Code of Federal Regulations (Last Updated: November 8, 2024) |
Title 23 - Highways |
Chapter I - Federal Highway Administration, Department of Transportation |
SubChapter G - Engineering and Traffic Operations |
Part 650 - Bridges, Structures, and Hydraulics |
Subpart A - Location and Hydraulic Design of Encroachments on Flood Plains |
§ 650.111 - Location hydraulic studies.
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§ 650.111 Location hydraulic studies.
(a) National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) maps or information developed by the highway agency, if NFIP maps are not available, shall be used to determine whether a highway location alternative will include an encroachment.
(b) Location studies shall include evaluation and discussion of the practicability of alternatives to any longitudinal encroachments.
(c) Location studies shall include discussion of the following items, commensurate with the significance of the risk or environmental impact, for all alternatives containing encroachments and for those actions which would support base flood-plain development:
(1) The risks associated with implementation of the action,
(2) The impacts on natural and beneficial flood-plain values,
(3) The support of probable incompatible flood-plain development,
(4) The measures to minimize flood-plain impacts associated with the action, and
(5) The measures to restore and preserve the natural and beneficial flood-plain values impacted by the action.
(d) Location studies shall include evaluation and discussion of the practicability of alternatives to any significant encroachments or any support of incompatible flood-plain development.
(e) The studies required by § 650.111 (c) and (d) shall be summarized in environmental review documents prepared pursuant to 23 CFR part 771.
(f) Local, State, and Federal water resources and flood-plain management agencies should be consulted to determine if the proposed highway action is consistent with existing watershed and flood-plain management programs and to obtain current information on development and proposed actions in the affected watersheds.