pittsburgh Regional Transit aims to reduce emissions in first-ever climate plan -Allegheny Front

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE/EQUITY

Federal Railroad Administration initiates civil rights probe in Amtrak’s Baltimore tunnel project -Baltimore Sun

Philadelphia Parking Authority begins issuing tickets, fines amid crackdown on ADA mobility violations in city -WPVI-TV

Another successful launch of MDOT’s diversity recruitment program -Talking Michigan Transportation podcast

Interagency Equity Advisory Committee Helps All California Communities Benefit from Transportation Projects -California DOT (media release)

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

Invasive seaweed causing Port of San Diego emergency -KGTV-TV

California’s water tunnel to cost $20 billion, state officials say the benefits are worth it –AP

EPA Announces Final Rule to Improve Public Awareness of Drinking Water Quality -EPA (media release)

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Pete Buttigieg says federal dollars should help mend Philadelphia’s Chinatown -NBC News



MnDOT, Grand Portage Band Partnership Bringing Ojibwe-English Road Signs To Highway 61 –Tbnewswatch

FDOT nixes Pride, Juneteenth bridge displays -Axios Florida

 

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Texas Department of Transportation Rolls Out Statewide Active Transportation Plan for Safer, Connected Travel –Hoodline

UDOT to build 60 miles of paved trails as part of Utah Trail Network -KSL-TV

With pedestrian deaths at a 30-year high, study examines engineering solutions -University of Minnesota’s Catalyst

Bicycling in Chicago doubled in 5 years, but cyclists still worry about safety -Chicago Sun-Times

Online tool supports local public agencies in addressing pedestrian and cyclist safety -Kansas DOT (press release)

 

TRB RESOURCES/RESEARCH/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Enhancing the Airport Experience with Wayfinding -ACRP (webinar)

Improving Airport Operations and Sustainability via Landside Vehicles -ACRP (webinar)

State DOT Product Evaluation Processes –NCHRP

Community-Driven Relocation: Recommendations for the U.S. Gulf Coast Region and Beyond -National Academies

Incorporating Climate Change and Climate Policy into Macroeconomic Modeling -National Academies (workshop proceedings)

A Primer on Low-Carbon Liquid Fuels and Biobased Products for Transit ApplicationsAssociation for Commuter Transportation (webinar)

Utah DOT Kicks off New Volunteer Litter Removal Program

The Utah Department of Transportation recently launched a new volunteer litter removal program called “Keeping Utah Beautiful” – a program designed to make it easy for members of the public to go online and sign up for a one-time cleanup of state roads.

[Above photo by the Utah DOT]

The agency said these volunteer cleanups will supplement the work of Utah DOT crews who regularly pick up litter statewide. To ensure volunteer safety, “Keeping Utah Beautiful” participants will not clean interstates or some state routes, the Utah DOT stressed – and requires that program volunteers be a minimum of age 14.

The “Keeping Utah Beautiful” program replaces the agency’s Adopt-a-Highway program, though Utah businesses can continue to support the “Sponsor a Highway” program, which hires a professional litter cleaning company to perform pickup along Utah’s interstates.

Utah Governor Spencer Cox (R) helped launch the new litter removal program by cleaning up a stretch of SR-201 near Mountain View Corridor.

“Serving others and giving back is the hallmark of who we are,” the governor said in a statement. “Utah leads the nation each year in volunteerism, and I know many Utahns, including myself, will take advantage of this new opportunity to help maintain the beauty of our state.”

Utah DOT Deputy Director Lisa Wilson added that her agency’s maintenance workers will continue cleaning up litter from interstates and major state roads alongside volunteer groups; an ongoing effort that costs the department an average of $2.3 million per year.

“Keeping litter off our roads not only keeps Utah beautiful, but it keeps Utah safe,” Utah DOT Deputy Director Lisa Wilson said. “This new program will make it easier than ever for Utahns to lend a hand and clean up our roads.”

State departments of transportation across the country are involved in a wide variety of litter removal efforts, as well as public awareness campaigns that seek to eliminate roadway littering – in no small part due to the growing cost of roadside cleanup efforts.

The Ohio Department of Transportation, for example, note that it is now spending $10 million annually to collect trash along state and U.S. routes outside municipalities and all interstates except the Ohio Turnpike.

In addition to Ohio DOT workers and Adopt-A-Highway groups, litter collection in Ohio is also performed along state highways by the following:

  • Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections – Ohio DOT works with 11 institutions on litter pickup along state highways. Since January, their crews collected over 24,000 bags of trash.
  • Interstate Business Solutions – Ohio DOT contracts with them to clean up litter in the state’s metropolitan areas (Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron, Canton, and Youngstown). Since January, the IBS team has collected over 31,343 bags of trash.
  • Center for Employment Opportunities – Ohio DOT contracts with CEO to pick up along roadsides, and to clean encampment areas of unhoused individuals. Since January, the CEO team has collected nearly 25,000 bags of trash.

Meanwhile, the Oklahoma Department of Transportation and Missouri Department of Transportation recently wrapped up yearly contests that seek to highlight the issue of roadside littering among elementary through high school aged students.

Oklahoma DOT said the 14 student winners of its 2024 Trash Poster Contest – drawn from a pool of 4,615 entries –receive a monetary award, T-shirt, certificate of recognition, a poster board and a laminated copy of their poster. Additionally, they are awarded sponsor promotional items and a state legislative citation of congratulations.

Concurrently, the Missouri Department of Transportation selected winners of the 2024 “Yes You CAN Make Missouri Litter Free” trash-can-decorating contest.

MoDOT said that it sponsors this contest as part of Missouri’s “No MOre Trash!” campaign to raise awareness about and discourage littering. The competition encourages students from kindergarten through 12th grade to join the fight against litter by decorating and displaying a large trash can with the “No MOre Trash!” logo and a litter-prevention message using a variety of creative art mediums.

New Mexico DOT Launches New DBE Support Program

On May 14, the New Mexico Department of Transportation launched its inaugural Small Business Training and Resources or “STAR” program; a 14-week course designed to provide support and resources for Disadvantaged Business Enterprises or DBEs and other small businesses seeking to work with NMDOT.

[Above image by NMDOT]

The STAR program will guide participants through corrections and improvements to any financial, managerial, technical, or labor conditions which could potentially prevent them from receiving project contracts. The agency added that the program’s “carefully crafted curriculum” is designed to ensure that participants receive a comprehensive learning experience tailored to their unique business needs.

NMDOT noted that its new STAR program is free for all participants and offers a “powerful blend” of expert-led workshops, practical tools, and personalized coaching tailored to propel DBEs and small businesses forward in the government contracting sector.

“Having a program that offers support and essential training to DBEs helps grow our local economy and business community. NMDOT wants small businesses to have more opportunities to partner with NMDOT and in turn, bolster the local business economy,” noted Ricky Serna, NMDOT secretary, in a statement.

The agency said the STAR program includes weekly online sessions, networking opportunities, a supportive environment, personalized coaching, and a professionally filmed and edited marketing video that will help advertise each business to its fullest potential. 

NMDOT pointed out that all small businesses looking to do business with the agency are eligible for this program; with first preference given to New Mexico-certified DBEs certified in the core construction and design category within the North American Industry Classification System.

Environmental News Highlights – May 15, 2024

FEDERAL ACTION

The National Zero-Emission Freight Corridor Strategy and Plans to Decarbonize Transportation in the US -Logistics Viewpoints

White House uses Infrastructure Week to tout progress on thousands of projects -The Hill

FHWA chief praises Port of Savannah projects to reduce truck pollution -Savannah Morning News

US Republican attorneys general sue to stop EPA’s carbon rule –Reuters

Bike Brands Start To Adopt C-V2X To Warn Cyclists About Cars -Ars Technica

Executive Director of Joint Office of Energy and Transportation Looks for Ideas to Expand E-Mobility -National League of Cities (commentary)

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Caltrans Launches Digital Map Highlighting More than 300 Clean California Projects -California DOT

Kansas City wants big federal money for sustainability projects, but it faces tough competition -KCUR Radio

Ohio seeks $189 million in EPA funds to electrify state fleets, retrofit public buildings -Ohio Capital Journal

Even Stock Exhausts Aren’t Safe from NYC Noise Camera Tickets -Road and Track

How Green Transit Technologies Can Shape The Future Of Public Transportation –Forbes

 

AIR QUALITY

Residents Across Five States Monitor Local Air Quality -The Appalachian Voice

EPA reminds New Englanders to use free air quality monitoring tools this summer -EPA (media release)

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE/EQUITY

New York City Ordered to Fix Broken Pledge to Make Half of Taxis Wheelchair-Accessible -The City

CULTURAL RESOURCES

The Father of the 15-Minute City Doubles Down on His Vision –CityLab

VDOT’s living shorelines project at this Boy Scout camp is a conservation success story -Scouting Magazine

You Might Need Your Teen To Translate These Hawaii DOT Highway Signs. (And That’s The Point) -KHNL/KGMB-TV

Sustainability in action at Laurelwood Park -Sound Transit (media release)

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

City of Belfast, Maine DOT partner to enhance Active Transportation infrastructure -Penobscot Bay Pilot

Chautauqua County, NY to hold Active Transportation Week –Observer

Cyclist safety enhancements coming to Miami-Dade’s most dangerous roadways -WTVJ-TV

Iowa closes “resounding gaps” in state law on crosswalks -Bleeding Heartland

New York City DOT Announces Plan for Secure Bike Parking Network -BoroPark24

Laredo, TX discusses bicycle safety and active transportation -Laredo Morning Times


2025 Transportation Alternatives (TA) Program Funding Available through SDDOT -South Dakota Department of Transportation (media release)

TRB RESOURCES/RESEARCH/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Elevating Community Voices and Environmental Justice in the Transition to Net Zero -National Academies

Addressing Climate Resilience and Greenhouse Gases in the Transportation Planning Process –NCHRP

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Call for Nominations for the Scientific Earthquake Studies Advisory Committee -U.S. Geological Survey (Call for nominations)

Ensuring Safe Accommodations for Air Travelers With Disabilities Using Wheelchairs -Office of the Secretary of Transportation (Proposed rule; extension of comment period)

Comment Period, Notice of Public Meeting, and Request for Comment on the Draft Programmatic Environmental Assessment for Drone Package Delivery in North Carolina -FAA (Notice of availability; notice of public meeting; request for comments)

Good Neighbor Environmental Board -EPA (Notice of meeting)

Council on Environmental Quality Finalizes NEPA Reforms

The White House Council on Environmental Quality or CEQ recently finalized reforms to the National Environmental Policy Act or NEPA that implement permitting efficiencies laid out in the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, including setting clear deadlines for agencies to complete environmental reviews, requiring a lead agency and setting specific expectations for lead and cooperating agencies, and creating a unified and coordinated federal review process.

[Above photo by the White House]

The CEQ said the rule provides agencies with other new and faster tools to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of environmental reviews. For example, it creates new ways for federal agencies to establish categorical exclusions – the fastest form of environmental review.

The agency noted the new NEPA reforms will apply to projects beginning environmental reviews on or after July 1 this year, but will not disrupt ongoing environmental review processes.

The new NEPA reforms are intended to help accelerate reviews for projects that agencies can evaluate on a broad, programmatic scale, or that incorporate measures to mitigate adverse effects – helping the transportation industry and other sectors speed up environmental reviews and providing more certainty when they are designing projects.

Finally, the CEQ says the new rule promotes early public engagement in environmental review processes to help reduce conflict, accelerate project reviews, improve project design and outcomes, and increase legal durability, noted Brenda Mallory, CEQ’s chair, in a statement – helping accelerate permitting for everything from wildfire management and electric vehicle charging infrastructure to high-speed internet and semiconductor manufacturing.

“These reforms will deliver smarter decisions, quicker permitting, and projects that are built better and faster,” she noted. “As we accelerate our clean energy future, we are also protecting communities from pollution and environmental harms that can result from poor planning and decision making while making sure we build projects in the right places.”

The CEQ said it conducted a “robust review” of more than 148,000 public comments on the proposed rule, of which approximately 920 were unique comments.

The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials provided detailed feedback on CEQ’s then-proposed NEPA revisions in September 2023, noting in its comment letter that it “shares CEQ’s goals” of providing for efficient and effective environmental reviews, ensuring full and fair public involvement, providing regulatory certainty, promoting better decision-making grounded in science, and protecting the environment.

Key comments from AASHTO included that there should be no “one-size-fits-all” way to comply with NEPA. “Each transportation project is unique,” the group pointed out in its letter. “Flexibility [is needed] to tailor the NEPA process based on a particular project’s circumstances [so] agencies should be able to meet NEPA’s requirements in a way that minimizes the financial and administrative burdens, informs public decisions, protects the environment, and avoids unintended consequences such as public or agency uncertainty and increased litigation risk.”

AASHTO also said CEQ’s NEPA regulations should provide clear direction to agencies, project sponsors and applicants, and the public. “To improve agency and public understanding of the regulatory framework, CEQ should be clear about which aspects of the regulations are statutorily required,” the group emphasized.

“AASHTO is concerned that CEQ’s proposed regulations introduce new undefined terms and create new vague requirements, which will lead to delays in project delivery and increase litigation risk for projects,” the group said. “For example, in various areas throughout the regulations, CEQ proposes to replace the term ‘significant’ with the ambiguous and undefined terms ‘important’ or ‘substantial.’”

Active Mobility Key Part of Utah DOT Construction Plan

The Utah Department of Transportation unveiled its 2024 construction plan, which encompasses 209 projects with a total value of $2.74 billion. Many of those projects include critical active transportation components, the agency said.

[Above photo by Utah DOT]

Lisa Wilson, Utah DOT deputy director of engineering and operations, noted in a statement that planned improvements incorporated within the agency’s 2024 construction plan range from repaving rural highways, building freeway-style interchanges, replacing aging bridges, improving pedestrian access, and building new trails.

“These projects are part of our commitment to helping people get where they want, in the way they want, safely and efficiently,” Wilson said. “This includes building new projects to help meet growth demands, maintaining our aging roads and bridges, and building out our transportation network to accommodate drivers, pedestrians and bicyclists.”

Just some of the major projects Utah DOT plans to start work on this year that incorporate active transportation elements include:

  • The Mountain View Corridor: This $466 million project will connect the Mountain View Corridor from Porter Rockwell Blvd with 2100 North in Lehi, providing another much-needed transportation option for northwest Utah County and southwest Salt Lake County drivers. It will be the first section of Mountain View Corridor constructed as a freeway with no stoplights. Additional work includes upgrading the intersection at 2100 North to an interchange, updating wildlife fencing, and creating a multi-use trail. The Mountain View Corridor will eventually be a 35-mile freeway from I-80 in Salt Lake County to SR-73 in Utah County. Construction is expected to last through early 2026.
  • 5600 South: This $361 million project incorporates building a new I-15 interchange at 5600 South in Roy that will make it easier to get to and from Hill Air Force Base. The project is also widening 5600 South from three to five lanes from I-15 to 3500 West. Utah DOT will also add new sidewalks, pedestrian ramps, and a new trail system for pedestrians and bicyclists as well. These improvements will help area residents get around more easily, whether they are walking, biking or driving. Construction started in 2023 and is expected to continue through 2026. 
  • I-15 Shepard Lane interchange: This $147.5 million project will build a new interchange on I-15 at Shepard Lane in Farmington to reduce congestion and improve safety in this area. Not only will it cross over Union Pacific Railroad and Utah Transit Authority tracks to create another connection to local roads, this project will also improve pedestrian and bike connectivity along Park Lane, along with improvements to ramps associated with I-15, US-89, and Legacy Parkway (SR-67). Construction is expected to wrap up in 2026.

Other state departments of transportation have also formally launched their 2024 construction efforts.

The Ohio Department of Transportation plans to invest $2.8 billion into 950 road and bridge improvement projects across the state during its 2024 construction season – with 39 of them classified as “major projects” with a value above $10 million.