Mar 19, 2008
Texas Farm Bureau: “TxDOT’s Draft Environmental
Impact Study will not withstand judicial scrutiny”
Southwest FARM PRESS
http://southwestfarmpress.com/news/impact-study-0319/index.html ©
2008 Penton Media, Inc.
In comments filed with the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT)
and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the Texas Farm Bureau
said the Draft Environmental Impact Study (DEIS) for the proposed I-69
corridor “would not withstand judicial scrutiny.”
Under the terms of the National Environmental Policy Act, these
detailed environmental studies are conducted under rules developed by
the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ).
According to the farm organization’s comments, the failure of the
DEIS to consider the environmental impact of using existing
rights-of-way–rather than a single minded focus on building a completely
new route–means the study could not hold up in court. Current law and
actual practice in the only other state, Indiana, to file a DEIS on the
massive interstate project dictate that existing rights-of-way be
considered. Indiana’s DEIS did, in fact, consider existing
rights-of-way.
“The completely new route, of course, would be the most disruptive in
terms of displacing families and impacting the environment,” said
Kenneth Dierschke, president of Texas Farm Bureau. “Once again, it seems
that TxDOT is trying to influence policy rather than implementing it,
this time by pretending that there is only one way to build the Texas
portion of I-69.”
Another problem, according to the document submitted by TFB, is the
insistence by TxDOT and FHWA that I-69 be “multimodal,” complete with
space for separate truck lanes, rail and a multi-purpose utility
corridor. The Farm Bureau charges that the two agencies have failed to
demonstrate the need for this kind of space-eating approach.
“I-69, as proposed, will pass through seven states. Of these, Texas
is the only one to mention, let alone require, a multimodal corridor in
connection with I-69,” Dierschke said.
Dierschke said the state needs additional highways but Farm Bureau is
concerned about the lost farm and ranch land along the proposed route.
That, he said, is another flaw in the DEIS. According to the TFB
document, farmland loss was not considered in the DEIS, as required by
federal law.
“There doesn’t appear to be any effort to minimize the loss of farm
and ranch lands or the productive capacity that might be lost,”
Dierschke said.
The Farm Bureau document suggests that many problems arise from the
intent to include I-69–not only in the federal corridor that includes
seven states–but in the controversial Trans-Texas Corridor as well. The
TTC is most often described as multimodal, requiring more space.
“We have to wonder if the rest of the TTC is getting this kind of
half-hearted scrutiny,” Dierschke said. “We hope TxDOT and FHWA are
approaching this planning phase with an open mind, but their efforts
suggest otherwise.”