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Parker Road (SH 83) Planning/ Environmental Linkages Study
Slide 1
Parker Road (SH 83) Planning/ Environmental Linkages Study
Peer Review
December 2, 2009
Slide 2
Why PEL?
- Planning process in Colorado would identify corridor vision/ project priorities but...
- Typically had to be backtrack and revisit vision/ priorities when we got to NEPA
Slide 3
Why
PEL?
- Now, has become more typical to follow PEL guidance in corridor planning studies, and document it, so that future
NEPA
can use studies as a starting point.
- Involve resource agencies upfront (intense involvement with first “pilot” efforts – define expectations for future PEL efforts)
Slide 4
Parker Road Location
This slide is a map showing where Parker Road is located.
Slide 5
SH 83 – Issues for Defining Improvements
- Major Regional Arterial
- Need to balance
- Regional Mobility
- Local Access – businesses and residents
- Parks, Wetlands, Historic Properties, and Listed Species
- Long Corridor/ Limited Funding
Slide 6
Parker Road Corridor Study
This slide shows two photographs of Parker Road
Slide 7
SH 83 – Our PEL Process
- As one of the first PELs in Colorado – was a pilot; we wanted to document resource agency buy-in.
- Strong partnership with
FHWA
and local project sponsor.
- Early and broad agency involvement – face to face interviews – Identified key resources; “worst case scenario” impacts; and discussed PEL process.
- Significant public involvement – and documented it
Slide 8
SH 83 PEL Matrix
- Thorough documentation of expectations for each agency – what they like/ fear about PEL
- Under what conditions findings could flow directly into NEPA
- Each agency is different – one size doesn’t fit all
- Defined how/ when agency wants to be involved in future PELs
Slide 9
Colorado’s PEL Partnering Agreement
- Outcome of this open dialogue about expectations/ desires for PEL led to Partnering Agreement – Management Level support
- 15 signatories
-
CDOT, FHWA,
FTA
-
EPA, Forest Service,
SHPO,
DNR,
USACE,
CDPHE,
USFWS
-
MPOs –
DRCOG,
PPACG,
NFRMPO,
PACOG
- Regional Transit –
RTD
Slide 10
The Partnering Agreement
- “Signatories are committed to performing meaningful and efficient environmental analyses that are pertinent to the decision-making process. This is a two-way conversation intended to not only address the needs of the transportation agencies but to be supportive of [other] agencies’ charters, goals, and initiatives.”
- “This Agreement does not affect the responsibilities that each agency has by law.”
Slide 11
CO FHWA PEL Questionnaire – Documenting the Results
- Innovation of FHWA in Colorado
- Grew out of strong partnering between CDOT/ FHWA/ Resource Agencies
- Documents PEL process, findings, agreements, etc.
- Bound into final study report, so can serve as starting point for staff entering future NEPA studies
Slide 12
Benefits of PEL
- Sets context for large corridors – broader understanding for better decisions/ better projects
- Smaller projects cleared later in NEPA with minimal backtracking
- Early agency involvement – when they can have an impact on alternatives (to avoid/ minimize)
Slide 13
Benefits of PEL
- Allows study of logical sequence for efficient project improvements
- Cross-training of planners and environmental practitioners
- Less expensive
Slide 14
Lessons Learned from
SH
83 PEL
- In order for PEL to function as a tiering document for future NEPA, cumulative impacts should be done.
- Not all agencies want to be involved in the same way, or at the same time.
- Some resource agencies are also landowners and have a dual interest.
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