97-30212. Environmental Impact Statement on the Proposed Central Light Rail Transit Line Between North Seattle (Northgate) and SeaTac, WA  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 222 (Tuesday, November 18, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 61579-61580]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-30212]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Federal Transit Administration
    
    
    Environmental Impact Statement on the Proposed Central Light Rail 
    Transit Line Between North Seattle (Northgate) and SeaTac, WA
    
    AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) and the Central Puget 
    Sound Regional Transit Authority (RTA) intend to prepare an 
    Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) in accordance with the National 
    Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The RTA will also ensure that the EIS 
    satisfies the requirements of the Washington State Environmental Policy 
    Act (SEPA). The FTA will be the NEPA lead agency. The RTA will be the 
    SEPA lead agency. Corridor alternatives were evaluated in a SEPA plan-
    level EIS (1993) and in a Major Investment Study (1997).
        The EIS will evaluate the Central Light Rail Transit (LRT) Project 
    and alignment alternatives in the 23-mile long corridor between North 
    Seattle (Northgate) and SeaTac, Washington. The proposed Central LRT 
    Project is intended to provide light rail transit service between key 
    activity centers along the corridor, including the region's three 
    largest employment centers, many major institutions, dense residential 
    neighborhoods, and regional destinations, such as Sea-Tac International 
    Airport.
        The study area also includes several sites for a proposed LRT 
    vehicle storage and maintenance facility. In addition, the EIS will 
    evaluate the no-build alternative and any new, reasonable alternatives 
    within the corridor generated through the scoping process.
        Scoping will be accomplished through correspondence with interested 
    persons, organizations, and federal, state, regional, and local 
    agencies. Six public scoping meetings will be held, as well as one 
    inter-agency scoping meeting. See DATES below for details.
    
    DATES: Comment Due Date: Written comments on the scope of alternatives 
    and impacts to be considered should be sent to the RTA by January 5, 
    1998. See ADDRESSES below. Oral comments should be made at one of the 
    six public scoping meetings scheduled below. Scoping Meetings: Public 
    scoping meetings will be held on the following days and locations:
    
    Tuesday, December 9, 1997, from 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., Kane Hall, 
    Walker Ames Room, University of Washington Campus, Seattle, WA
    Wednesday, December 10, 1997, from 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., Union 
    Station, 401 S. Jackson Street, Seattle, WA
    Thursday, December 11, 1997, from 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., Rainier 
    Community Center, 4600 36th Avenue South, Seattle, WA
    Saturday, December 13, 1997, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon, Seattle 
    Central Community College, 1701 Broadway, Room 1110, Seattle, WA
    Saturday, December 13, 1997, from 1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Foster 
    High School Commons, 4242 S. 144th Street, Tukwila, WA
    Wednesday, December 17, 1997, from 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., Tyee High 
    School Auditorium, 4424 South 188th Street, SeaTac, WA
    
    A scoping meeting for governmental agencies will be held on Monday, 
    December 8, 1997, between 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. at the RTA, 1100 2nd 
    Avenue, Suite 500, Seattle, WA 98101-3423. All the locations for the 
    scoping meetings are accessible to people with disabilities. People 
    with special needs should contact the RTA at the address below or by 
    calling (206) 684-6776. A TDD number is also available: (206) 684-1394.
        Scoping meetings will be held in an ``open-house'' format. Project 
    representatives will be available to discuss the project throughout the 
    entire meeting. Informational displays and written materials will also 
    be available throughout the entire meeting. In addition to written 
    comments, which may be made at the meeting or as described below, a 
    stenographer will be available at the meeting to record oral comments.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments on the project scope should be sent to: 
    Perry Weinberg, Environmental Compliance Manager, Regional Transit 
    Authority, 1100 Second Avenue, Suite 500, Seattle, WA 98101-3423; fax 
    number: (206) 689-3525.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. F. William Fort, Transportation 
    Program Specialist, Federal Transit Administration, Region X, 915 
    Second Avenue, Room 3142, Seattle, WA 98174; phone number: (206) 220-
    4461.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Scoping
    
        The FTA and the RTA invite interested individuals, organizations, 
    and federal, state, regional and local agencies to participate in 
    defining the alternatives within the corridor to be evaluated in the 
    EIS and identifying any significant, social, economic, or environmental 
    issues related to the alternatives. An Environmental Scoping 
    Information Report describing the project, the proposed alternatives, 
    the impact areas to be evaluated, the public involvement program and 
    the preliminary project schedule has been prepared. You may request a 
    copy of the report by contacting the person identified above in the 
    section FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. Scoping comments may be made 
    orally at the public scoping meetings or in writing. See DATES above 
    for locations and times, and see the ADDRESSES section above for 
    written comments. During scoping, comments should focus on identifying 
    specific social, economic, or environmental impacts to be evaluated
    
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    and suggesting alternatives that are more cost-effective or have fewer 
    environmental impacts while achieving similar transit objectives.
        Scoping materials will be available at the meeting or in advance of 
    the meeting by contacting the RTA at (206) 684-6776. If you wish to be 
    placed on the mailing list to receive further information as the 
    project proceeds, please contact the following at the RTA: Ron Endlich, 
    LRT North Corridor Manager (206) 684-1634 or Jonathan Jackson, LRT 
    South Corridor Manager (206) 684-6773.
    
    II. Description of Study Area and Project Need
    
        The Central LRT Project study area is a north-south corridor, 
    approximately 23 miles long between the Northgate area in north Seattle 
    and SeaTac, Washington. The Central LRT Project will include a 
    partially grade-separated, double-track light rail line on new right-
    of-way. Conventional LRT low-floor vehicles are expected to be used. 
    Service is expected to operate every 6 minutes in peak periods and 
    every 8 minutes in off-peak times, 18 to 20 hours a day, seven days a 
    week.
        A total of 21 LRT stations are proposed to serve the major transit 
    markets of Northgate, the University District, Capitol Hill, First 
    Hill, downtown Seattle, Southeast Seattle, and the cities of Tukwila 
    and SeaTac. Light rail service will operate through downtown Seattle in 
    the existing transit tunnel. Bus transfer facilities will be provided 
    at each LRT station. Transfers to planned commuter rail service will 
    take place at several selected stations.
    
    III. Alternatives
    
        The alternatives proposed for evaluation include a variety of 
    alignment alternatives for different segments of the corridor. In 
    addition, various track profiles will be evaluated throughout the study 
    area. Profiles include tunnel, surface and aerial sections.
        Beginning from the south, in the SeaTac segment two route alignment 
    alternatives will be evaluated. One route follows International Blvd. 
    (State Route 99) from S. 200th Street, north past Sea-Tac Airport to 
    the intersection with SR-518. The other alignment starts from the same 
    location at the south end of the City and follows 28th Street, using 
    Sea-Tac Airport property traveling north to connect with the SR-99 
    route.
        In the Tukwila segment, two alternative alignments will be 
    evaluated. One alignment would use Pacific Highway South (State Route 
    99) between the SeaTac city limits and Boeing Access Road. The second 
    alignment would travel east from State Route 99 along State Route 518 
    and continue east past Southcenter Mall. The line would proceed north 
    along Interurban Avenue to I-5 at Boeing Access Road.
        In the southeast Seattle (Rainier Valley) segment, two alignment 
    alternatives will be considered. One follows Martin Luther King, Jr. 
    Way from Henderson Street north to McClellan Street. The other follows 
    Rainier Avenue South between the same locations. Various combinations 
    of these alignments may also be considered.
        Between South McClellan Street and the Downtown Seattle Transit 
    Tunnel, two general alignments will be evaluated. One alignment would 
    run north along Rainier Avenue past I-90, before heading west to 
    connect with the existing International District tunnel station. The 
    second alignment would explore the feasibility of tunneling under 
    Beacon Hill, beginning just west of the intersection of Rainier Avenue 
    and Martin Luther King, Jr. Way. The route would connect with the 
    existing E-3 busway at South Lander Street and would travel north to 
    the International District tunnel station.
        From the north end of the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel to the 
    University District, two alignments will be evaluated. One alignment is 
    a tunnel beginning under I-5 east of the existing Convention Place 
    tunnel station. The tunnel would loop south to serve First Hill, then 
    continue north under Broadway Avenue and 10th Avenue East. The tunnel 
    would continue under Portage Bay and 15th Avenue Northeast in the 
    University District. Another alignment would run north from the 
    Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel at the Westlake Station underground 
    through the Denny Regrade and the Seattle Center areas. The route would 
    continue northeast through south Lake Union and the Eastlake/Fairview 
    area, adjacent to I-5. The route would leave the tunnel north of SR-520 
    and would cross the Ship Canal on a new high-level bridge parallel to 
    the existing I-5 bridge. The route would continue east along Campus 
    Parkway and reenter a tunnel under the University District.
        In the University District to Northgate segment, several 
    alternative alignments will be considered for the segment between 
    Ravenna Boulevard and N.E. 75th Street. These alternatives include 
    alignments along 8th Avenue N.E., Roosevelt Way, and 12th Avenue N.E.
        The proposed Central LRT Project also includes construction of an 
    LRT vehicle storage and maintenance facility. Alternative locations for 
    the facility will be evaluated in the City of Tukwila, near Boeing 
    Access Road and East Marginal Way South, and in Southeast Seattle, 
    between Boeing Access Road and Henderson Street.
        The No-Build alternative, which involves no change to 
    transportation services or facilities in the corridor beyond those 
    currently programmed, will also be evaluated in the EIS.
    
    IV. Probable Effects/Potential Impacts for Analysis
    
        The FTA and RTA plan to evaluate in the EIS all significant, 
    social, economic, and environmental impacts of the alternatives. 
    Environmental and social impacts proposed for analysis include land use 
    and neighborhood impacts, traffic and parking impacts near stations, 
    traffic circulation, visual impacts, health and safety impacts, impacts 
    on cultural and archaeological resources, impacts on wetland and 
    parkland areas, and noise and vibration impacts. The impacts on natural 
    areas, rare and endangered species, and earth, air and water quality, 
    will also be covered. The impacts will be evaluated both for the 
    construction period and for the long-term period of operations. 
    Reasonable measures to mitigate adverse impacts will be identified.
    
    V. FTA Procedures
    
        The Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and the Preliminary 
    Engineering (PE) for the Central Light Rail Transit Project will be 
    conducted simultaneously. The locally preferred light rail transit mode 
    and its general alignment were selected previously on the basis of the 
    evaluation in the Major Investment Study (1997). The EIS/PE process 
    will assess the social, economic and environmental impacts of 
    alternative specific alignments, station locations and designs, and 
    maintenance facility locations and designs to minimize and mitigate 
    adverse impacts. A draft EIS will be published and made available for 
    public and agency review and comment, and public hearings will be held. 
    On the basis of the draft EIS and the comments received, the RTA will 
    refine the project design and complete preliminary engineering and the 
    final EIS.
    
        Issued: November 12, 1997.
    Helen M. Knoll,
    Regional Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 97-30212 Filed 11-17-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-57-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
11/18/1997
Department:
Federal Transit Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
Document Number:
97-30212
Pages:
61579-61580 (2 pages)
PDF File:
97-30212.pdf