HomeMy WebLinkAbout20020672 Ver 3_1-6-14 Comments on Draft SFEIS_20140106S OUTHERN E NVIRONMENTAL L AW C ENTER
Telephone 919-967-1450 601 WEST ROSEMARY STREET, SUITE 220
CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516-2356
Facsimile 919-929-9421
Charlottesville • Chapel Hill • Atlanta • Asheville • Birmingham • Charleston • Nashville • Richmond • Washington, DC
January 6, 2014
VIA E-MAIL AND FEDEX
Jennifer Harris
North Carolina Department of Transportation
1 South Wilmington Street
Raleigh, NC 27601
jhharris1@ncdot.gov
RE: Monroe Connector/Bypass: Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement
Dear Ms. Harris:
On behalf of the North Carolina Wildlife Federation, Clean Air Carolina and the Yadkin
Riverkeeper, the Southern Environmental Law Center (“SELC”) submits the attached comments
on the Draft Supplemental Final Environmental Impact Statement (“DSFEIS”) for the Monroe
Connector/Bypass. In addition, we submit a report by transportation expert David T. Hartgen,
which reviews NCDOT’s traffic forecasts for the project.1 Dr. Hartgen concludes that the
forecasts are inadequate to support decisionmaking.
The comments below identify severe deficiencies in the DSFEIS which call into question
the advisability of proceeding further with the $900 million Bypass. The key shortcomings
include the following:
New Trends: Much has changed since NCDOT first began to study the Monroe Connector/
Bypass in 2007. But the DSFEIS, which appears to be written only to justify a new highway,
disregards any new information suggesting the merits of a different approach.
• Travel speeds along the U.S. 74 corridor have improved dramatically in the
past five years, increasing by 10-15 mph in that short time span.
• Traffic volumes in the corridor have remained flat for the past decade.
• The Bypass, which was originally anticipated to save commuters travelling its
full length 29-32 minutes, is now estimated to save a mere 8-12 minutes in the
opening year.
• Growth in previously fast-growing Union County has slowed significantly,
particularly in the Bypass study area.
• Transportation resources have become increasingly scarce.
1 David T. Hartgen, Review of Traffic Forecasting: Monroe Connector/Bypass Draft Supplemental Final EIS,
November 2013 (Dec. 26, 2013) [hereinafter “Hartgen Report 2013”], Attachment 1.
2
• The cost of the project has skyrocketed to almost $900 million.
• A principal contractor for the project has been indicted for fraud in highway
contracting and has been suspended from bidding on federal projects.
These new trends all suggest that an expensive new-location toll-highway may no longer be the
best solution for Union County or the state of North Carolina.
Alternatives: Travel in Union County still needs improvement, and fortunately there are
solutions available. Yet once more the DSFEIS rejects all cost-effective alternatives out of hand
and looks only at the costly, destructive Bypass.
• Transportation expert David T. Hartgen has declared the traffic forecasts in
the DSFEIS inadequate to support decisionmaking.
• The past five years have demonstrated that low-cost, small-scale
improvements can result in dramatic improvements to travel speeds on U.S.
74. But the DSFEIS once more fails to consider how such improvements may
be expanded to improve travel in Union County for a fraction of the cost of
the Bypass.
• The DSFEIS fails to look at how a suite of alternatives including upgrades to
U.S. 74, a parallel road network and expanded transit and freight rail services,
might work together to improve mobility in the corridor.
• The analysis of alternatives in the DSFEIS is based on outdated and overstated
traffic data which manufactures the conclusion that the Bypass is inevitable.
Impacts: After being chastised by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit for
presenting the public with inaccurate information, NCDOT has finally clarified its
methodologies, and the full extent of its flawed analysis is now laid bare.
• The “No-Build” analysis in the DSFEIS is based on an assumption that
disregards entirely the constraining impact a congested U.S. 74 might have on
future growth, thus dramatically understates the level of growth attributable to
increased highway capacity, such as the Monroe Bypass.
• The DSFEIS continues to assert that minimal growth will result from the
Bypass, despite statements at all levels of government, including from
NCDOT, to the contrary.
• The DSFEIS fails to consider fully how growth may be redistributed, and how
a shift in growth away from the Charlotte metro area may impact air quality.
Disregard for the Public Process: Despite the clear mandate from the United States Court of
Appeals for the Fourth Circuit that NCDOT must use the NEPA process to accurately and
transparently inform the public, NCDOT has continued to foster a climate of misinformation.
• NCDOT paid a contractor for the Bypass to create a fake grassroots group and
spread information about the Bypass that was entirely contrary to the findings
3
in the EIS. The contractor also hosted a pro-Bypass BBQ at the site of the
public NEPA hearing, again espousing misinformation.
• NCDOT knows that there is substantial confusion about the purpose of the
Bypass, with many local residents expecting it to improve congestion on U.S.
74 and promote economic growth. Yet the Department has done nothing to
publicly clarify the true project’s purpose and anticipated impact.
I. INTRODUCTION
The National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”) is the nation’s keystone
environmental law designed to ensure careful decision making and a rational consideration of
impacts and alternatives. It is the foundation of “a national policy of protecting and promoting
environmental quality.” Hughes River Watershed Conservancy v. Glickman, 81 F.3d 437, 443
(4th Cir. 1996). For major federal actions that will significantly impact the environment, NEPA
requires that agencies develop an Environmental Impact Statement (“EIS”).
Because NCDOT’s initial EIS was found to be inadequate, the Department has prepared
this Supplemental statement, the DSFEIS. Regulations from the Council on Environmental
Quality provide that a Supplemental EIS shall be prepared, circulated and filed “in the same
fashion” as a draft and final statement.” 40 C.F.R. § 1502.9 (c)(4). As such, the Supplemental
Statement should follow all standard NEPA requirements starting with the consideration of the
project’s purpose and need, a thorough analysis of alternative solutions to meet that need, and an
analysis of the environmental impacts of project alternatives. See id. NCDOT’s SDFEIS for the
Monroe Bypass fails at every step.
II. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE AND NEED
A properly targeted and well-defined Statement of Purpose and Need is paramount to
NEPA, as it guides the agencies’ scope of review. 40 C.F.R. § 1502.13. The United States Court
of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has recognized this principle, for example noting that “[o]nly
alternatives that accomplish the purposes of the proposed action are considered reasonable, and
only reasonable alternatives require detailed study. So how the agency defines the purpose of the
proposed action sets the contours for its exploration of available alternatives.” Webster v. United
States Dep’t of Agric., 685 F.3d 411, 422 (4th Cir. 2012).
The stated purposes of the Monroe Connector/Bypass in the DSFEIS remain unchanged
from the previous EIS, and are:
1) To construct a facility that allows for safe, reliable, high-speed regional travel
in the U.S. 74 Corridor between I-485 in Mecklenburg County and the Town
of Marshville in Union County, in a manner consistent with the North
Carolina Strategic Highway Corridors Vision Plan for U.S. 74 and the
designation of U.S. 74 on the North Carolina Intrastate System.
4
2) Improve mobility in the U.S. 74 corridor within the project study area, while
maintaining access to properties along existing U.S. 74.2
A. The Statement of Purpose and Need Is Improperly Narrow
The Statement of Purpose and Need in the DSFEIS is overly narrow and written in such a
way that it precludes meaningful consideration of a full range of alternatives, per the
requirements of NEPA. 40 C.F.R. § 1502.13. Because the Statement of Purpose and Need
forms the basis upon which to compare alternatives, an agency is not permitted “to contrive a
purpose so slender as to define competing ‘reasonable alternatives’ out of consideration.”
Simmons v. US Army Corps of Eng’rs, 120 F.3d 664, 666 (7th Cir. 1997). Here, NCDOT has
done just that and, as a result, the whole NEPA document is rendered both meaningless and
unlawful.
NCDOT’s Statement of Purpose and Need includes so many specific elements there is no
chance that any option other than the predetermined new-location bypass could meet the
requirements. The project must apparently allow for “high-speed” travel, which is again
specifically defined as being consistently over 50 mph.3 The project must stretch from one very
specific location (I-485) to another specific location (Marshville).4 And the project must
maintain access to properties along U.S. 74.5 Each of these elements is arbitrary, and in
combination they form a statement that is “so unreasonably narrow that only one alternative . . .
[could ever] accomplish the goals of the agency’s action,” rendering the EIS a “foreordained
formality.” Simmons 120 F.3d at 666; see also Webster, 685 F.3d at 422.
The “high-speed” element, with its very specific speed limit of 50 mph, is noted to have
its origin in the Strategic Highway Corridor (“SHC”) Vision Plan.6 This external planning
product was not subject the public participation requirements of NEPA, and therefore cannot be
transferred into the NEPA process without opportunity for public comment and consideration.7
Without the SHC document, it becomes clear that the requirement of 50 mph is an artifice
designed to constrain alternatives to only those that involve a new-location highway. The
corridor is currently operating at an average speed of 44 mph, a vast improvement over past
years, and significant additional improvements are planned and funded for next year. By setting
50 mph as a requirement, it seems that NCDOT has hoped to avoid consideration of many lower-
cost solutions that would not require a toll and would provide real congestion relief to Union
County drivers. Removal of this artificial limit would allow a more comprehensive approach to
solutions for the corridor, and a true unconstrained look at the costs and benefits of different
options.
2 See NCDOT, Final Statement of Purpose and Need for the Monroe Connector/ Bypass (Feb. 2008), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/FinalMonroe_PN_020608.pdf.
3 Draft Supplemental Final Environmental Impact Statement [hereinafter “DSFEIS”] at 1-3, 2-3, available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/.
4 Id.
5 Id.
6 Id.
7 Moving Ahead for Progress in the 2st Century (“MAP-21”), Section 1310, 23 U.S.C. § 168(d)(4).
5
The locations mandated in the Statement of Purpose and Need are similarly arbitrary.
There is no rational reason why the small rural town of Marshville must be the end of the project.
Looking at NCDOT’s own maps of current traffic congestion, it is clear that the majority of
congestion occurs around Monroe.8 Long before Marshville, the speed of traffic along U.S. 74
increases to 50 mph and higher.9 By setting the beginning and end points of the Bypass into the
Statement of Purpose and Need, NCDOT again constrains consideration of alternatives,
precluding consideration of options that would deal with the true congestion hotspots in the
corridor.10
The most arbitrary of the constraints placed in the Statement of Purpose and Need is the
requirement that any alternatives must “maintain access to properties along existing U.S. 74.”
Requiring that access be maintained to properties along existing U.S. 74, while neglecting the
many properties that must be taken to build a new-location Bypass, has no rational basis. Many
of the farms and homes that stand in the path of the highway, as currently planned, have been in
their owners’ families for over one hundred years. The only basis for valuing the businesses
along U.S. 74 and giving no value to the homes, farms and businesses that must be taken by the
Bypass is to preclude consideration of alternatives that focus on improvements to U.S. 74 itself.
The arbitrary nature of these requirements is further exacerbated by the fact that they
have little to do with the stated need. To establish a “need” for the Bypass, NCDOT has set forth
(now outdated) data showing that U.S. 74 is congested, but has then constructed a project
purpose that does not address the stated need. In fact, as explained, many of the constraints
actually serve to eliminate consideration of options that would meet the stated need.
We understand NCDOT has been charged by the legislature to build the Monroe Bypass,
but despite the deference that is generally according to an agency’s selection of purpose and
need, that deference does not go so far as to give agencies “license to fulfill their own
prophecies, whatever the parochial impulses that drive them.” Citizens Against Burlington v.
Busey, 938 F.2d 190, 196 (D.C. Cir. 1991). As explained below, the common misunderstanding
of the project’s purpose and the recent improvements to U.S. 74 require that the statement be
revisited. We urge NCDOT to craft a new Statement of Purpose and Need that properly allows
for a full range of alternatives for improving mobility in Union County.
B. The Convoluted Statement of Purpose and Need Is Commonly
Misunderstood.
Given the convoluted nature of the Statement of Purpose and Need, it is not surprising
that it is commonly misunderstood by both the general public in the Union County area and by
decisionmakers at many levels. Many in the community mistakenly believe that the purpose of
the Bypass is to relieve current levels of congestion on existing U.S. 74 — something that the
Bypass is neither intended nor expected to achieve. This misunderstanding is unsurprising. The
Statement of Purpose and Need states that the Bypass is intended to “improve mobility in the
8 DSFEIS at 1-9‒1-12.
9 Id.
10 See discussion of traffic hot-spots below, section (III)(C)(1)(i).
6
U.S. 74 corridor.” For NCDOT, this means the “corridor” in general, but it is not hard to see
how the general public would assume that the statement applied to U.S. 74 itself. We have
pointed out this common misinterpretation to NCDOT on several occasions,11 but the agency has
taken no steps to clarify its meaning to the public.
Other misunderstandings about the purpose of the Bypass are also common throughout
Union County. Many local residents, including several who spoke during the recent public
comment period, believe the Bypass is intended to improve safety by taking truck traffic off of
U.S. 74. Others believe the project is intended to bring significant growth to Union County, and
even to neighboring Anson County.12 Unfortunately, NCDOT has refused to correct these
misapprehensions, and, in some cases, has even gone so far as to itself advance similar theories.
Such actions—intentionally misleading the public about the purpose and nature of the proposed
road—violate the very essence of NEPA which is to foster greater, not lesser, understanding of
major federal actions.
Even state officials working on the project are confused by the project’s convoluted
Statement of Purpose and Need. Alan Johnson, the assigned staff member from the Division of
Water Quality (“DWQ”) detailed his own confusion in an e-mail to the Bypass study team.13 He
explained that he had understood that the purpose of the bypass was “to relieve traffic congestion
on Hwy 74” and was thus surprised to learn that travel time was not expected to be affected by
the project.14 He went on to mention his additional surprise regarding NCDOT’s conclusion that
“growth is inevitable” regardless of the road.15 Mr. Johnson concluded by asking: “So if the
road doesn’t affect growth, and it doesn’t affect travel times, what is the purpose of the road?” 16
A good question.
1. Resolutions containing misleading information
The most striking example of the misunderstandings surrounding the Bypass was the pro-
Bypass resolution circulated last spring. As we explained in our March 6, 2013 letter to
Transportation Secretary Tata, the Union County Chamber of Commerce distributed a resolution
supporting the Monroe Bypass to a large number of local elected bodies and other partners in
Spring of 2013.17 The resolution listed several reasons why Union County residents should
support the Bypass, the vast majority of which promoted the Bypass’s ability to spur growth and
11 See, e.g., Letter from Frank Holleman and Kym Hunter, SELC, to Jennifer Harris, NCDOT, re Monroe
Connector/Bypass: Supplemental Environmental Analysis (Nov. 30, 2012) [hereinafter “SELC comments Nov.
2012”], at 28-30.
12 See, e.g., DSFEIS at A1-81; letter from Roland Bibeau, Novant Health Matthews Medical Center, to SELC (Oct.
11, 2013), Attachment 2.
13 DSFEIS at C1-96.
14 Id.
15 Id.
16 Id.
17 Letter from Kym Hunter, SELC, to Gen. Anthony Tata, NCDOT (Mar. 6, 2013), Attachment 3.
7
fix current congestion on U.S. 74, directly contradicting NCDOT’s own review of the Bypass.18
After noting the many misunderstandings present in the resolution, SELC sent a letter to
NCDOT, the State agency responsible for disseminating information about proposed
transportation projects, calling on the agency to act swiftly to clarify the true facts about the
Bypass so that the public and decisionmakers could work with accurate information.19 With our
letter we included an annotated copy of the resolution demonstrating the many ways in which it
was inconsistent with NCDOT’s own data and analysis.20
We received no response to this letter. Only in November, eight months after the
resolution was brought to NCDOT’s attention, did the agency offer any acknowledgement of the
resolution, and that response was buried in an appendix to the recently published DSFEIS.21
Even this response did not directly address any misunderstandings, but focused instead on
attempting to distinguish points in SELC’s analysis of the resolution. In doing so, NCDOT
served only to foster further confusion. For example, noting that the public may be confused
about the purpose of the Bypass, SELC wrote that “NCDOT states that improving U.S. 74 is not
a stated purpose of the Bypass, nor is it an anticipated result.”22 In response, NCDOT simply
quoted the entire purpose statement, parroting the confusing language without any additional
commentary.23
In the eight months between the inception of this misleading resolution and the
publication of the DSFEIS, the resolution was passed by at least eight groups. The City of
Monroe, the Union County Board of Commissioners, the Indian Trail Town Council, the Union
County Public Schools, the Town of Stallings, the Town of Marshville, and the Town of
Waxhaw have passed versions of the resolution, all espousing the belief that the Bypass will
serve as a major driver of growth within the county and will solve current congestion problems
on existing U.S. 74.24 Most troubling was passage of the resolution by the Mecklenburg-Union
Metropolitan Planning Organization (“MUMPO”) (now the Charlotte Region Transportation
Planning Organization “CRTPO”).25 As the local arm of the transportation planning process,
18 Id.; Resolution for Cities, County, Civic Organizations — Annotated by the SELC (Mar. 6, 2013), Attachment 4
[hereinafter “Annotated Resolution”].
19 Letter from Kym Hunter, SELC, to Gen. Anthony Tata, NCDOT (Mar. 6, 2013), Attachment 3.
20 Annotated Resolution, Attachment 4.
21 DSFEIS at A1-35.
22 Id.
23 DSFEIS at A1-39 (response to Comment #19), A1-40 (response to Comment #26).
24 Town of Indian Trail, Resolution (Apr. 9, 2013), Attachment 5; Town of Indian Trail, Town Council Supports
Monroe Bypass Project (Apr. 11, 2013), Attachment 6; City of Monroe, City Council Meeting Packet, at 35-37
(Mar. 5, 2013), Attachment 7; Union County Board of Commissioners, Minutes of Monday, March 18, 2013
Regular Meeting, at 26-29 (Apr. 1, 2013), Attachment 8; Union County Commissioners and Manager, News
Release: Board Wants Swift Action on Monroe Bypass (Mar. 19, 2013), Attachment 9; County chamber pushing
Bypass, THE HOME NEWS (Mar. 14, 2013), Attachment 10; Stallings Town Council, Minutes of Town Council
Meeting of the Town of Stallings, North Carolina, at 9 (Mar. 11, 2013), Attachment 11; Minutes of the Meeting of
the Waxhaw Board of Commissioners Meeting, at 41-44 (Apr. 23, 2013), Attachment 12.
25 Mecklenburg-Union Metropolitan Planning Organization, Resolution to Support Prompt Action for the
Construction of the Monroe Bypass (Mar. 20, 2013), Attachment 13.
8
MUMPO has the responsibility for both making local planning decisions and informing local
citizens about the potential impacts of a project. The version of the resolution passed by
MUMPO affirmatively stated its reasoning for urging swift action on the Bypass as being that
“the Monroe Bypass will stimulate economic and commercial development,” and that “the
Monroe Bypass will ease congestion on U.S. Highway 74 and other routes.”26 Yet, NCDOT has
repeatedly stated that the Bypass is likely to be responsible for very limited growth in Union
County27 and is not expected to ease current levels of congestion.28 Moreover, the Department
crafted a Statement of Purpose and Need that specifically declines to consider improvements to
U.S. 74 congestion.29 And yet, despite being fully aware that MUMPO passed this resolution,
NCDOT did nothing to correct the facts about the project and the message coming from this
federally mandated planning body.30
Both NCDOT and MUMPO had a duty to correct the misunderstandings being circulated
about the Bypass and make sure that local support for the project was based on accurate
information. By refusing to address publicly the reality of what can be anticipated if the Bypass
is constructed, these bodies failed to serve the public citizens they represent. Worse, internal
NCDOT documents suggest that the resolution was in fact put together by the contractors who
are being paid to construct the Bypass and that payments from NCDOT went to fund both the
creation of the resolution and its dissemination.31
2. False statements by NCDOT
NCDOT has gone further than failing to correct misapprehensions about the Bypass; in
fact, the Department has gone so far as to actively foster the confusion. For example, Ned
Curran, Chairman of the North Carolina Board of Transportation, has stated in addresses to both
MUMPO and the Board of Transportation that the Monroe Bypass is necessary to address high
unemployment rates in the eight counties through which U.S. 74 passes as it runs from
Mecklenburg County to the coast, in particular Anson County.32 We noted in our November
2012 comments that another Board of Transportation member, John Collet, published an opinion
piece in the newspaper stating both that the Bypass would “create jobs” and “relieve
congestion.”33 NCDOT does nothing to correct these false claims in the DSFEIS. Moreover,
26 Id.
27 See, e.g., DSFEIS at E1-84, E1-93, E1-98.
28 See, e.g., DEIS (2009), table 7; DEIS errata (showing future traffic volumes on U.S. 74 are expected to be
considerably higher with or without the bypass).
29 DSFEIS at 1-3.
30 E-mail from Jamal Alvi, NCDOT, to NCDOT’s Monroe Bypass Team, RE: MUMPO resolution (March 21,
2013), Attachment 14.
31 See discussion below, Section (VI)(A)(2).
32 MUMPO, Summary Minutes of September 18, 2013 Meeting, Attachment 15; personal communication from
MUMPO member Lynda Paxton; see also NC Board of Transportation meetings in October and December, attended
by SELC attorney Kym Hunter; public remarks by Jim Trogdon, formerly COO of NCDOT, in a presentation to the
Joint Legislative Transportation Oversight Committee on October 4, 2013, also attended by SELC attorney Kym
Hunter.
33 SELC comments, Nov. 2012, at 5.
9
NCDOT’s own Secretary, Tony Tata, has publically stated both that the Bypass will bring
dramatic growth to Union County and that it will improve congestion on U.S. 74, such as in a
speech at a meeting of the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce’s inaugural Transportation and
Infrastructure Summit in April 2013.34
Additionally, as discussed in more detail below, NCDOT has worked with the contractor
for the Bypass, Boggs Paving, to further foster confusion about the purpose and impacts of the
Bypass.35 Working with NCDOT, Boggs Paving put together a website promoting the ability of
the Bypass to relieve congestion for U.S. 74 and bring dramatic economic development to Union
County. Additionally, Boggs Paving put together community meetings promoting the same false
suggestions. Boggs even hosted a BBQ on the same day and at the same location as the NEPA
public hearing for the Bypass, stating in its invitation that “[t]his bypass is a crucial piece of
infrastructure that Union County needs to unlock our road congestion and improve transportation
in our county.”36 By working with the contractor to promote supposed purposes for the Bypass
which it knows to be false, NCDOT further corroded the NEPA process.
C. NCDOT Must Revisit the Project’s Stated Need in Light of New Information.
The Statement of Purpose and Need was initially contrived seven years ago with review
conducted in 2007 and a Final Statement published in 2008. Since that time there have been
considerable changes in the study area. The DSFEIS fails entirely to incorporate any of these
changes into the NEPA analysis. As explained below, changes in growth expectations, current
levels of traffic and congestion, and the success of alternatives all add up to a significantly
changed state of affairs in Union County. We urge NCDOT to revisit the Statement of Purpose
and Need in light of these changes and create a new statement based on current data that will
transparently allow the public and decisionmakers to evaluate a range of alternatives as NEPA
intended.
1. The NC Intrastate System
The DSFEIS recognizes U.S. 74 as a route of statewide importance as it both connects
Union County to Mecklenburg County, and the Charlotte region to the port at Wilmington.37
The DSFEIS then explains that NCDOT has designated the U.S. 74 corridor as a Strategic
Highway Corridor (“SHC”), as part of the North Carolina Intrastate System, and as part of the
National Highway System Strategic Highway Network (“STRAHNET”). The DSFEIS notes
that the SHC and NC Intrastate designations call for the corridor to serve high-speed regional
34 The event was attended by SELC attorney Kym Hunter, who listened to and recorded the Secretary’s remarks.
35 See discussion below, Section (VI)(A)(1).
36 Monroe Bypass Constructors, Union County supporters of the Monroe Bypass host free community BBQ and
rally, press release (Dec. 2013), Attachment 16.
37 DSFEIS at 1-1–1-2.
10
travel,38 ignoring that the North Carolina General Assembly has recently repealed the Intrastate
System legislation.39
2. Conditions in the U.S. 74 corridor
The DSFEIS explains that the need for the Monroe Bypass is based on the fact that U.S.
74 currently experiences congestion during peak periods of the day, pointing to travel-time field
surveys showing that certain specific segments of the corridor experience travel speeds of 37-41
mph (westbound) and 42-45 mph (eastbound).40 The DSFEIS then concludes that a bypass is
needed because the corridor does not currently operate as a high-speed facility (average speed of
50 mph or greater), nor will it in the future without substantial improvements.41 The draft
explains that congestion “will only get worse because traffic volumes are expected to increase in
the future due to projected growth in Union County.”42 These statements fail to acknowledge
that: (1) Travel times have improved and congestion has decreased in the U.S. 74 corridor; (2)
small scale alternatives have been successful; and (3) growth projections for the future have
decreased.
i. Decreased congestion
NCDOT based its initial Statement of Purpose and Need on travel time data from 2007.
At that time the agency showed peak travel time along the U.S. 74 corridor as 50 minutes, with
an average peak speed of 24 mph, and expected that by 2030 the travel time would increase to 70
minutes, with an average speed of 17 mph.43
These projections have been shown to be dramatically overstated. Since NCDOT’s
original analysis, traffic volumes in Union County have remained fairly stable, while corridor
improvements have caused travel speeds in the corridor to improve dramatically. NCDOT’s
recent 2013 data shows that current travel time along U.S. 74 is now 30 minutes at peak with an
average peak speed of about 44 mph, 20 mph faster than was observed in 2007.44 As the
DSFEIS recognizes, with just these minimal improvements, peak travel time speeds are now
closely approaching the speed limit throughout much of the U.S. 74 corridor. Further, the
DSFEIS demonstrates that congestion is not prevalent throughout the study area, but rather
38 DSFEIS at 1-2.
39 North Carolina Session Law 2013-183 at Section 4.9 (repealing N.C. Gen. Stat. 136-179).
40 DSFEIS at 1-3.
41 Id.
42 Id. at 1-3.
43 DEIS (2009) at 1-18 (table 1-5).
44 Memorandum from Bradley Reynolds, HNTB, to Jennifer Harris, NCDOT, RE: U.S. 74 Corridor Travel Time
Comparison (October 2013), at 2, available at http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/U.S.
74CorridorTravelTimeMemoFinal102413.pdf.
11
limited to a few key hotspots.45 In other parts of the corridor, the magic speed of 50 mph is
already accomplished, and in several more sections it is close.46
It is likely that NCDOT’s predictions of 70 minute travel times and speeds of 17 mph by
2035 are also greatly overstated. As mentioned, traffic volumes in the corridor have seen very
little increase in the past ten years, and there is no evidence presented in the EIS as to why they
would be expected to increase to the dramatic levels previously forecast. Additionally, the traffic
forecasts used by NCDOT to analyze future levels of congestion did not take into account the
recent improvements to the U.S. 74 corridor, or improvements that have been scheduled and
funded in the near future. This failure again serves to overstate the congestion problem.
ii. Success of Alternatives along U.S. 74
Following the recommendations of the Stantec Study, NCDOT has implemented to great
effect a wide variety of targeted, relatively low cost traffic improvements throughout the length
of U.S. 74 in the project study area.
For example, NCDOT has optimized signal timing at 23 intersections along the length of
U.S. 74 through the study area.47 Traffic signal optimization involves the implementation of
ideal timing settings to govern the operation of a traffic signal. This process can minimize stops
and delays, fuel consumption, and air pollution emissions, and can maximize progression along
an arterial like U.S. 74. Signal optimization has been found to be an incredibly cost-effective
congestion management effort, especially in comparison to expensive alternatives like new
construction. In fact, FHWA has noted that the benefit ratio can be as high as 40 to 1.48 And
because traffic signals can be easily optimized without any changes to the roadway’s existing
footprint, the effort successfully maintains access to existing businesses.
NCDOT has also added additional turn-lanes and turn-lane storage for several U.S. 74
intersections such as at Unionville-Indian Trail Road, Faith Church Road/Harris Teeter
Distribution Center, Wesley Chapel-Stouts Road/Sardis Church Road, Chamber Drive, Rocky
River Road, Poplin Place/Wellness Boulevard, Hanover Drive, and Dickerson Boulevard.49
Similarly, NCDOT has reconfigured lane assignments at U.S. 74’s intersections with Stallings
Road, Unionville-Indian Trail Road, and Poplin Place/Wellness Boulevard.50
Additionally, the original traffic projections do not take into account the impact of Union
County’s recent bus service to Charlotte. Since 2008, the Charlotte Area Transit System
45 DSFEIS at 1-9–1-12.
46 Id.
47 Richard W. Baucom, US 74 Highway Improvements in Union County, NC: 2007 - March 2013, table (Mar. 25,
2013), Attachment 17.
48 S. Lawrence Paulson, Managing Traffic Flow Through Signal Timing, FHWA’S PUBLIC ROADS, Vol. 65 No. 4
(Jan/Feb 2002), available at http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/publicroads/02janfeb/timing.cfm.
49 Richard W. Baucom, US 74 Highway Improvements in Union County, NC: 2007 - March 2013, table (Mar. 25,
2013), Attachment 17.
50 Id.
12
(“CATS”) has provided the 74X Union County Regional Transit Service. The bus service visits
two locations in Union County — the Monroe K-Mart and Union Town Center — and transports
riders to several locations in Charlotte, including the Charlotte Transportation Center as well as
the major intersection of College and 11th, thereby removing many drivers from U.S. 74 during
peak travel times.51 In July 2013, Union County extended its contract with CATS to continue
this service.52
The observed impacts of the improvements to U.S. 74 have been striking. As noted above
travel speeds in the corridor are now much faster than they were when NCDOT first began the
NEPA process. It is not surprising, therefore, that one engineer, discussing the improvements,
joked that the dramatic results jeopardized the need for the Bypass, stating:
“I just hope the Toll Road Authority does not get wind of what we have done
to move traffic on U.S. 74, they may object strenuously!”53
And yet more improvements are forthcoming. As acknowledged in the DSFEIS, six
million dollars in superstreet improvements have been scheduled to improve the section of U.S.
74 that runs through Indian Trail.54 The superstreets will be implemented in 2015, before the
proposed Bypass would be built.55 NCDOT has estimated that 20 per cent more vehicles will get
through a superstreet intersection during rush hour than a traditional intersection, indicating that
these planned superstreets are likely to have a great effect on peak congestion in the U.S. 74
Corridor.56 The DSFEIS fails to analyze the impact of these planned improvements and how
they might, in conjunction with improvements that have already been made, reduce the need for
as large scale a project as the proposed Bypass.
iii. Reduced growth in Union County
In addition to the failure to look at improved travel speeds and the success of alternative
solutions, the DSFEIS also fails to consider recent changes to growth trends in Union County.
The DSFEIS considers data on Union County’s population growth through only 2010,57 failing
to recognize the major changes in Union County growth trends since 2010. This is exemplified
by the fact that the DSFEIS incorrectly states that Union County is the fastest growing county in
North Carolina.58 Though this statistic may have been true several years ago, today there are at
51 Union County, July 24 Union Update, County Extends Contract with CATS for Bus Service to Charlotte (July 24,
2013), Attachment 18.
52 Id.
53 E-mail from Wilbur C. Garner, Moffatt & Nichol, to Dean Harris, NCDOT, RE: U.S. 74 @ Stallings (Apr. 8,
2011), Attachment 19.
54 DSFEIS at 2-12; MUMPO, Aug. 21, 2013 Summary Meeting Minutes, at 2, Attachment 20.
55 DSFEIS at 2-12.
56 Carl Gibilaro, MonroeBypassFacts.com Meeting Summary, prepared for NCDOT (December 3, 2012),
Attachment 21.
57 DSFEIS at 1-4.
58 DSFEIS at 1-2.
13
least ten counties that are growing faster than Union County.59 In fact growth in Union County
has slowed down considerably to an average annual growth rate of 1.7 per cent between 2010
and 2012.60 Growth in the study area has slowed even more significantly, with much of the new
growth on the southern and western edges of the county — not an area expected to impact U.S.
74 traffic greatly.61
Further, as noted above, despite Union County’s previous experience of high growth
rates, traffic volumes have remained steady. In November 2012, NCDOT’s Congestion
Management Section reported that after analyzing the Average Annual Daily Traffic Maps for
the previous ten years, it found that traffic volumes on U.S. 74 had remained steady for the past
decade.62 Reasons given for this apparent contradiction include the fact that a smaller percentage
of workers are now commuting from Union County to Charlotte 63 and the hypothesis that drivers
may be finding alternative routes to avoid U.S. 74.64 Whatever the reason, if traffic was not
increasing when socio-economic growth was high, it seems unlikely that it would increase at a
much greater rate now that socio-economic growth has slowed.
In sum, the growth experienced over the past seven years has been vastly different to the
forecast underlying the original statement of need. Traffic volumes have not increased, but
traffic speeds have. Small scale improvements have been planned and implemented along U.S.
74 and have been successful. Population growth in the study area has slowed. In light of these
changes, NCDOT should carefully reevaluate the Statement of Purpose and Need. Rather than
just looking at current data and dismissing it as showing only that peak speeds are still below 50
mph, NCDOT should more carefully consider what the data shows is really needed and what
might be achieved. Congestion is mostly found in key hotspots, and there are potential
alternatives, smaller scale and less expensive than the Bypass, which might address this
congestion. Further, the average travel speed in the corridor is fast approaching the sought after
50 mph, and indeed over half the corridor is now running at that speed.
3. Public and agency involvement in the purpose and need
In 2008, NCDOT arrived at the Statement of Purpose and Need after a process that
included the public and all relevant environmental resource agencies.65 As noted in the DSFEIS,
a formal “scoping letter” was distributed seven years ago on January 5, 2007, and the purpose
59 Hartgen Report 2013, at 6, Attachment 1.
60 E-mail from Ken Gilland, Baker Corporation, to Scudder Wagg et. al., Baker Corporation, RE: DRAFT USACE
Presentation (Population estimates) (Feb. 14, 2013), Attachment 22.
61 Hartgen Report 2013, at 14, Attachment 1.
62 Memorandum from Michael Reese, NCDOT, to Sean Epperson, NCDOT, U.S. 74 Corridor Superstreet and
Traditional Intersection Capacity Analysis, at 1 (Nov. 5, 2012), Attachment 23.
63 DSFEIS at 1-4.
64 Wilbur Smith Associates, Proposed Monroe Connector/Bypass Comprehensive Traffic and Revenue Study,
prepared for NCTA, at 2-5 (2010), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/monroe_FEIS_ComprehensiveTrafficRevenueStudy.pdf
[hereinafter Traffic and Revenue Study 2010].
65 DSFEIS at 1-3–1-4.
14
and need was discussed with resource agencies at five separate coordination meetings in 2007.66
Public comment on the purpose and need was also solicited in 2007 at a Citizens’ Informational
Workshop.67 The need was considered and established based on the conditions in the U.S. 74
corridor at that time (2007) when traffic on was travelling at significantly lower speeds that it is
today, taking 20 minutes longer to travel the corridor at peak times.68 As detailed above, much
has changed in the past seven years and the public and resource agencies should be given a full
opportunity to establish an updated statement based on 2014 conditions, trends and opportunities.
Yet the DSFEIS notes that there has been no additional public or agency outreach on this
important question that defines the scope for the whole NEPA process.69
III. ALTERNATIVES ANALYSIS
In its rejection of NCDOT’s previous EIS for this project, the United States Court of
Appeals for Fourth Circuit reiterated the consistent message of NEPA jurisprudence: that NEPA
requires that agencies to “[r]igorously explore and objectively evaluate all reasonable
alternatives.” N.C. Wildlife Federation, 677 F.3d at 602 (citing 40 C.F.R. § 1502.14(a)). Yet the
DSFEIS demonstrates that NCDOT has performed no such rigorous new analysis. Instead, the
transportation agencies have continued to base their alternatives analysis on flawed traffic
forecasts, and still refuse to evaluate fully all reasonable alternatives to the Monroe Bypass.
A. The Alternatives Analysis Is Based on Flawed Traffic Forecasts
Underlying NCDOT’s DSFEIS are the existing and future traffic forecasts for both the
Build and No-Build scenarios, developed in 2008 based on data available at that time.70 Of
particular focus are the Martin/Alexiou/Bryson 2030 No-Build traffic forecasts, the primary
forecasts used to analyze project alternatives.71 The 2030 No-Build forecast volumes showed
significant congestion in the U.S. 74 corridor, a fact used by NCDOT both to demonstrate a need
for the project and to eliminate project alternatives.72 Later, Wilbur Smith Associates (“WSA”)
(now CDM Smith) conducted a 2035 No-Build as an update to these forecasts for the sole
purpose of confirming the “assumption that the traffic volumes on existing U.S. 74 would stay
the same or increase from 2030 to 2035 if no roadway improvements took place.”73 Because the
WSA forecast confirmed the assumption, NCDOT determined it was not necessary to update the
operational analyses for the No-Build alternative.74 The transportation agencies later admitted in
66 Id. at 1-3.
67 Id. at 1-4.
68 Monroe Bypass Draft Environmental Impact Statement (2009), at 1-18 (table 1-5), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/monroe_DEIS_PurposeNeed.pdf.
69 DSFEIS at 1-3.
70 Id. at G-5.
71 Id.; see also id. at G-35.
72 Id. at G-35.
73 Id.
74 Id.; see also id. at G-9.
15
the FEIS errata that the 2035 No-Build alternative forecast was overestimated, and included a
revision to some of the projections, but did not revisit the alternatives analysis.75
1. The failure to conduct new forecasts violates NEPA.
The transportation agencies have since determined that the 2035 forecasts remain valid
for the purposes of the DSFEIS, explaining that the forecasts were “only used to show that
conditions will worsen in the future,” and that “additional future traffic analyses were not needed
to document the present need for the project.”76 Thus, the alternatives analysis in the DSFEIS
essentially remains based on the 2008 projections for 2030. NCDOT has justified the decision to
continue relying on these old traffic forecasts because: (1) no new alternatives have been
identified, (2) the current let date of the project is less than the future forecast year plus 20 years,
(3) the study area is not experiencing growth not previously considered in the forecast, and (4)
the traffic forecast is not five years older than the Base Year.77 The decision is apparently based
on a memorandum entitled “Guidelines to Determine When to Request an Updated Traffic
Forecast.”78 The memo sets out that the determination of when traffic forecasts should be redone
should be based on cognizance that such forecasts “can adversely affect the project’s cost,
schedule, and budget.”79
First, we should note that based on NCDOT’s own narrow parameters a new traffic
forecast is needed. New project alternatives, such as upgrades to Secrest Shortcut and Old
Monroe Road in combination with U.S. 74 improvements, were identified in our previous
comment letter.80 Moreover, the study area, while not experiencing more growth than previously
considered in the forecasts is experiencing considerably less growth, a fact that is equally
important when it comes to the ramifications for the alternatives analysis.
More importantly, however, the extent of an agency’s NEPA responsibilities is not
curtailed by the agency’s considerations of its own costs, schedule, or budget. Such
considerations do not relieve an agency of a legal duty to perform a full and adequate NEPA
review. “Accurate scientific analysis, expert agency comments, and public scrutiny are essential
to implementing NEPA.” 40 C.F.R. § 1500.1(b). Such accuracy ensures that agencies take a
“hard look” at environmental effects of proposed projects and that relevant information is
available to the public. Glickman, 81 F.3d at 445-46 (holding that the economic assumptions
underlying an EIS are subject to “narrowly focused review” to determine whether they
“impair[ed] fair consideration of a project’s adverse environmental effects”).
75 FEIS (2010) at A-3.
76 DSFEIS at G-2.
77 Id. at G-9.
78 NCDOT, Guidelines to Determine When to Request an Updated Traffic Forecast (Feb. 24, 2009), available at
https://connect.ncdot.gov/projects/planning/TPB%20Systems%20Planning/Requesting%20an%20Updated%20Traff
ic%20Forecast.pdf, (cited in DSFEIS at G-9).
79 Id.
80 SELC comments, Nov. 2012, at 35-36.
16
Moreover, agencies have a duty to “insure the professional integrity, including scientific
integrity, of the discussions and analyses in environmental impact statements.” 40 C.F.R.
§ 1502.24. The continued reliance on outdated traffic forecasts that have now been shown to be
overstated to an alarming degree fails to “satisfy the requirements of NEPA,” and the DSFEIS
“cannot provide the basis for an informed evaluation or a reasoned decision.” Sierra Club v. US
Army Corps of Eng’rs, 701 F.2d 1011, 1030 (2d Cir. 1983).
2. The traffic forecasts data ignores recent history
Reliance on up-to-date data is imperative for the NEPA process. A long line of federal
courts have held that agency reliance on data that is stale or inaccurate invalidates environmental
review. See, e.g., Northern Plains Resource Council, Inc. v. Surface Transp. Bd., 668 F.3d
1067, 1085-86 (9th Cir. 2011) (ten-year old survey data for wildlife “too stale” thus reliance on it
in EIS was arbitrary and capricious); Lands Council v. Powell, 395 F.3d 1019, 1031 (9th Cir.
2005) (six year-old survey data for cutthroat trout was “too outdated to carry the weight assigned
to it” and reliance on that data violated NEPA); Seattle Audubon Soc. v. Espy, 998 F.2d 699,
704-05 (9th Cir. 1993) (reliance on “stale scientific evidence” regarding owl population data
without adequate discussion of scientific uncertainty violated NEPA). Courts have been clear
that the quality of data must be proportional to the weight the agency assigns to it in its analysis.
Here, the accuracy of the traffic forecast data underlies both the purpose and need for the project
and the entire analysis of alternatives.
We asked Dr. David T. Hartgen, P.E., Ph.D., to review the traffic forecasts for the
Monroe Bypass.81 Dr. Hartgen has 45 years of experience in transportation planning and
analysis and is a Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.82 Hartgen
is familiar with the Bypass project and the U.S. 74 corridor 83 and in fact is cited often by
NCDOT in the DSFEIS.84 After his review Dr. Hartgen concluded that “traffic forecasts
presented in the DSFEIS are too uncertain and insufficiently supported to be the basis for
decision-making regarding the Monroe Connector/Bypass”85 explaining that the DSFEIS
“simply ignores the last 12 years of history regarding traffic trends on U.S. 74.”86
As NCDOT’s own observed traffic counts demonstrate, the rate of growth in traffic
volume originally forecast for the U.S. 74 corridor is wildly out of sync with reality. Dr. Hartgen
notes that NCDOT’s observed traffic data since 2000 shows that along the portion of U.S. 74 at
the Mecklenburg-Union line, just west of the project end, the traffic has grown on average just
0.15%/year (a total of 1.8% in 12 years), and has actually declined since 2005.87 He also notes
81 Hartgen Report 2013, Attachment 1.
82 Id. at 35-38.
83 Id. at 3.
84 See, e.g., ICE Appendix L.
85 Hartgen Report 2013, at 4, Attachment 1.
86 Id. at 18.
87 Id. at 17.
17
that near the city of Monroe, growth has been modest at approximately 0.4%/year.88 Dr. Hartgen
also demonstrates that observed traffic volumes at the eastern edge of the project have declined
since 2000.89
Yet the traffic forecasts used to analyze alternatives in NEPA documents require traffic
volumes to skyrocket. As demonstrated in HNTB’s Traffic Forecast Summary, the percent
volume increase from NCDOT’s 2012 AADT that must be realized to reach the 2035 No-Build
Projection ranges from 22% to 81%, with an average of 53% increase in volume.90 Dr. Hartgen
explains that the implied percent changes from current volumes which range from 1.3 to 5.4%
per year, are 5-10 times faster than the recent twelve years of observed traffic volumes.91
Though the DSFEIS recognizes that traffic counts from 2007 to 2012 show “zero change,”92 the
transportation agencies offer no explanation of how to reconcile their projections of radical
increases in traffic volume with the reality of flat-lined growth rates over the last twelve years.
Dr. Hartgen also notes that these trends pre-date the 2008 recession, and have continued
in the recession’s wake, providing strong evidence these trends do not represent a short term
trend, but rather “a huge change in prior trends.”93
Further, Union County is no longer experiencing anywhere near the level of growth as in
2008, indicating that expectations of massive increases in traffic are no longer justifiable. As Dr.
Hartgen notes, Union County’s growth rate has fallen sharply since the project’s first FEIS,
falling from 4.9%/year from 2000-2010 to just 1.7%/year, based on the most recent census
data.94 Moreover, even when Union County’s population was growing, traffic volumes
remained stable. As Dr. Hartgen details in his report, in spite of the previous high growth in
Union County “traffic on U.S. 74 has not increased substantially since 2000.”95 The
transportation agencies have never explained why, in the face of such evidence, increased
population would necessarily result in more drivers using the U.S. 74 Corridor. With population
growth now slowing, the huge increase in drivers seems even less likely.
Dr. Hartgen has also outlined other significant flaws in the traffic forecasts. Importantly,
the traffic forecasts do not include the majority of traffic improvements already instituted along
the U.S. 74 corridor, nor do they anticipate future planned improvements.96 As detailed above,
NCDOT has instituted a wide range of small-scale improvements along U.S. 74, such that traffic
conditions on U.S. 74 are now vastly different from the environment in which the transportation
agencies’ consultants first developed the future No-Build traffic forecasts. Dr. Hartgen explains
88 Id.
89 Id. at 17-18.
90 DSFEIS at G-9 and G-22, table 5.
91 Hartgen Report 2013, at 18, Attachment 1.
92 DSFEIS at 4-20.
93 Hartgen Report 2013, at 18, Attachment 1.
94 Id. at 14 (citing cenus.gov).
95 Id. at 17 (emphasis in original).
96 Id. at 13.
18
that it is “likely that the improvements made so far also helped to improve the current operating
speeds in the 44-mph range, given that traffic volumes have not increased and INRIX speeds
show an increase over time.”97 As such, Dr. Hartgen argues that “at the very least, the planned
improvements should be coded into the regional network and used as the basis for all
forecasts.”98 Moreover, future planned improvements, such as the superstreet installations
described above,99 may be “equally effective” at improving traffic condition such that they also
should be considered in the traffic forecasts.100
We applaud NCDOT’s efforts to improve traffic conditions in the U.S. 74 Corridor, and
recognize that traffic experts such as Dr. Hartgen anticipate future planned improvements will
surely continue to dramatically improve traffic conditions.101 When these improvements are
paired with the steady to declining traffic volumes observed over the past twelve years, the result
is a significant, sustained divergence from the 2008 traffic forecasts used to underpin both the
Statement of Purpose and Need and the Alternatives Analysis. NCDOT’s continued reliance on
these forecasts is both bad policy, considering the $900 million investment, and a violation of
NEPA.
3. Socio-economic data underlying the traffic forecasts is also
significantly flawed.
The validity of the traffic forecasts is also undercut by several flaws in the socio-
economic data that underlies their creation. Because the socio-economic data underlying the
forecasts now appears to be dramatically overstated, it is likely that the forecasts were similarly
overstated, creating serious implications for the analysis of alternatives.
i. Outdated, inaccurate socio-economic data
As NCDOT admits, the forecasts of traffic are not based on the most recent available
socio-economic data.102 The traffic forecasts underlying the Draft FEIS are based on 2005
socio-economic data, yet the transportation agencies verify that they could have, at the very least,
updated their model with 2009 socio-economic data.103 Instead, the transportation agencies
considered the 2009 socio-economic data only to verify a continued demand on the U.S. 74
Corridor,104 yet did nothing to quantify or otherwise detail any differences that the use of such
data might make on the forecasts themselves. Moreover, even more up-to-date forecasts of
socioeconomic growth have recently been put together by Dr. Steven Appold. These new
projections show considerably lower growth rates than previously forecast, and indicate that the
97 Id. (citing DSFEIS at 1-6).
98 Id.
99 See Section (II)(C)(2) above.
100 Hartgen Report 2013, at 13, Attachment 1.
101 Id.
102 DSFEIS at G-12–G-13.
103 Id.
104 Id. at G-13.
19
growth that is expected will be located close to Mecklenburg, rather than in the eastern part of
the county.105 Rather than review and respond to projections that have serious implications for
NCDOT’s analysis, the agency has chosen to ignore them.106 Further, as Dr. Hartgen notes, the
recent (2010-12) population growth rate for Union County has been much slower at just
1.7%/year, calling into serious question the use of 2009 socio-economic data, as opposed to more
recent numbers.107
Indeed, as Dr. Hartgen has detailed in his report, the population forecasts used to forecast
traffic are “probably significantly overstated.”108 Dr. Hartgen goes on to outline and discuss
several critical and flawed assumptions underlying the projections relied upon by NCDOT.109
For example, with regard to Dr. Hammer’s “top-down” forecasts, Dr. Hartgen explains that the
assumption that the United States will maintain past growth rates is now untenable, given the
recent recession, noting that current growth rates for the United States are now one third to one
half of the estimates the Hammer study relies upon, and points out that the employment/
population ratio is the lowest in 50 years.110
Dr. Hartgen also criticizes the assumption that the Charlotte region will continue to excel
relative to other regions,111 explaining that North Carolina and the Charlotte region “was very
hard-hit in the recession, with large banks and other employers shedding jobs inordinately, and
unemployment remains significantly above the U.S. and NC levels,” having the effect of
“slow[ing] the local employment growth to a crawl,” none of which was considered in NCDOT’s
projections.112
Additionally, Dr. Hartgen questions Dr. Hammer’s assumption that Union County will
attract a relatively large share of regional growth,113 explaining that the majority of Union
County’s recent growth “was driven not by local county economic activity but by proximity to
Charlotte, particularly in the Ballantyne area,” which has now slowed significantly.114 Dr.
Hartgen also notes that reliance on Dr. Hammer’s projections for the purposes of traffic forecasts
for the study area is in error, as the Dr. Hammer study and the recent Baker review do not
105 See discussion in SELC Comments, Nov. 2012, at 15-16, citing e-mail from Stephen Appold to Bjorn Hansen,
Scot R. Sibert, Anna Gallup, Ruchi Agarwal, Amy Helms, C. Chorak, Robert Cook, Dana Stoogenke, D. Hooper, D.
Ritsema, K. Wolf, Evan Lowry, M. Sandy, Wendy Bell, Bernie Yacobucci, Nadine Bennett, Joe McLelland, R.
Black (Oct. 17, 2012), Attachment 24; see also Dr. Steve Appold, Projections Compared Excel Sheet, at “counties”
sheet (Sept. 20, 2012), Attachment 25 (Appold projects 70,176 jobs in Union County in 2035, whereas Hammer
projects 141,704; Appold projects 66,730 jobs in Union County in 2030, whereas Hammer projects 128,494).
106 See, e.g., DSFEIS at A1-74.
107 Hartgen Report 2013, at 14, Attachment 1.
108 Id. at 20.
109 Id. at 21-23.
110 Id. at 22.
111 DSFEIS, ICE Appendix H, at 6.
112 Hartgen Report 2013, at 22, Attachment 1.
113 Id.
114 Id.
20
discuss the location of that growth within Union County and thus “overlook the fact that the most
of the Union County growth has been outside of the Bypass study area.”115
These overstated Hammer projections were then used by Paul Smith as the foundation for
the sub-area allocation of county-level population and “population-chasing employment” control
totals to “transportation analysis zones” (“TAZs”) based on vacant residential acres and travel
time to employment, which remain as the totals used in the most recent DSFEIS.116 Dr. Hartgen
explains that this error is significant, because “if the Hammer-based forecasts of population
growth by county are high, then the TAZ forecasts will be high in the same proportion.”117
ii. Single set of socio-economic data
As noted during litigation and in our 2012 comments, the previous alternatives analysis
for the Monroe Bypass was flawed because it relied on traffic forecasts that used a single set of
socio-economic data for both “Build” and “No-Build” alternatives and thus failed to take
account of induced growth and its impact on traffic patterns and volumes. We appreciate that
NCDOT has finally taken some time to consider this issue, although we disagree with its
conclusion.
As discussed below, NCDOT’s analysis of induced growth is fundamentally flawed due
to an improper assumption in the “No-Build” forecast.118 That forecast failed to take into
account the constraining effect heavily congested infrastructure might have on future growth and
thus vastly overstated the likely levels of growth without the Bypass. As a result, the analysis
severely downplayed the difference between future “Build” and “No-Build” scenarios. Thus,
when NCDOT’s consultants examined the impact of induced growth on NCDOT’s traffic
forecasts they were working with flawed data which showed an improperly low level of growth
attributable to the Bypass.119 Moreover, the consultants failed to analyze properly the difference
in trip volume and distribution due to the likely redistributed growth patterns that will result from
the Bypass.120
Further, even if NCDOT’s cursory analysis of this issue were sufficient, we disagree with
agency that the difference of 3-4% in traffic volumes is so negligible that it need not be given
any consideration or further study.121 Moreover, the 3-4% difference presented is for Union
County as a whole. The percentage difference is likely much higher in the study area.122
115 Id. (emphasis added).
116 Id. at 23 (citing DSFEIS at 2-15, 4-25).
117 Id.
118 See discussion below, section (IV)(A)(1).
119 DSFEIS at G-16–G-17.
120 Id.
121 Id.
122 Id.
21
We are pleased to see FHWA acknowledge that there are circumstances in which reliance
on a single set of socio-economic forecasts for traffic forecasts is inappropriate.123 Once a
proper indirect and cumulative effects analysis has been performed for the project, we expect the
Monroe Bypass will be such a circumstance.
4. The flawed traffic forecasts bias the analysis of alternatives
Even if the NCDOT is correct that the U.S. 74 Corridor will continue to experience
congestion, a point not clear in light of the agency’s grave failure to evaluate the impacts of
planned future transportation improvements outlined above.124 Such a conclusion does not
support the decision to perform no new traffic forecasts. The No-Build forecasts are necessary
not only to support the idea that increasing traffic volumes on U.S. 74 require some solution, but
also to evaluate a range of alternatives to address the problem. NEPA requires agencies to
present a full detailed picture of alternatives and their differing environmental impacts for the
benefit of decision makers, including permitting agencies and the public. 40 C.F.R. § 1502.14;
Nat’l Audubon Soc’y, 422 F.3d at 185. This information forms the “clear basis for choice among
options.” 40 C.F.R. § 1502.14.
Rather than use accurate forecasts to compare transparently a range of alternatives,
NCDOT has used the bogus, overstated projections to justify its choice of a new-location Bypass
as the only possible solution to area congestion.125 As noted in the DSFEIS, the development
and evaluation of alternatives began with the selection of the Detailed Study Alternatives
(“DSA”) included in the DEIS, documented in the Alternatives Development and Analysis
Report (PBS&J, April 2008),126 as well as further studies of existing U.S. 74 documented in the
Upgrade Existing U.S. 74 Alternatives Study (HNTB, April 2009).127
The process documented in these studies demonstrates that the transportation agencies’
alternatives analysis explicitly relied upon the WSA 2035 traffic forecasts, as well as a separate
WSA forecast for the Improve Existing U.S. 74 Alternative.128 These forecasts were used to
help determine each alternative’s potential to meet initial criteria, including whether the
alternative addressed the need to improve mobility and capacity in the U.S. 74 corridor.129 The
Draft EIS specified that to be carried forward “an alternative must provide more than a minor
improvement” as compared to the future No-Build scenario, indicating that the degree to which
the alternative was able to address mobility and capacity in the corridor was of particular
importance.130
123 Id. at G-3.
124 See discussion above, section (II)(C)(2).
125 DEIS (2009) at 2-3–2-4.
126 DSFEIS at 2-1.
127 Id.
128 Draft EIS (2009) at 2-3.
129 Id. at 2-4.
130 Id.
22
For example, alternatives such as the Transportation Management System (“TSM”)
Alternative, which consists of low-cost, minor transportation improvements to increase the
capacity of the existing facility, were eliminated in the First Qualitative Screening because “the
amount of traffic projected for 2030 along U.S. 74 would overwhelm the effectiveness of minor
TSM improvements.”131 Similar reasoning was cited as part of the decision to eliminate the
Mass Transit/Multi-Modal Alternative.132
As such, the traffic forecasts were integral not just to determining if there was any need
for the project, but also in screening and analyzing different project alternatives. Accordingly,
simply verifying that the U.S. 74 Corridor will continue to experience high demand may
“substantiate the viability of and need for” some sort of project in the corridor,133 but it does
nothing to reevaluate transparently and publicly the relevant success of different project
alternatives, as NEPA requires. The vast disparity between observed recent traffic patterns and
the traffic projections used in the EIS demonstrate that NCDOT must revisit its alternatives
analysis. By relying on outdated and flawed projections, NCDOT has vastly overstated future
traffic volumes, thereby making alternatives to the Bypass look less promising. Instead, changed
conditions necessarily require that the transportation agencies reevaluate alternatives based on
realistic, up-to-date traffic projections grounded in valid assumptions about growth and traffic
volumes.
We are concerned that the refusal to properly forecast future traffic is becoming a regular
practice for NCDOT. It is quickly becoming a matter of course for NCDOT to fail to engage in
proper forecasting, thereby failing their NEPA duty to analyze impacts and cumulative effects of
a project.134
B. The Alternatives Analysis Fails to Analyze Patterns of Traffic in the
Corridor
In addition to its reliance on outdated and fundamentally flawed traffic forecasts, the
alternatives analysis also fails to answer a key question: Where are travelers in the U.S. 74
corridor going? The DSFEIS fails entirely to look at the percentage of traffic in the corridor that
is local, i.e. moving within a town or traveling from one town along U.S. 74 to another, the
percentage that is commuting into Charlotte, and the percentage that is traveling through the
corridor. Without some knowledge of this basic information, it is impossible to determine what
alternatives will be most effective for the corridor.
131 Monroe Connector/Bypass Project Alternatives Development and Analysis Report, at 1-7–1-8 (Apr. 2008),
available at http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/monroe_DEIS_AltsReport_Rev.pdf.
132 Id. at 1-10.
133 DSFEIS at G-13.
134 Letter from Kym Hunter, SELC, to Jamille Robbins, NCDOT, RE: Environmental Assessment for the I-77 High
Occupancy/ Toll Lanes project (Aug. 1, 2013), Attachment 26; NCDOT, Finding of No Significant Impact for the I-
77 High Occupancy/Toll Lanes, B4-12-B4-13, available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/i77HOTlanes/download/I3311C_5405_4750AA_FONSI_101613.pdf, Attachment
27.
23
We raised this point in our November 2012 comment letter,135 but in response the
transportation agencies asserted that no further analysis is necessary as MUMPO supports the
project and the Traffic & Revenue Study shows the project to be financially feasible with tolls.136
The transportation agencies also point to the NCDOT’s October 24, 2012 response letter to
Stallings Mayor Lynda Paxton for “[d]etails about traffic patterns, mixes and volumes,”137 and
appear to rely solely on this letter to address the issue.138 Yet as the paltry mishmash of
percentages listed without explanation in NCDOT’s letter to Mayor Paxton demonstrates,139
NCDOT has never studied the existing or projected percentages of local versus through traffic,
nor has NCDOT ever applied these limited findings to the analysis of alternatives in the DSFEIS.
The data cited in the letter to Mayor Paxton comes from the WSA’s Comprehensive
Traffic & Revenue Study, which was not completed as part of the EIS.140 Rather, the data was
collected as part of an extremely limited Origin-Destination Study.141 In a recent report to
NCDOT by its consultant CDM Smith (formerly Wilbur Smith Associates, who performed the
Traffic & Revenue Study),142 the consultant noted the deficiencies of the study, admitting that
the Origin-Destination Study provides little to no information on truck traffic.143 The consultant
explained that “[t]ypically truck drivers do not respond to mail-back survey requests” of the type
used in the Traffic & Revenue Study, citing the response rate at about 1-2%.144 The consultant
further admitted that the survey was specifically “geared toward obtaining a successful survey of
passenger vehicles,” not data on trucks, which likely make up much of the through traffic in the
corridor.145 Similarly, the survey was conducted in March and April, months that are certainly
not representative of levels of through-traffic passenger cars headed to the coast during peak
beach season (Memorial Day to Labor Day).146 NCDOT has also publically admitted outside of
the NEPA process that it “has not projected the amount of traffic that will travel throughout (end
to end) the entire corridor versus accessing within the corridor at interchanges.”147
135 SELC comments Nov. 2012 at 38-39.
136 DSFEIS at A1-85.
137 Id.
138 DSFEIS at G-2 (“Mr. Gardner [FHWA] asked how local traffic vs. through traffic was addressed in the traffic
impact analysis and upon review of the letter to Mayor Paxton (Oct. 24, 2012) found the explanation included to
have adequately addressed this issue.”).
139 DSFEIS at C3-6–C3-7.
140 DSFEIS at C3-6 (Traffic and Revenue Study 2010).
141 Id. at 3-1.
142 Id. at A1-25.
143 Id. at A1-26.
144 Id.
145 Id.
146 Traffic and Revenue Study 2010, at 3-1.
147 US-74 Corridor Revitalization Study Stakeholder Interviews: Transportation Meeting Notes, at 3 (Jan. 18, 2012),
Attachment 28.
24
The engineering firm O’Connell & Lawrence (“OCL”) also critiqued the transportation
agencies’ origin-destination study in a recent report for several reasons. One concern OCL
raised was the substantial disparity between the number of trips originating and ending in
Charlotte, the dominant employment and population center in the region.148 OCL found that this
disparity indicates that the location of the survey handout locations should have been adjusted to
provide a better cross-section of drivers.149 OCL also noted the low percentages of trucks as
opposed to passenger vehicles responding to the survey was alarming, as it was significantly
different from the percentage breakdown among actual vehicles on the road.150
NCDOT’s failure to analyze the percentages of local and through traffic necessarily
undercuts the validity and thoroughness of their alternatives analysis. Without any
comprehensive study of where traffic is going in the U.S. 74 Corridor, the transportation
agencies have no clear vision of the actual usage of U.S.74. In fact, this point is made within the
Traffic & Revenue Study itself. As the “Report of Independent Economic,” completed as part of
the Comprehensive Traffic & Revenue Study, recognizes “the U.S. 74 corridor handles a
significant volume of extra-regional traffic,” referencing specifically the traffic going from the
Charlotte area to the Port of Wilmington and the beaches near Wilmington and Myrtle Beach,
and vice versa.151 The report explains that “no good source of data for drivers of long distances
travel through US 74 exists,” outlining the difficulty in estimating long-distance passenger and
truck traffic based on existing figures.152
Because the intent of the Bypass is to speed travel from one end of the corridor to
another, knowledge about the percentage of traffic making that trip is necessary for projecting
usage of the facility and divergence of traffic from U.S. 74, both key to determining how well
different alternatives meet the stated purpose and need. Such information is also essential for
determining the impacts of different project alternatives, specifically, how much traffic is
expected to remain on U.S. 74 and whether levels of truck traffic will decline.
Before the NCDOT continues forward with the Bypass, it is essential that they analyze
who exactly is going to use it. Only then can it perform a thorough analysis of different
alternative solutions. To do so, the transportation agencies must conduct a full origin-destination
study to determine whether this is indeed the case. As CDM Smith has suggested, this study
could be performed in such a way that is specifically targeted towards determining the
percentages of local as opposed to through traffic, such as through visually collecting the phone
numbers/company names off of truck-cab doors at survey sites and conducting phone interviews
148 O’Connell & Lawrence, Inc., A Closer Look at U.S. 74: Challenges & Opportunities, prepared for SELC, at 15
(2013), [hereinafter “OCL report”].
149 Id.
150 Id. at 16.
151 DSFEIS at ICE Appendix K, Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise, Technical Memorandum: Proposed Monroe
Connector/Bypass Comprehensive Traffic and Revenue Study Initial Report of Independent Economist, prepared for
NCTA, at 31 (updated Mar. 1, 2010), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/ICEAppendixKReportIndepEco.pdf.
152 Id. at 31-33.
25
regarding route patterns and the potential for paying tolls or staying on the non-tolled road.153
Similarly, the OCL report recommended that the Wilbur Smith Associates origin-destination
study could be expanded by increasing the number of survey collection points and increasing the
time spent collecting the origin-destination data.154 OCL also recommended that a separate
commercial driver origin-destination study could be performed to highlight the difference
between passenger vehicle and commercial vehicle traffic patterns.155 The transportation
agencies could also better stagger their data collection throughout the year and include weekend
surveying to get a better idea of beach-going through traffic.
Only once a proper study is performed and alternatives analyzed will it be appropriate to
ask whether MUMPO (now the Charlotte Regional Transportation Planning Organization
“CRTPO”), still supports the project.156 Indeed, Mayor Lynda Paxton, a former MUMPO
delegate and previous Vice-Chair, has shown significant interest in a thorough origin-destination
study, making clear both that MUMPO members do not yet have this information and that they
find it important.157
C. The Transportation Agencies Must Consider a Full Range of Reasonable
Alternatives and Combinations of Alternatives.
Agencies have a “duty under NEPA . . . to study all alternatives that appear reasonable
and appropriate for study at the time of drafting the EIS, as well as significant alternatives
suggested by other agencies or the public during the comment period.” Roosevelt Campobello
Int’l Park Comm’n. v. US EPA, 684 F.2d 1041, 1047 (1st Cir. 1982) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Only unreasonable alternatives can be eliminated. 40 C.F.R. § 1502.14(a). NCDOT’s
review of a range of alternatives has not been updated in almost a decade.
Documents from 2006 show how the alternatives analysis for the 2009 EIS was simply
recycled from the analysis that came before it, with decisions made to eliminate alternatives
before the NEPA process even formally began.158 This old analysis was then dumped once more
into the DSFEIS, with no true consideration given to any transportation improvement other than
the Bypass. Given the outdated nature of this analysis and the changed circumstance described
above, NCDOT must reinitiate its alternative analysis from the beginning and use updated traffic
forecasts to consider a full range of alternatives, and combinations of those alternatives, to satisfy
NEPA’s mandate.
153 See DSFEIS at A1-26.
154 OCL report, at 15-17.
155 Id. at 17.
156 DSFEIS at A1-85.
157 Id. at C3-6–C3-7.
158 Memorandum from Jill Gurak and Carl Gibilaro, PBS&J, to Jennifer Harris, NCDOT (Oct. 19, 2006).
Attachment 29.
26
1. Improvements to Existing U.S. 74
As we have regularly emphasized in our comments to NCDOT, a complete alternatives
analysis must give full consideration to upgrades to U.S. 74. We have already begun to see that
the implementation of a wide variety of recent small-scale, low-cost traffic improvements to the
corridor has dramatically improved traffic flow along U.S. 74.159 As outlined above, NCDOT’s
measures to implement many of the improvements suggested in the Stantec Study have been a
great success, and other planned and funded improvements are likely to have an even greater
impact.160 These observed effects, when coupled with steady-to-waning traffic volumes detailed
above, indicate that a renewed study of the Improve Existing U.S. 74 Alternatives is necessary.
Failure to give “substantial treatment” to this reasonable alternative to building the proposed
highway without providing “adequate justification for its omission” is necessarily arbitrary and a
violation of NEPA. Southeast Alaska Conservation Council v. FHWA, 649 F.3d 1050, 1059 (9th
Cir. 2011).
i. Targeting congestion hotspots
NCDOT’s most recent data demonstrates that the U.S. 74 corridor is hampered by
patches of congestion in specific hot spots, rather than corridor-wide traffic problems. As such,
NCDOT’s alternative analysis should seriously consider a series of targeted improvements to
address congestion hot spots, rather than constructing an expensive, massive new-location
highway.
For example, one problem area appears to be from Fowler Secrest Road to US 601. But
as NCDOT recognizes, much of the slowdown in this area is due to the density of traffic lights in
this area.161 The DSFEIS notes that the two densest areas of traffic signals are from Fowler
Secrest Road east to Secrest Shortcut Road (3.5 traffic signals per mile), and from Stafford Road
just east of US 601 North to Campus Park Drive just west of US 601 South (3.7 traffic signals
per mile).162 The DSFEIS quantifies the impact of this spacing as placing an extra 9-16 percent
travel time on corridor users.163 The alternatives analysis should consider targeted
improvements to address this particular hot spot, such as another superstreet facility in addition
to those planned for Indian Trail, or eliminating some of the dense signalized crossings.
Other targeted improvements to existing U.S. 74 were identified by the Stantec Study, as
outlined in Table 3-5 of the DSFEIS.164 Several of these improvements have been implemented
with great success throughout the corridor, as outlined above.165 Others, such as the superstreets
159 See section (II)(C)(2)(ii)above.
160 See id.
161 DSFEIS at 1-13.
162 Id.
163 Id.
164 DSFEIS at 3-13–3-14.
165 See section (II)(C)(2)(ii) above.
27
planned for Indian Trail, are expected to have an impressive impact as well.166 Yet NCDOT
decided to dismiss these targeted, small-scale alternatives out of hand for failure to meet the
project’s purpose and need.
This assessment is based entirely on outdated, inaccurate traffic forecasts.167 The
DSFEIS dismisses the improvements listed in Table 3-5 of the Final EIS (those improvements
identified by the Stantec Study) by noting that they would not achieve high-speed travel. To
reach this conclusion, the DSFEIS relies on 2008 estimates which projected that implementing
the Stantec improvements would result in an average 2015 peak travel speed of between 29 to 30
mph.168 But, as recognized by Dr. Hartgen in his report, after implementing just some of these
solutions, NCDOT has already observed average peak travel speeds well above these projections,
with the average peak travel speed now 44 mph.169
The documents supporting the DSFEIS further demonstrate NCDOT’s pattern of relying
on outdated traffic forecasts to dismiss viable Improve Existing U.S. 74 alternatives. For
example, in an October 2012 memorandum evaluating the Stantec Study, NCDOT staff dismiss
the traffic improvements suggested in the Stantec Study as failing to provide any long-term
benefit because the road would be “overwhelmed by projected traffic in the corridor,” relying
explicitly on a comparison with old traffic forecasts performed for the original NEPA analysis.170
To examine properly this low-cost alternative, NCDOT must take a fresh look at the likely
ability of these improvements based on valid updated traffic forecasts, and taking into account
the success of the improvements that have been implemented to date and present that analysis to
the public.
ii. U.S. 74 Revitalization Study
Since publication of the original EIS, four local government entities representing
communities along U.S. 74 in the study area have begun their own investigation into improving
existing U.S. 74 by funding the U.S. 74 Revitalization Study. The Study is a coordinated effort
on the part of Union County, the Town of Stallings, the Town of Indian Trail, the City of
Monroe, MUMPO and NCDOT.171 The Study, now in draft, was intended to develop a
coordinated land-use, urban design, economic development, and multi-modal transportation plan,
to be implemented by the local governments and NCDOT.172 Though the transportation
agencies are correct that it was not the purpose of the study to develop alternatives to the
166 DSFEIS at 2-12.
167 Id. at 2-9; Memorandum from Bradley Reynolds, HNTB, to Christy Shumate, NCDOT, STIP R-3329/R-2559
Monroe Connector/Bypass (Oct. 18, 2012), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/MemotofileStantecU.S. 74CorridorStudy101812.pdf.
[hereinafter “Stantec Memo”]
168 See id.
169 Id. at 1-7–1-8; Hartgen report 2013, at 13.
170 Stantec Memo, at 3.
171 US-74 Corridor Revitalization Study: Draft Corridor Revitalization Plan, Project Overview, available at
http://www.U.S.74corridor, Attachment 1C [hereinafter “Draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Plan”].
172 Id.
28
Bypass,173 the draft plan catalogues a series of feasible upgrades to improve traffic flow along
U.S. 74 in the study area which should have been evaluated by the transportation agencies as part
of a suite of improvements to the existing facility.174 At the very least, the transportation
agencies should consider the following improvements recommended and described in greater
detail in the draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Study:
• Indian Trail Road to Crooked Creek
o Recommended 6-lane suburban boulevard typology175
• Crooked Creek to Laurel Creek
o Recommended 6-lane suburban boulevard 176
• Laurel Creek to Breckonridge Centre Drive
o Recommended 4-lane suburban boulevard
o Recommended conversion of 2 intersections to signalized
intersections 177
• Breckonridge Centre Drive to Wilson Avenue/Kempsar Lane
o Recommended 4-lane multiway boulevard without parking
o Recommended 2-lane local street or 2-lane suburban boulevard for
arterial Rocky River Road
o Anticipated signalized intersection for Rocky River Road 178
• Wilson Avenue/Kempsar Lane to John Moor Road/Fowler Secrest Road
o Recommended 4-lane suburban boulevard or 4-lane multiway
boulevard 179
• John Moore Road/Fowler Secrest Road to Carroll Street/Rolling Hills Drive
o Recommended 4-lane suburban boulevard 180
• Carroll Street/Rolling Hills Drive to Williams Road
o Recommended 4-lane suburban boulevard (assuming an aggressive
access management approach accompanies future development)181
• Williams Road to Dickerson Boulevard
o Recommended 4-lane multiway boulevard with parking (if parallel
road network implemented) or 6-lane multiway boulevard with parking (if
parallel road network not implemented)182
• Dickerson Boulevard to Concord Avenue
173 DSFEIS at A1-84.
174 Draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Plan, Attachment 30; see also HNTB, Union County Commissioners Progress
Briefing (May 7, 2013), Attachment 31.
175 Draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Plan, Attachment 30, at 38-39.
176 Id. at 41.
177 Id. at 44.
178 Id. at 44-45.
179 Id. at 47.
180 Id.
181 Id. at 48.
182 Id. at 50.
29
o Recommended 6-lane multiway boulevard (but without additional lane
on southbound 74)183
• Skyway Drive/US 601 to Stafford Street
o Recommended 6-lane multiway boulevard with parking 184
• Stafford Street to Walkup Avenue
o Recommended 6-lane multiway boulevard with parking 185
iii. Frontage roads along U.S. 74
Another recommendation included in both Dr. Hartgen’s report and the U.S. 74
Revitalization Study draft report is the development of frontage roads along portions of U.S. 74.
A frontage road, also known as a local access or service road, is a local road which runs
parallel to a higher-speed, limited-access road, and is intended to maintain access to business or
other locations along the corridor. As Dr. Hartgen illustrates, the transportation agencies have
confusingly failed to consider frontage roads, or even partial frontage roads as part of a suite of
improvements along U.S. 74.186 He notes that the alternatives analysis should rightly include
evaluation of such options that may take a minimal, or minor, number of existing properties
along existing U.S. 74.187 Such consideration would be logical, given the vast number of
properties that will be taken by the Bypass.
NCDOT has implemented similar on-current-alignment upgrades along U.S. 74 in the
adjacent Mecklenburg County, yet did not consider them as an alternative, or as part of a suite of
alternatives, for this project. For example, as part of a suite of improvements to Independence
Boulevard (U.S. 74 in Mecklenburg County), NCDOT intends to convert a portion of
Independence Boulevard to an expressway.188 The plan involves several particular
improvements functioning together to improve traffic flow. NCDOT’s plan involves their
removal of existing traffic signals at Sharon Amity Road and Idlewild Road.189 NCDOT also
plans to widen the existing six-lane roadway to include four general purpose lanes and one bus
lane in each direction.190 The agency will also build bridges, or grade separations, at
interchanges with Sharon Amity Road, Idlewild Road, and Conference Drive.191 The
transportation agencies have offered no explanation as to why such alternatives were possible
183 Id. at 51.
184 Id.at 55.
185 Id. at 57.
186 Hartgen Report 2013, at 8, Attachment 1.
187 Id.
188 NCDOT, U.S. 74 Widening & Improvements, available at http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/U.S.
74WideningImprovements/ , Attachment 32; see also, CRTPO, Independence Blvd. Widening (Sharon Amity to
Conference Drive), available at http://www.crtpo.org/independence-blvd-widening-sharon-amity-conference-drive ,
Attachment 33.
189 NCDOT, NCDOT will begin setting barrier walls on Independence Boulevard in Mecklenburg County (June 12,
2013), available at https://apps.ncdot.gov/newsreleases/details.aspx?r=8383, Attachment 34.
190 Id.
191 Id.
30
(and in fact preferable) along one stretch of U.S. 74 but was given scant attention as an
alternative for improving the stretch of U.S. 74 at issue here, just one county over.
2. Development of a parallel road network
The transportation agencies should also consider the value of improvements to other
Union County roads that could provide local drivers with alternative routes and thereby lessen
local traffic congestion on U.S. 74. Such efforts at creating a parallel road network, in
conjunction with other targeted improvements to U.S. 74 itself, could function to leave U.S. 74
to serve as a high-speed corridor while still maintaining access to existing businesses.
We raised the consideration of improvements to Old Monroe Road and Old Charlotte
Highway in our November 2012 comment letter,192 but received the response, without analysis,
that such improvements were found not to meet the project purpose and need.193 This response
fails to recognize that the combinations of a parallel road network, working together with other
target improvements, could serve to meet the project’s purpose and need. Rankin v. Coleman,
394 F. Supp. 647, 657-59 (E.D.N.C. 1975). Below are listed some examples of projects the
transportation agencies should consider.
i. Old Monroe Road/Old Charlotte Highway
Old Monroe Road runs parallel to U.S. 74 along its southwestern side, crossing the entire
length of the City of Monroe. As such, improving Old Monroe Road offers the opportunity to
address one of the greatest congestion hot spots along U.S. 74.194 In fact, certain segments of
Old Monroe Road and Old Charlotte Highway are already under consideration for widening to
multi-lane facilities in Matthews, Stallings, and Indian Trail.195 NCDOT has underway a three-
section plan to widen Old Monroe Road from Matthews to Indian Trail, with Section A widening
the road from Interstate 485 toward Charlotte, Section B from Interstate 485 to Stallings Road,
and Section C from Stallings Road to Wesley Chapel-Stouts Road.196 And in August 2013,
NCDOT hosted public meetings regarding plans to improve approximately 6.5 miles of Old
Monroe Road through Matthews, Stallings, and Indian Trail, including plans to widen the
existing two-lane roadway to a multi-lane facility with accommodations for pedestrians and
bicycles.197
192 See SELC comments Nov. 2012, at 35-36.
193 DSFEIS at A1-83.
194 See Figure 1 at 31 and Figures 1-4 attached.
195 See, e.g., Business leaders, NCDOT discuss Monroe Bypass, UNION COUNTY WEEKLY (Feb. 8, 2013),
Attachment 35; Indian Trail, Stallings, NCDOT working on Old Monroe plans, UNION COUNTY WEEKLY (Nov. 30,
2012), Attachment 36; Widening coming for Old Monroe Road?, UNION COUNTY WEEKLY (Aug. 24, 2013),
Attachment 37.
196 Heather Smith, Charrette weighs plans for Old Monroe Road, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Aug. 31, 2013),
Attachment 38.
197 NCDOT, Notice of Multi-Day Design Charrette for E. John Street/Old Monroe Road (State Road 1009)
Improvements Through Matthews, Stallings, and Indian Trail, Attachment 39.
31
Such improvements to Old Monroe Road would provide local traffic with a neighboring
alternative to U.S. 74 through some of the most congested portions of U.S. 74, allowing local
travelers the option to move more easily through Monroe’s core business district without relying
on U.S. 74. And many local drivers currently use Old Monroe/Old Charlotte Roads to bypass
U.S. 74, indicating that these improvements would be likely to have a great impact.198
Figure 1. Examples of projects to develop a parallel road network, such as along Old Charlotte
Hwy/Old Monroe Rd (in red), Secrest Short Cut Rd (in green), and the Monroe Rd Loop (in
blue), which could make significant strides towards targeting congestion hot spots on U.S. 74.199
ii. Monroe Road Loop
Another parallel road that could greatly alleviate a congestion hot spot is the Monroe
Road Loop. The project would be a new road to continue the recently completed Martin Luther
King Boulevard from Secrest Short Cut Road near Monroe Mall to Walkup Road at the east end
of Monroe. This project is already included on the 2040 MTP Candidate Projects List.200 Much
smaller and less expensive than the Monroe Bypass, this “mini-bypass” would create additional
198 U.S.-74 Corridor Revitalization Study Stakeholder Interviews: Transportation Meeting Notes, at 1 (Jan. 18,
2012), Attachment 28.
199 See also Figures 2, 3 & 4 attached.
200 CRTPO 2040 MTP Candidate Projects (Aug. 21, 2913), available at
http://www.crtpo.org/PDFs/LRTP/2040/2040_MTP_Candidate_Projects_List.pdf Attachment 40.
32
access in the most congested part of the corridor, helping to alleviate one of the biggest
congestion hotspots.201
iii. Secrest Shortcut
NCDOT should consider improvements to Secrest Shortcut for the same reason. Because
Secrest Shortcut runs parallel to U.S. 74 along its northeastern side, improvements to the road
could provide local drivers with another option to avoid congestion along U.S. 74. Because
Secrest Shortcut falls almost directly within the proposed pathway of the Monroe
Connector/Bypass from Hemby Bridge to Fowler Road, it could service many of the same users
expected along the proposed Bypass.
iv. Other small scale projects
The U.S. 74 Revitalization submits extensive suggestions for additional small-scale
projects, which taken together, could serve to provide a broad parallel road network. Chapter 7
of the draft is devoted to detailing these suggestions of particular roadways to connect including:
• Secrest Shortcut Road to Wilkes Drive
• Wilkes Drive to Stafford Street
• Stafford Street to Morgan Mill Road
• Poplin Place to Roland Drive
• Roland Drive to Williams Road
• Williams Road to Dickerson Boulevard
• Dickerson Boulevard to Patton Avenue
• Patton Avenue to Skyway Drive 202
The Study Draft also details suggestions to develop a parallel road network in both Indian Trail
and Stallings that the transportation agencies should consider.203 These suggestions primarily
involve improving existing roadways and building new connections over vacant land, rather than
demolishing 95 households, 47 businesses and 499 acres of active agricultural land.204
3. Public transit
As in our previous comment letters, we again encourage the transportation agencies to
take a closer look at transit options in the corridor as part of a comprehensive solution to
improving mobility. The transportation agencies eliminated this solution from further study in
201 See Figure 1 at 31 and Figures 1-4 attached.
202 Draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Plan, at 63-71, Attachment 30.
203 Id. at 69-71.
204 See DSFEIS at 3-4–3-5.
33
the First Qualitative Screening, citing its inability to “noticeably improve mobility and capacity
in the project study area as well as a finding that it would not divert enough vehicular traffic.205
Such a response ignores the viability of increased transit as one part of a functioning
comprehensive solution. As we noted in our November 2012 letter, the benefits and likely
success of increased transit in the U.S. 74 corridor has been discussed at length in conjunction
with the U.S. 74 Revitalization Study. Though this study was not commissioned to evaluate
alternative to the Bypass, the study’s purpose is irrelevant to its finding that increased transit may
be a viable option to address transportation concerns in the U.S. 74 Corridor.206 Representatives
of the Charlotte Area Transit System (“CATS”) noted that they see U.S. 74 as a potential transit
market,207 and have noted benefits to users such as savings in gas and parking expenses, as well
as reduced driver frustration,208 a major concern for drivers in the U.S. 74 Corridor. And
expanded transit services, in conjunction with other alternatives, have a significant ability
improve traffic conditions in the corridor by diverting drivers from the corridor at peak times.
While Union County transit ridership may currently be slightly lower than other
surrounding areas, it is increasing.209 The U.S. 74 Revitalization Study suggests that demand for
increased transit services will continue to grow in Union County as it continues to develop, and
argues that the expert stakeholders interviewed believe more commuters can be lured to use
transit if there were “a robust transit system [] created in collaboration with other jurisdictions in
Union County, Mecklenburg County, Town of Matthews, City of Charlotte, and CATS.210
Introducing transit services to areas which have traditionally relied primarily on personal-
vehicle-based travel requires time to ramp up ridership and reach critical service levels such that
services are dependable and well understood. NCDOT can play an active role in encouraging
such reliance and expanding area transit, as they have done well in their efforts to promote
transportation alternatives in conjunction with the Fortify project in the Raleigh area. For
example, NCDOT is investing an additional $12 million in public transportation to add more
buses and bus routes and to identify new park-and-ride options as part of its efforts to ease
205 See id. at 2-8, A1-84; NCTA, Draft Alternatives Development and Analysis Report (Nov. 5, 2007), at 1-9–1-11,
available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/monroe_archives_AltsDevRptAllScreenings110607.pdf.
206 Draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Plan, at 3, Attachment 30.
207 U.S. 74 Corridor Revitalization Study Stakeholder Interviews: Transportation Meeting Notes, at 1 (Jan. 18,
2012), Attachment 28.
208 Id.
209 Draft U.S. 74 Revitalization Plan, at 16, Attachment 30.
210 Id. at 78.
34
congestion along I-40/440,211 and has been actively promoting these transit services both online
and in the press.212
CATS representatives have also suggested a variety of ways the transportation agencies
can encourage greater ridership in Union County, such as by providing more park-and-ride
locations and more turn-around locations for buses, thereby making CATS operations easier.213
The CATS representatives also stated that the current Bus Rapid Transit stations in Union
County are not ideally located in relation to U.S. 74, but that there will be opportunities in the
near future to plan for more convenient locations.214 They suggested that park-and-rides could
be an interim solution for Union County residents seeking to access the express routes into
Mecklenburg County.215 And CATS has expressed the intent to extend bus rapid transit across
the county line.216 As such, we urge the transportation agencies to study more closely expanded
transit options as part of a suite of solutions for managing congestion on U.S. 74.
4. Freight rail
As in previous comment letters, we again urge NCDOT to consider increased rail freight
options as an alternative that would help alleviate some of the truck traffic from U.S. 74. We
regularly hear local area drivers cite commercial truck traffic as one of greatest problems facing
the U.S. 74 corridor. For example, at the recent December public hearings in Union County, the
need to remove truck traffic from U.S. 74 was regularly referenced by hearing attendees as one
of the primary reasons for wanting the Bypass.
NCDOT has argued that freight rail expansion would not address the project purpose and
that freight rail improvements would not eliminate the truck usage of U.S. 74,217 and in the latest
document, asserts that freight rail would not address the purpose of improving mobility and
capacity by providing a facility that allows for high speed regional travel.218 While we agree
that freight rail alone will not solve transportation problems in the U.S. 74 corridor, NCDOT has
211 NCDOT, Fortify: Frequently Asked Questions, available at
http://ncdot.gov/fortifync/_resources/docs/Fortify_FAQ.pdf , Attachment 41; Dawn Kurry, Free bus may be faster
than Fortify traffic freeze, TRIANGLE BUSINESS JOURNAL, Attachment 42.
212 See, e.g., NCDOT, Fortify: Transit Options, available at http://ncdot.gov/fortifync/transit-options/ , Attachment
43; NCDOT, Fortify Powerpoint Presentation, available at
http://ncdot.gov/fortifync/_resources/docs/NCDOTPowerPointFORTIFY1182013.ppt, Attachment 44; NCDOT,
Fortify: Driver Information, available at http://ncdot.gov/fortifync/driver-info/ , Attachment 45; Dawn Curry,
Massive I-40/440 rebuild means Raleigh must ‘Fortify’ through 2016, TRIANGLE BUSINESS JOURNAL (Oct. 28,
2013), Attachment 46; Bruce Siceloff, Road Worrier: NCDOT says not to worry about 3 years of Beltline misery –
be happy!, NEWS & OBSERVER (October 28, 2013), Attachment 47.
213 U.S.-74 Corridor Revitalization Study Stakeholder Interviews: Transportation Meeting Notes (Jan. 18, 2012),
Attachment 28.
214 Id.
215 Id.
216 Id.
217 FEIS (2010), Appendix B, at B-3-34 – B-3-35.
218 DSFEIS at A1-83 – A1-84.
35
still failed to provide any analysis of how expanded freight rail, in combination with other
alternatives, could form an important part of the solution.
Further, shifting freight from commercial trucks to freight rail could serve particularly
well at resolving high level commercial vehicle traffic which many local drivers consider to be
the most pressing issue facing the U.S. 74 corridor. The average freight train can remove more
than 280 trucks from highways in a single trip.219 And such impacts are expected even in the
Charlotte region; the recent expansion at the Charlotte Intermodal rail yard, for example, is
projected to take 392,000 long-haul truck trips off the road each year in North Carolina as more
goods move by train.220
5. Reduced interchanges
Each of the 25 variations on a new-location highway considered as preliminary study
alternatives in the Third Quantitative Screening involved between seven to ten interchanges.221
The transportation agencies should also fully evaluate alternative designs to the proposed toll
road. The current design includes nine separate interchanges, though the transportation agencies
have not articulated why so many interchanges are needed if the purpose of the road is to provide
a high-speed facility from I-485 to Marshville. The transportation agencies have asserted that
the interchanges are necessary to serve projected traffic demand in the target year as well as to
support the toll revenue bonds required to finance the project.222 And yet, because NCDOT is
ignorant of the traffic patterns in the corridor, and the extent to which traffic is local, there is
nothing to point to the elimination of interchanges being financially problematic. Indeed, as
discussed below, it seems unlikely that travelers going from Charlotte to Stallings or Monroe
would likely go out of their way and pay a toll to use the Bypass given the recent improvements
to U.S. 74 and improved travel times in the corridor.
As with other alternatives, this alternative has been improperly dismissed out of hand
based on the transportation agencies’ reliance on faulty traffic forecasts. Regardless of whether
the United States Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) has expressed concern regarding the
transportation agencies’ failure to study this alternative,223 Section 404 of the Clean Water Act
mandates that the agencies study and select the “Least Environmentally Damaging Practicable
Alternative.” 40 C.F.R. § 230.10(a). The transportation agencies’ selection of the Preferred
Alternative, in light of their failure to evaluate fully an alternative toll highway with less
interchanges, is a failure of this statutory duty. As you are aware, the fact is the Corps revoked
the 404 permit for the Monroe Bypass project on April 17, 2013.224 As such, the transportation
agencies will be required to undergo the permitting process once again, which necessarily
219 See, e.g., GoRail, Rail Benefits, Attachment 48.
220 Ely Portillo, City hopes new rail yard kicks off boom around airport, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER (Dec. 30, 2013),
available at http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/12/30/4576495/city-hopes-new-rail-yard-
kicks.html#.UsrbnvRDvVs Attachment 49.
221 DEIS (2009) at 2-26.
222 DSFEIS at A1-85.
223 Id.
224 Id. at C1-170–C1-171.
36
includes the opportunity for public comment. If the project proceeds that far we will be sure to
raise this issue at that time directly with the Corps.
6. Transportation Demand Management
The DSFEIS also includes an insufficient analysis of Transportation Demand
Management (“TDM”) options that might work in conjunction with other alternatives by
reducing demand for the road infrastructure. Conspicuously absent from the TDM analysis is
any discussion of staggered or flexible work schedules. As Dr. Hartgen has noted, such options
may be viable in the U.S. 74 Corridor, as most of the traffic using the facility is local.225 Dr.
Hartgen also points out that recent census data demonstrates a significant increase in the number
of Union County residents working at home, doubling from 3.4% in 2000, to 6.9% in 2012,226
indicating an increasing acceptance of telecommuting as a valid TDM option in the study area.
Dr. Hartgen also recognizes that the number of Union County workers commuting outside of the
county for employment has dropped dramatically in recent years, falling from 61% of Union
County workers commuting outside of the County in 2006 to only 50% in 2009.227 Such a trend
indicates that staggered or flexible work schedules could be increasingly effective to assist in
managing peak traffic in the study area.
NCDOT has spent significant resources promoting the values of staggered or flexible
work schedules to employers within the Raleigh area as part of its recent “Fortify” effort,
indicating that they understand these TDM options can have significant impacts on peak traffic
demand management.228 We encourage the transportation agencies to evaluate these TDM
options as part of a suite of alternatives, which functioning together could significantly decrease
demand on the U.S. 74 Corridor at peak travel periods.
IV. IMPACTS ANALYSIS
While NCDOT completely neglected to revisit the Statement of Purpose and Need or the
alternatives analysis in this DSFEIS, it did spend more time reviewing its analysis of impacts.
Unfortunately, rather than focus on presenting an accurate analysis of the likely impacts from the
project, the agency instead limited its efforts to revising its explanation of minimal impacts from
the $900 million, twenty-mile new-location highway.
225 Hartgen report 2013, at 11, Attachment 1.
226 Id. (citing US Census data for 2012 and 2000, Attachments 50 and 51).
227 Id. at 16.
228 NCDOT, Fortify: Employer Resources, Attachment 52; NCDOT, Fortify Powerpoint Presentation, available at
http://ncdot.gov/fortifync/_resources/docs/NCDOTPowerPointFORTIFY1182013.ppt, Attachment 44; Bruce
Siceloff, Road Worrier: NCDOT says not to worry about 3 years of Beltline misery – be happy!, NEWS & OBSERVER
(October 28, 2013), Attachment 47.
37
A. Indirect and Cumulative Effects Analysis
1. NCDOT’s new explanation
In its May 3, 2012 ruling the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
explained that NCDOT had misled the public with regard to key assumptions underlying the
analysis of Indirect and Cumulative Effects (“ICE”). NC Wildlife Fed’n, 677 F.3d at 604. In
response NCDOT has now laid out in detail the true nature of those assumptions. By laying bare
the full process, NCDOT has revealed an ICE analysis that is nonsensical. The analysis, which
is supposed to look at the impact of transportation infrastructure on growth and development, is
based on data that completely ignores the impact of transportation infrastructure. Now that the
analysis is, at last, transparently open to the public, it is not surprising that NCDOT worked so
hard to obscure this absurdity from the public.
The DSFEIS spends considerable time explaining that, while the Monroe Bypass was
included in data used to create a “No-Build” scenario, its inclusion was not important because
transportation infrastructure essentially had almost no impact on the forecasts of future growth
used in the ICE analysis. The DSFEIS goes to great lengths to explain how transportation
infrastructure was not factored in at each step of the analysis. The document explains that Dr.
Hammer’s “top down” projections were not sensitive to factors such as “large scale
transportation projects.”229 Similarly, the document explains that Paul Smith’s “bottom up”
allocation of growth was also barely influenced by transportation infrastructure. The one factor
that might have included transportation infrastructure, “travel time to employment,” was found
not to have figured into the analysis to any great extent.230 In sum, the DSFEIS reports that “the
methodology used does not incorporate the full accessibility impacts of major roadway
projects.”231
This failure is staggering considering that in its previous EIS, NCDOT repeatedly
explained how important transportation infrastructure is on changing levels and distribution of
development. In the 2009 Qualitative ICE study, for example, NCDOT explained time after
time that improving travel time to major employment centers through infrastructure investments
would be one of the primary factors in determining where growth would go.232
In its review of NCDOT’s new explanation of the methodology, FHWA appeared to
recognize that not analyzing the impact of transportation infrastructure on development might be
a problem for an EIS that deals with a major new highway project. FHWA noted that the new
explanation may “raise the question why this model was used as the basis for analyzing the
impact of a road project intended to move people over a twenty-mile distance to a job center in
Charlotte.”233 In response, NCDOT explained that because a different methodology was used
229 DSFEIS at E1-59–E1-64.
230 Id. at E1-64–E1-69.
231 Id. at E1-79.
232 See, e.g., Qualitative ICE analysis (2009) at 6-7.
233 FHWA, NCDOT and Atkins, Comment Chart, excel sheet, Attachment 53.
38
for the “build” scenario, any concern about the “No-Build” scenario is irrelevant.234 This
explanation misses the point. To assess adequately environmental impacts from a project it is
necessary to have both an accurate “build” scenario and an accurate “No-Build” scenario. Only
by doing so can a reviewing agency determine the impact attributable to the project. See Friends
of Back Bay v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 681 F.3d 581, 588 (4th Cir. 2012) (explaining the
importance of accurate baseline data to the NEPA process).
By focusing only on the adequacy of the “Build” scenario NCDOT completely neglects a
key component of the analysis. It is just as important to know how Union County would grow
without the road as it is to determine how much it will grow with the road. By its own adamant
admission, NCDOT’s “No-Build” scenario is based on analysis that does not take into account
the impact of transportation infrastructure. In other words, NCDOT’s analysis assumes that
growth continues to carry on unabated regardless of how congested the infrastructure in the
county would get in the absence of improvements or the Monroe Bypass. This is particularly
staggering when one considers that NCDOT’s own (albeit flawed) analysis suggests that by 2035
U.S. 74 will become so congested in the absence of the Bypass or other improvements that traffic
speeds will be as low as 17 mph, and travel times through the corridor will be as high as 70
minutes.235 The idea that just as many people would want to move to Union County if it was an
average of 25 minutes outside of Charlotte as they would be if it was over an hour outside of
Charlotte belies simple common sense and long observed growth patterns.
Indeed, the DSFEIS itself demonstrates just how absurd and contradictory the analysis
really is. For example, to support the idea that transportation infrastructure has no impact on
growth in Union County, the DSFEIS states that “most of the county is already highly accessible
with a well-connected roadway network and no major barriers limiting access from Union
County to the major employment centers in Mecklenburg County.”236 This statement apparently
ignores findings elsewhere in the EIS that, without the Bypass or other improvements to U.S. 74,
traffic speeds are expected to decrease to less than 20 mph and two thirds of intersections are
expected to operate at Level of Service E or F.237 The very impetus for building the Bypass was
the expectation that, without significant transportation investments, congestion in the corridor
will become a “major barrier limiting access from Union County to the major employment
centers in Mecklenburg county.”238
The opinions of officials and planning staff in Union County similarly belie NCDOT’s
assumption that future levels of congestion would not contain levels of growth. Local planners,
interviewed as part of the EIS make this clear. For example, Union County planners state that in
absence of the Bypass growth, will be extremely limited in the eastern part of the county.239
Similarly, planners from Marshville state that congestion on U.S. 74 currently is an impediment
234 Id.
235 DEIS (2009) at 1-18 (table 1-5).
236 DSFEIS at E1-84.
237 FEIS (2010) at 1.1.2 and 1.1.8 (referenced by DSFEIS at 2-13).
238 DSFEIS at E1-84.
239 Id. at ICE Appendix A, regarding Union County.
39
to development.240 Likewise, the President of the Union County Chamber of Commerce stated
that Union County often loses development projects “just because of travel time on U.S. 74.”241
If current congestion on U.S. 74 is constraining development, it seems impossible that it would
not be further constrained given NCDOT’s future projections.
Courts have recognized the absurdity of an analysis that fails to consider the impact on
infrastructure in absence of new highway investments. See, e.g., Highway J Citizens Grp. v. US
Dep’t of Transp., 656 F. Supp. 2d 868, 887 (E.D. Wis. 2009). For example, in Highway J
Citizens Group v. US DOT, a federal district court rejected a state Department of
Transportation’s argument that development in Waukesha and Washington Counties, Wisconsin,
would continue to occur at the pace it has previously whether or not additional infrastructure was
added. Id. at 887-88. Refusing to buy into this counterintuitive and highly unlikely reasoning
the court stated that: “[o]ne need not be an expert to reasonably suspect that if Highway 164
were not expanded development in the region would be constricted. Presumably, congestion on a
two-lane Highway 164 would discourage development in the area, whereas expansion of the
highway to four lanes would cause development to continue unabated.” Id. at 878.
If U.S. 74 was free flowing and expected to continue in that state it might be reasonable
for NCDOT to exclude consideration of the impact of infrastructure in their No-Build analysis.
But it is not, and NCDOT itself predicts that, without additional investments, the highway will
get increasingly congested to the extent that commutes into Charlotte could take well over an
hour. Given these predictions it seems highly unlikely that growth would continue to occur at the
same rate it has in the past, and much more likely that growth would be impacted by the hugely
increased travel times to the major employment center. Certainly, NCDOT has not presented
any credible evidence to suggest why such congestion would not, in fact, be relevant.
2. Outdated socio-economic forecasts
NCDOT’s ICE analysis is further discredited because it relies on forecasts of future
socio-economic growth that have been shown to be vastly overstated. Union County is no longer
the fastest growing county in the state ‒— it grew 2.2%.242 or less 243 between 2010 and 2012.
Other forecasts of growth have accounted for this shift — the Traffic and Revenue Study
adjusted its forecasts of growth down (although not sufficiently), acknowledging that growth had
slowed considerably due to the recession.244 FHWA, taking note of this data, asked if perhaps
NCDOT should also be adjusting the forecasts down in light of the recession.245 NCDOT
admitted that it “would be more accurate to so.” 246 Nonetheless, the Department decided not to
240 Id. at ICE Appendix A, regarding Marshville.
241 Email blast from Sharon Rosché, Union County Chamber of Commerce, RE: Monroe Bypass – Let’s work to get
this project moving! (March 5, 2013), Attachment 54.
242 E-mail from Ken Gilland, Baker Corporation, to Scudder Wagg et. al., Baker Corporation (Feb. 14, 2013), RE:
DRAFT USACE Presentation (Population estimates), Attachment 22.
243 Dr. Hartgen calculates the growth rate as 1.7% in his report. Hartgen Report 2013 at 6, Attachment 1.
244 ICE Appendix K, at 29-30.
245 FHWA, NCDOT and Atkins, Comment Chart, excel sheet, at Question 60, Attachment 53.
246 Id. at response to Question 60.
40
make any adjustment based on the rationale that both “No-Build” and “Build” forecasts would be
affected equally.
This decision overlooks entirely the purpose of NEPA. First, as explained above the
alternatives analysis would be significantly impacted by lower levels of socio-economic growth
post-recession. One of NCDOT’s primary reasons for eliminating a variety of alternatives is that
traffic growth is expected to be so extensive in the future that only a new-location Bypass will
satisfy future needs. Second, the very purpose of an impacts analysis is to present a clear and
accurate picture of what the future will look like with and without the Bypass. By continuing to
use forecasts of growth that all admit are overstated, NCDOT fails to present accurately the
reasonable analysis of impacts that NEPA requires.
NCDOT’s refusal to address current reality is made more egregious by the fact that
experts have been working on, and are close to finalizing, updated estimates of growth for Union
County that are significantly lower than those currently being used in the DSFEIS.247 The group
of Charlotte MPOs, the Charlotte Regional Alliance for Transportation (“CRAFT”)
commissioned Dr. Stephen Appold to create new updated socio-economic forecasts for the
region to replace those currently employed by NCDOT. These new projections show growth
occurring at a significantly lower rate than those created by Dr. Hammer. Indeed, the new
projections suggest that growth previously anticipated to occur by 2030 will not occur, if at all,
until 2040, a full decade later.248 NCDOT attempts to justify its failure to use these forecasts by
explaining that the forecasts have not yet been fully finalized. It is absurd to knowingly use
significantly incorrect forecasts just because the more accurate forecasts are not yet final,
particularly when the accurate forecasts suggest a wildly different conclusion. As noted above
NEPA requires agencies to use accurate data. 40 C.F.R. § 1500.1(b). This mandate does not
include using data all know to be incorrect.
3. Location of growth
NCDOT’s forecasts of future growth may also be greatly overstated because they
wrongly equate growth in Union County with growth in the study area. The DSFEIS fails to
acknowledge that there are significant differences between the make-up of the county as a whole
and the make-up of the study area. For example, the DSFEIS asserts that one reason the study
area will continue to see strong growth in absence of the Bypass is that median household
income is much higher than in other counties in the Charlotte area.249 But, within Union County
median income is much higher on the western edge of the county, in areas outside of the study
area. Dr. Hartgen makes note of this error in his report, explaining that much of the growth in
Union County has been in places not served by the Bypass.250
247 See DSFEIS at C1-7 (describing Dr. Appold’s work as “analyzing the effects of the recession, which followed the
very high growth period beforehand”).
248 Id. at A1-74.
249 Id. at C1-31.
250 Hartgen report 2013, at 16, Attachment 1.
41
4. Redistributed growth
In addition to its utterly flawed analysis of induced growth, NCDOT has also
failed to properly examine how growth would be redistributed if the Bypass is constructed.
While there is some discussion of this likely phenomenon in the ICE, 251 it is incomplete. The
current analysis in the ICE looks at how growth may redistribute based on increased levels of
accessibility. A map shows that based on the improved accessibility occasioned by the Bypass
growth is expected to shift to the east, towards Wingate and Marshville.252 The travel-time
savings used for this accessibility analysis, however, range from 0-10 minutes. While this may
be in line with what NCDOT expects to see at opening year, other data in the DSFEIS suggests
that travel time savings would be higher by 2035. No explanation is given as to why these
greater travel time savings are not used to analysis the redistribution of growth.
Other than this exceedingly rough analysis, there is no description as to what
redistributed growth might look like, and how communities that were previously seeing strong
growth rates may feel the impact of the Bypass. For example, there is no consideration given to
how Stallings or Indian Trail may be impacted as land in Marshville and Wingate becomes more
desirable.253 A previous draft of the DSFEIS included a reference to growth migrating away
from Downtown Monroe.254 After SELC brought attention to this comment in public meetings it
was deleted from the EIS.255 Failing to disclose, and otherwise ignoring important impacts from
the project, however, is inconsistent with the purpose of NEPA, which is to inform the public
and decisionmakers, not to “sell” one particular outcome. If shifts in growth away from current
population centers and downtowns are expected, that impact should be clearly and transparently
explained in the EIS. A detailed analysis of redistributed growth is also important for fully
disclosing environmental concerns such as impacts to water quality and endangered species, as
was made clear by both the Environmental Protection Agency and the North Carolina Division
of Water Quality during the development of the DSFEIS.256
5. Conflicting growth projections
As detailed in earlier comment letters, outside of the NEPA process local stakeholders
and state-level officials have widely purported that the Bypass will drive dramatic new economic
development in Union County and across the state. NCDOT has refused to reconcile publically
the disparity between this widespread understanding of the Bypass’s likely impacts with their
own projections of negligible growth. Further, the NCDOT itself regularly espouses
251 DSFEIS at C2-203.
252 DSFEIS at C2-244 (Map 14).
253 DSFEIS at E1-87
254 Compare NCDOT, Appendix A - Comments Since the Final EIS, Draft (June 2013), at 3, Attachment 55, with
DSFEIS at Appendix A.
255 See, e.g., SELC, Presentation to Unionville and Fairview Town Councils (Oct. 1, 2013), at slide 18, Attachment
56.
256 Email from Chris Militscher, EPA, to Christy Shumate, NCDOT, RE: Monroe Connector/Bypass (R-3329/R-
2559) Update and Documentation (Feb. 28, 2013), Attachment 57; DSFEIS at C1-95 (Memo from Alan Johnson,
DWQ).
42
contradictory positions, and has in fact paid to support purportedly local stakeholders to
perpetuate the belief in the Bypass’s ability to drive economic growth.
NCDOT is regularly confronted with the fact that knowledgeable stakeholders throughout
Union County and the state strongly believe that constructing the Monroe Bypass will result in
dramatic economic development. As documented in our November 2012 comment letter, groups
and municipalities such as the Union County Chamber of Commerce, Charlotte Chamber of
Commerce, City of Monroe, Town of Indian Trail, Charlotte Regional Partnership, and the
Governor’s Logistic Task Force have regularly championed and planned for the future based on
this understanding.257
i. Local voices
This understanding of the Monroe Bypass continues to pervade Union County and the
State. For example, as noted above, at least eight communities and organizations — including
the MUMPO, the City of Monroe, the Union County Board of Commissioners, the Indian Trail
Town Council, the Town of Stallings, the Town of Marshville, and the Town of Waxhaw —
have all passed versions of a resolution supporting construction of the Bypass in part because
“the Monroe Bypass will stimulate economic and commercial development.”258
In the DSFEIS, the transportation agencies continue to dismiss the extensive and detailed
demonstration of local stakeholders’ widespread belief presented in our November 2012
comment letter, stating only that the NCDOT analysis is more correct because “numerous local
planners and others were interviewed and current adopted planning documents were reviewed”
and that the DSFEIS “presents data and analysis.” 259
A review of this “data and analysis,” however, confirms that local planners (1)
have noticed a significant slowing of growth since the original EIS and (2) expect the Bypass to
impact their communities. Planners from the Charlotte Mecklenburg planning board,260 the City
of Monroe,261 the Town of Stallings 262 and Union County 263 all note that growth projections
have slowed since the original analysis of the Bypass was performed.
Likewise, many local planning officials appear to disagree with NCDOT’s that the
Bypass will have minimal impact. Planners from Fairview state that they expect to see an impact,
but are unsure what it will be.264 Planners from Marshville state expressly that “future growth in
Marshville dependent on implementation of the Bypass” and note that congestion on U.S. 74
257 SELC comments Nov. 2012, at 3-6.
258 See resolutions at n. 23 & 24.
259 See, e.g., DSFEIS at A1-65, Comment No. 2 & 3.
260 DSFEIS, ICE Appendix A, regarding Charlotte-Mecklenburg Planning and Development.
261 Id. ICE Appendix A, regarding City of Monroe.
262 Id. ICE Appendix A, regarding Town of Stallings.
263 Id. ICE Appendix A, regarding Union County.
264 Id. ICE Appendix A, regarding Town of Fairview.
43
currently is an impediment to development.265 Those planners also expressly note that the town
would increase utility capacity if the Bypass is constructed. Union County planners state that in
absence of the Bypass, growth will be extremely limited in the eastern part of the county. The
same planners expect growth to slow throughout the county if the Bypass is not constructed. An
interview with Chris Platé, the Executive Director of Monroe Union County Economic
Development (“MUCED”) reported similar findings.266
These surveys of local planners, which are confusingly written, are simply dumped in the
EIS with no analysis of their findings.267 There is no indication as to how the opinions of the
planners have been incorporated into the EIS and there is no explanation as to why many of the
opinions of the local planners sit in direct opposition with NCDOT’s own assumptions and
methodologies.
Outside of the NEPA process groups with specialized knowledge about Union County’s
potential for economic growth have also touted the Bypass as a likely driver of economic growth.
For example, the MUCED group mentioned above recently recognized that the Bypass is key to
the planned economic development efforts detailed in its 2013-2015 workplan.268 MUCED’s
workplan outlines its plan to concentrate its recruitment and retention efforts on four “Areas of
Focus:” Precision Manufacturing, Agri-Business, Logistics, and Commercial.269 In describing
its focus on Logistic, the workplan lists the Monroe Bypass as the only “opportunity” of which to
take advantage, and lists “Congestion/Inadequate Road System” as the only challenge.270 And
publically, the MUCED has dedicated itself to continuing to support Bypass construction,
recognizing the project would “bolster the county’s attractiveness for logistics work.”271 The
MUCED also uses the Bypass on its website to attract new business to the area.272
As President of the Union County Chamber of Commerce, Sharon Rosché was also
convinced that the Bypass would bring dramatic growth and development to Union County.
When asked about the studies conducted by NCTA and NCDOT finding the Bypass would result
in negligible economic growth, Rosché “maintained that the bypass would bring new businesses
and industry to Union County,” explaining that “[y]ou can do all the studies in the world but the
reality is that I’ve got towns in Union County that have purchased water opportunities and sewer
and are ready to build as soon as this thing goes over.”273 Rosché, as president of the Union
County Chamber, was arguably one of the individuals most tapped into the details of county’s
265 Id. ICE Appendix A, regarding Town of Marshville.
266 Id. ICE Appendix A, regarding MUCED.
267 Id. ICE Appendix A.
268 Monroe-Union County Economic Development, Work Plan 2013-15 (Jul. 2013), Attachment 58.
269 Id. at 2.
270 Id. at 10.
271 Adam Bell, Monroe-Union County Economic Development ready for action, ROCK HILL HERALD ONLINE (Aug.
8, 2013), Attachment 59.
272 Monroe Union County Economic Development, Highway Access (2013), Attachment 60.
273 Heather Smith, Chamber resolution draws fire from Bypass opponent, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Mar. 6, 2013),
Attachment 61.
44
economic potential and most knowledgeable about planned growth. She called the project
“vital” to Union County,274 and noted that the region is experiencing growth in anticipation of
the Bypass, stating that developers have purchased land along the bypass footprint, specifically
in anticipation of a higher demand.275
President Rosché cast further doubt on the validity of NCDOT’s studies, stating that
“studies can say whatever you want them to say . . . [t]hey can use certain information, certain
formulas and studies and have the result support what you want them to.”276 She explained that
the problem is that NCDOT has not done the proper investigation, stating “NCDOT can do study
after study, but if they talk to the people, talk to the residents of Union County, they would find
that a lot of new growth will come with that road.”277 She went on to explain that “economic
development and growth will come with a bypass, even if NCDOT studies show otherwise.”278
Indeed, Union County has begun planning for infrastructure to support the growth
occasioned by the Bypass.279 For example, Union County’s Comprehensive Water and
Wastewater Master Plan, recognizing the Bypass as a “growth driver” and a “[d]evelopment
initiative,” details plans to extend water and sewer service to the areas at the Bypass’s proposed
interchanges as well as residential development along the major feeder routes.280 The Plan
projects that “[a]s a result of the development anticipated with the Monroe Bypass service area
and in general on the eastside, the projected County wastewater flows going to the Monroe
[wastewater treatment plant] will double over the planning period.”281
In recognition of this expanded infrastructure need, the FY 2014-2019 Union County
Capital Improvement Program allocates over $1 million to increase wastewater capacity
specifically to address “the need for an additional 3.0 MGD of capacity from the City of Monroe
as a result of the Development anticipated with the Monroe Bypass.”282 The plan also allocates
over $5 million to expand sewer services in the Lake Twitty Sewershed, justified by “the need
274 Adam Bell, Despite hurdles, Union County Chamber pushes bypass plan, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER (Apr. 16,
2013), Attachment 62; Adam Bell, Chamber sticks by bypass plan, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER (Apr. 17, 2013),
Attachment 63.
275 Heather Smith, Chamber resolution draws fire from Bypass opponent, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Mar. 6, 2013),
available at http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/local/x1942451769/Chamber-resolution-draws-fire-from-
Bypass-opponent , Attachment 61.
276 Id.
277 Id.
278 Id.
279 Union County Chamber of Commerce, Union County NOW: Comprehensive Guide to our Community, at 24
(2012-2013), Attachment 64 at 54.
280 Black & Veatch, Comprehensive Water and Wastewater Master Plan, prepared for Union County, NC, at ES-4,
ES-8, 4, 19, 3-9, 5-3 (Dec. 2011), Attachment 65.
281 Id. at ES-8.
282 Union County, Proposed FY 2014-2019 Union County Capital Improvement Program, at 35, available at
http://www.co.union.nc.us/Portals/0/Finance/ProposedFY2014toFY2019UCCIP%2004032013qqqq.pdf ,
Attachment 66; adopted at May 6, 2013 Union County Board of Commissioners Meeting, minutes, at 54,
Attachment 67.
45
for providing a new Sewer Service area for new Commercial development expected in the
immediate vicinity of the Monroe Bypass.”283
Elsewhere in the study area, local elected officials also see the Bypass as a driver of
growth in Union County, and not just in the eastern part of the county. For example, Indian Trail
Mayor Michael Alvarez has stated that constructing the road will “promote business
development in Indian Trail and throughout the county.”284 And the new Indian Trail
comprehensive plan estimates that Indian Trail’s population will greatly increase by 2030, from
approximately 35,000 residents to 60-80,000 residents, in a large part due to “the changes
brought by the planned Monroe Bypass.”285
In fact, Indian Trail officials so strongly believe in the Bypass’s potential to drive growth
in Union County that in October 2013, the Indian Trail Town Council meeting hosted
presentations on the Bypass by NCDOT as well as three different pro-growth groups: MUCED,
Union County Chamber of Commerce, and the Indian Trail Business Association.286 NCDOT
staff sat by as Pat Kahle, the new president of the Union County Chamber of Commerce,
discussed “gridlock on Highway 74” and the significant commuting times in Union County as
reasons why the Chamber supported the Bypass, noting that building the Bypass can enhance
business in Union County.287 Both Chris Platé of the MUCED and Indian Trail Business
Association echoed these sentiments, focusing on the importance of the Bypass to expanding the
local business community.288
Indian Trail Councilwoman Darlene Luther echoed these beliefs, stating “Everybody
supports it for the development and economic vitality it brings,” . . . “And it will bring economic
development. There’s no way that it can’t.” . . . “We’re getting a bypass that can bring economic
development and it doesn’t cost the town a penny.”289 Though several NCDOT staff were
present and presented other information about the Bypass at the meeting, none made any attempt
to publically address or explore these beliefs.290
ii. Contradictory Positions at the State Level
NCDOT has also failed to reconcile its predictions of minimal growth with those
espoused elsewhere by both the Department of Transportation itself, and other state departments
283 Id. at 45.
284 Mayor Michael L. Alvarez, Indian Trail, Facebook post (Oct. 9, 2013), Attachment 68.
285 Heather Smith, Indian Trail plans for 80,000 by 2030, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Aug. 29, 2013), Attachment 69; see
also Indian Trail, Draft Comprehensive Plan Update, Chapter 4: Market and Economic Analysis, Attachment 70;
Indian Trail, Draft Comprehensive Plan Update, Chapter 6: Transportation, Attachment 71.
286 Indian Trail Town Council, Minutes of Town Council (Oct. 8, 2013), Attachment 72.
287 Indian Trail Town Council, Minutes of Town Council (Oct. 22, 2013), Attachment 73; also see Payton Guion,
Monroe Bypass supporters make presentation at Indian Trail meeting; opposition not invited, MECKLENBURG TIMES
(Oct. 24, 2013), Attachment 74.
288 Indian Trail Town Council, Oct. 22, 2013 Agenda (Oct. 22, 2013), Attachment 73.
289 Monroe, Indian Trail snub bypass opponents, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Oct. 12, 2013), Attachment 75.
290 Indian Trail Town Council, Minutes of Town Council (Oct. 22, 2013), Attachment 73.
46
and officials. As we noted in our 2012 comment letter, the State Logistics Task Force Report, a
document still very much in use at NCDOT,291 highlights the Monroe Bypass as being
“important or critical” for growth and development in Union County and beyond.292 In response
to our raising this apparent conflict NCDOT’s only response is to state in the DSFEIS that the
scale of the Logistics Task Force Report is different to that of the EIS, and that “the report
provides no specific reasons or supporting data for the key nature of the Monroe Connector/
Bypass . . . .”293 A similar response was given to the conflicting statements about the importance
of the Bypass as noted in the state’s recent “Seven Portals Study.”294
It is unclear what NCDOT meant by this response. The Logistics Task Force report took
over two years to complete, employed a team of 30 members, including the Lieutenant Governor
and the Secretary of Transportation, and involved 24 separate stakeholder meetings throughout
the state.295 At the result of two years of study it recommended specific infrastructure
investments. The Seven Portals study was privately compiled for the Department at taxpayer
expense and claims to assess “How Economic Development Can be Encouraged in North
Carolina Through Infrastructure Investment.”296
Does NCDOT contend that these two reports, which cost significant state resources, are
essentially meaningless? If so, NCDOT should cease citing these studies and sharing them with
the public. The Seven Portals study, for example, is currently being used by the North Carolina
Board of Transportation in its new 25 year planning effort.297 If it is NCDOT’s contention that
the analysis of the two studies is, in fact, without merit it should refrain from relying on them in
the future. NCDOT should also consider the value of its current planning effort, the
Implementing Vision,298 which, like its predecessors involves a significant investment of state
resources.
291 See, e.g., SELC comments Nov. 2012 at 5; see also NCDOT presentation before NC Board of Transportation,
Economic Development & Intergovernmental Relations Committee, Implementing Vision for Strategic
Transportation Investments: a 25 year infrastructure plan (Nov. 6-7, 2013), at slides 8-9, Attachment 76; NC Board
of Transportation Economic Development & Intergovernmental Relations Committee, Minutes of Oct. 2, 2013
Meeting, Attachment 77; Handout from NC Board of Transportation Economic Development & Intergovernmental
Relations Committee Oct. 2, 2013 Meeting, summary of recent statewide planning documents, prepared by NCDOT
staff, Attachment 78.
292 SELC comments Nov. 2012 at 5.
293 DSFEIS at A1-67.
294 Id. at A1-67.
295 State Logistics Task Force Report, at 8 (2011), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/download/Business/committees/logistics/GovernorsReport_Jun2012.pdf.
296 Seven Portals Study (Dec. 31, 2011), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/doh/preconstruct/tpb/research/download/2010-34-0masterfinalreport.pdf.
297 NC Board of Transportation Economic Development & Intergovernmental Relations Committee, Minutes of
Dec. 4, 2013 Meeting, Attachment 79.
298 NCDOT presentation before NC Board of Transportation, Economic Development & Intergovernmental
Relations Committee, Implementing Vision for Strategic Transportation Investments: a 25 year infrastructure plan
(Nov. 6-7, 2013), at slides 8-9, Attachment 76.
47
NCDOT’s response to other contradictory statements was likewise unsatisfactory. In our
2012 comments we noted that while NCDOT stated in the EIS that the Bypass would result in
minimal growth and development, it painted a different picture in its application for federal
TIFIA funds.299 The TIFIA application touted the economic growth benefits of the Bypass,
specifically mentioning the proposed Legacy Park. NCDOT’s response to our concern about
these contradictory statements was simply to state that because the project was ultimately
unsuccessful in securing transportation funding it did not matter that two opposing assessments
of the growth potential were presented in the different federal documents.300 This is not the first
time that NCDOT has dismissed its untruthful statements to the public and other federal agencies
by stating that the untruth did not matter.301 Just as the Fourth Circuit noted, however, this
assertion misses the key point — NCDOT is a public agency and should be honest in all its
statements, whatever the ultimate outcome, a point that is especially important in the context of
NEPA where the agency has a specific legal mandate to inform the public. NC Wildlife Fed’n,
667 F.3d at 603.
NCDOT has persisted to present contradictory predictions of growth attributable to the
Bypass subsequent to the concerns raised in our 2012 letter. As noted above, Secretary Tata has
publicly touted the Bypass as necessary to bring economic development to Union County. And
on numerous occasions the Chair of the Board of Transportation, Ned Curran, has explained that
the Bypass is important not just in bringing economic development to Union County, but also to
Anson County and several counties beyond. NCDOT’s division engineer, Louis Mitchell, has
made similar claims. Moreover, when called upon to address misconceptions the Department
has failed to do so.302
B. Cumulative Impacts
NEPA requires that an EIS disclose not just the direct and indirect impacts of a specific
project, but also the cumulative impacts of the project when considered in conjunction with other
“past, present, and reasonably foreseeable future actions regardless of what agency . . . or person
undertakes such other actions.” 40 C.F.R. § 1508.25(a)(2). Cumulative impacts may result from
“individually minor but collectively significant actions taking place over a period of time.” Id. §
1508.7. In determining whether a project will have a “significant” impact on the environment,
an agency must consider “[w]hether the action is related to other actions with individually
insignificant but cumulatively significant impacts.” Id. § 1508.27(b)(7). “The purpose of the
cumulative impact analysis is to provide readers with a complete understanding of the
environmental effects a proposed action will cause.” N.C. Alliance for Transp. Reform, Inc. v.
US DOT, 151 F. Supp. 2d 661, 698 (M.D.N.C. 2001). The DSFEIS includes almost no
discussion of cumulative impacts other than vague generalizations lumped into the ICE analysis.
A robust cumulative impacts analysis is essential for NEPA compliance. Below we have listed
several impacts associated with the Bypass that NCDOT must consider.
299 SELC comments Nov. 2012 at 14.
300 DSFEIS, Appendix A at A1-73.
301 See Brief of Defendants-Appellees, NC Wildlife Fed’n v. NCDOT, No. 11-2210, at 53 (4th Cir. Jan. 19, 2012),
Attachment 80.
302 See discussion of resolution letter at section (II)(B)(1), above.
48
1. U.S. 74 Economic Development Corridor
As noted above, the Chair of the Board of Transportation has frequently stated that the
Monroe Bypass is necessary to address high unemployment rates in the eight counties through
which U.S. 74 passes as it runs from Mecklenburg County to the coast.303 Similar claims about
the project have been made by many state officials and legislators who promote the potential of
the Bypass to spur growth statewide by connecting Charlotte to major ports like Wilmington,
Charleston, and Savannah. Even the local MPO has proclaimed such a purpose for the road.304
The claims and statements align with a recent effort to identify and promote the
development of a South Economic Development Corridor along U.S. 74 running from I-26 in
Polk County to Wilmington.305 The development of this proposed U.S. 74 economic
development corridor is intended to improve commerce between western North Carolina, the
Charlotte Metropolitan area, Charlotte-Douglas International Airport, and the port of
Wilmington, and would be an important east-west corridor across the state.306 County
commissions in at least seven counties have passed resolutions in support of the corridor,
including Rutherford, Polk, Cleveland, Scotland, Brunswick, Gaston, and Union counties.307
303 See, e.g., MUMPO, Summary Minutes of September 18, 2013 Meeting, Attachment 15.
304 See, e.g., Mecklenburg-Union Metropolitan Organization, Resolution to Support Prompt Action for the
Construction of the Monroe Bypass (Mar. 20, 2013), Attachment 13.
305 Matthew Clark, Can Interstate 74 create jobs?, DAILY COURIER (Mar. 22, 2013), available at
http://www.thedigitalcourier.com/news/x145781448/Can-Interstate-74-create-jobs, Attachment 81; Jessica Pickens,
Possibility of freeway-style interstate to connect NC up for discussion, GASTON GAZETTE (Mar. 23, 2013), available
at http://www.gastongazette.com/news/local/possibility-of-freeway-style-interstate-to-connect-nc-up-for-discussion-
1.116462, Attachment 82; Board supports Hwy. 74 alliance, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Oct. 9, 2013), Attachment 83;
Matt Blackwell, NC’s Rutherford County Economic Development, Economic Development Benefits of Interstate
Access (May, 30, 2013), Attachment 84.
306 Matthew Clark, Can Interstate 74 create jobs?, DAILY COURIER (Mar. 22, 2013), available at
http://www.thedigitalcourier.com/news/x145781448/Can-Interstate-74-create-jobs, Attachment 81; Jessica Pickens,
Possibility of freeway-style interstate to connect NC up for discussion, GASTON GAZETTE (Mar. 23, 2013), available
at http://www.gastongazette.com/news/local/possibility-of-freeway-style-interstate-to-connect-nc-up-for-discUS
sion-1.116462, Attachment 82; Board supports Hwy. 74 alliance, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Oct. 9, 2013), Attachment
83; Matt Blackwell, NC’s Rutherford County Economic Development, Economic Development Benefits of Interstate
Access (May, 30, 2013), Attachment 84.
307 Board supports Hwy. 74 alliance, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Oct. 9, 2013), Attachment 83; Chairman Ronald J.
Hawkins, Cleveland County Board of Commissioners, Resolution to Support the Development of an Alliance of
Local Government and Business Leaders to Review and Promote Improvements to a South Economic Development
Corridor from I-26 to Wilmington Along the Existing Highway 74 Corridor (Mar. 21, 2013), Attachment 85;
Chairman Michael V. Gage, Polk County Board of Commissioners, Resolution (Mar. 21, 2013), Attachment 86;
Larry Sackett, Economic development efforts coming to U.S. 74, STAR NEWS ONLINE (Oct. 12, 2013), available at
http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20131012/ARTICLES/131019888, Attachment 87; Chairman Phil Norris,
Brunswick County Commissioners, Resolution to Support the Development of an Alliance of Local Government
and Business Leaders to Review and Promote Improvements to a South Economic Development Corridor From I-26
to Wilmington along the Existing Highway 74 Corridor (Oct. 7, 2013), Attachment 88; Chairman Guy McCook,
Scotland County Board of Commissioners, Resolution to Support the Development of an Alliance of Local
Government and Business Leaders to Review and Promote Improvements to a South Economic Development
Corridor from I-26 to Wilmington along the Existing Highway 74 Corridor (Sept. 3, 2013), Attachment 89;
Chairman Charles McDowell, Columbus County Board of Commissioners, Resolution to Support the Development
of an Alliance of Local Government and Business Leaders to Review and Promote Improvements to a South
49
The resolutions state that the proposed corridor would create jobs across North Carolina in
maritime, transportation, distribution, manufacturing and agriculture by providing greater access
across the state, thus increasing opportunities for international trade.308
State planning documents, such as the Seven Portals Study and the North Carolina
Maritime Strategy Final Report, demonstrate that this is not the pipe-dream of a few counties,
but rather a state-wide effort to improve the U.S. 74 Corridor to connect the Port of Wilmington
to important sites across the southern border of North Carolina, such as the Charlotte-Douglas
Airport and I-26.309 In fact, NCDOT’s own website indicates the agency also sees this vision for
U.S. 74, recognizing that the Shelby Bypass “will improve vehicle capacity of the U.S. 74
Corridor, reduce future traffic congestion, increase safety and improve roadway continuity
between I-26 and I-85.”310
At a more local level, such claims have been echoed by Chris Platé, executive director of
MUCED, who called the Monroe Bypass “the most significant roadway project in North
Carolina.”311 Platé went on to state that the Monroe Bypass “affects all of the state’s assets and
trying to estimate its im[p]act is very hard to do.”312 He explained that without the Monroe
Bypass, the port at Wilmington cannot compete with Charleston and Savannah, explaining that
traffic to and from the port would remain bottlenecked in Union County.313 Platé said the
Monroe Bypass will “speed up that travel time,” which he claims is important to the North
Carolina business and military communities.314 Platé explained that “[r]ight now, we have a
Economic Development Corridor from I-26 to Wilmington Along the Existing Highway 74 Corridor (Sept. 16,
2013), Attachment 90; Clerk Donna Buff, Gaston County Board of Commissioners, Resolution to Support the
Development of an Alliance of Local Government and Business Leaders to Review and Promote Improvements to a
South Economic Development Corridor from I-26 to Wilmington Along the Existing Highway 74 Corridor (Sept.
26, 2013), Attachment 91; Union County Board of Commissioners, Resolution to Support the Development of an
Alliance of Local Government and Business Leaders to Review and Promote Improvements to a South Economic
Development Corridor from I-26 to Wilmington Along the Existing Highway 74 Corridor (2013), Attachment 92.
308 Board supports Hwy. 74 alliance, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Oct. 9, 2013), Attachment 83.
309 See, e.g., Seven Portals Study (Dec. 31, 2011), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/doh/preconstruct/tpb/research/download/2010-34-0masterfinalreport.pdf, at 115 (“There is a
need to improve highway and rail access . . . to the Port of Wilmington via US 74 (future I-74) from Charlotte.”);
North Carolina Maritime Strategy: Final Report (June 26, 2012), available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/download/business/committees/logistics/Maritime/NC_Maritime_final_report_2012-06-
26.pdf, at 4, 74, 115; Message from Jeff Parker to Sec. Tony Tata, NCDOT, Facebook (Dec. 1, 2013), Attachment
93.
310 NCDOT, US 74 Bypass (Shelby Bypass), available at http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/us74bypass/, Attachment
94.
311 Payton Guion, Monroe Bypass supporters make presentation at Indian Trail meeting; opposition not invited,
MECKLENBURG TIMES (Oct. 24, 2013), available at http://mecktimes.com/news/2013/10/24/monroe-bypass-
supporters-make-presentation-at-indian-trail-meeting-opposition-not-invited/, Attachment 74.
312 Heather Smith, Platé: Bypass is vital to Port of Wilmington, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Oct. 24, 2013), available at
http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/x2082475277/Plat-Bypass-is-vital-to-Port-of-Wilmington, Attachment 95.
313 Id.
314 Id.
50
little gauntlet that people have to run,” noting that U.S. 74 has 44 stop lights as it runs through
Union County.315
Though County Commissioners from the affected counties have met with NCDOT about
the proposed U.S. 74 Economic Development Corridor,316 the DSFEIS does not address the role
of the Monroe Bypass as a central portion of such a corridor, nor does the DSFEIS consider the
cumulative impact of other projects that form this corridor approach, such as the Bypasses
around Shelby and Rockingham. Alternatively, if, as Chairman Curran has stated, is NCDOTs’
position that the Monroe Bypass only is expected to have such wide ranging impacts it is
necessary that NCDOT expand the project study area so that all impacts can be properly studied
and accounted for.
2. HOT lanes: 485 and U.S. 74
NCDOT is currently planning a system of High Occupancy Toll (“HOT”) Lanes in the
Charlotte metro region. The system would include sections of I-485, and the stretch of U.S. 74/
Independence Blvd inside the beltway. In a May 5, 2012 presentation NCDOT explained that
the Independence Blvd HOT lanes would connect with the Monroe Bypass.317 The HOT lanes
on 485 would also stretch around to Independence Blvd., completing the system. Plans have
continued to develop since that time with focus groups, design, and traffic and revenue studies
for the projects.318 In March 2013, the TIP was amended to program funds for a formal
feasibility study of the U.S. 74 project.319 Both the U.S. 74 and the I-485 projects are included
on the CRTPO’s fiscally constrained project list for its Metropolitan Transportation Plan to be
built between 2016-2025.320
Project managers for the Monroe Bypass have been involved in the planning process for
the new HOT-lane projects.321 It is therefore surprising that there is no mention of the projects in
the DSFEIS. The projects, a network of toll highways that would physically connect together,
are certainly connected to the Monroe Bypass, and will without doubt have cumulative effects
that should be considered. The traffic patterns from the different projects will likely impact each
other, and the cumulative effects on air quality, noise, wildlife habitat, water quality, threatened
and endangered species and cultural and historic resources should all be disclosed as part of the
NEPA process. Analysis of these cumulative impacts is necessary for “a complete understanding
315 Id.
316 Matthew Clark, Can Interstate 74 create jobs?, DAILY COURIER (Mar. 22, 2013), available at
http://www.thedigitalcourier.com/news/x145781448/Can-Interstate-74-create-jobs, Attachment 81.
317 Charlotte Fast Lanes Study: Phase III Results Summary, Attachment 96.
318 Presentation to MUMPO Technical Coordinating Committee, Charlotte Region Fast Lanes Study: Phase III
(February 7, 2013), Attachment 97.
319 MUMPO, March 20, 2013 Meeting Summary Minutes, Attachment 98 .
320 CRTPO, 2040 Fiscally Constrained Project List, Attachment 99; CRTPO, 2040 Metropolitan Transportation
Plan: Fiscally Constrained Roadway Projects, map, Attachment 100.
321 Email from Jennifer Harris, NCDOT, to Scott Cole, NCDOT, RE: NCTA-NCDOT Scope for the US 74-HOT
Lanes Project (January 24, 2013), Attachment 101.
51
of the environmental effects a proposed action will cause.” N.C. Alliance for Transp. Reform,
Inc. v. US DOT, 151 F. Supp. 2d 661, 698 (M.D.N.C. 2001).
Courts have held that all reasonably foreseeable future actions must be considered in the
NEPA document, including projects that are not yet fully finalized, and for which no funding
has yet been allocated. See, e.g., Western N.C. Alliance v. N.C. DOT, 312 F. Supp. 2d 765, 771
(E.D.N.C. 2003) (quoting Sierra Club v. Marsh, 976 F.2d 763, 767 (1st Cir. 1992)). In Western
N.C. Alliance, NCDOT prepared an EA for a highway project that expanded an existing highway
and was in the vicinity of three future NCDOT projects. Id. at 771-73. The EA did not include
the future projects in its cumulative impact analysis. Id. The Court stated that even though the
designs were not finalized, funding had not been allocated, and no environmental documents had
been prepared, the planning that had taken place for those projects was sufficient to
“meaningfully evaluate” their cumulative impacts. Id. (holding that future projects were
reasonably foreseeable where right of way acquisitions had been scheduled and the NCDOT had
decided on minimum design specifications). Like the EA challenged in the Western N.C.
Alliance, the DSFEIS fails to consider cumulative impacts from other closely related NCDOT
projects. These projects are even further along than those considered in Western N.C. Alliance,
as substantial planning has taken place for the projects and they are funded as part of CRTPO’s
fiscally constrained MTP.
3. Other area road projects
In addition to the HOT lanes, there are several other road projects which should be
included as part of a cumulative impacts analysis. The most obvious is the project described
above, which will convert several intersections along U.S. 74 to superstreets.322 Funding has
been allocated for this project and construction is set to begin next year.323 Other projects
include the widening of Old Monroe Road and Charlotte Avenue which are both also included in
the fiscally constrained MTP.324
4. Legacy Park
We appreciate that in the DSFEIS NCDOT has taken the time to acknowledge and more
fully investigate Legacy Park, a proposed 5,000 acre business park which would connect with the
Monroe Bypass. NCDOT’s earlier effort to apparently purposefully obscure the Park and its
associated development was inexcusable. We are disappointed that NCDOT still fails to
acknowledge its role in the Park’s development. As we pointed out in our 2012 comments the
Executive Director of the North Carolina Turnpike Authority actually flew to Florida to promote
the Park, and a senior NCDOT staffer, Roberto Canales, sat on the task force to promote the park
and create an associated intermodal station with CSX. 325 The DSFEIS includes no explanation
322 DSFEIS at 2-12.
323 Id.; see also MUMPO, Aug. 21, 2013 Summary Meeting Minutes, at 2, Attachment 20.
324 CRTPO, 2040 Fiscally Constrained Project List, Attachment 99; CRTPO, 2040 Metropolitan Transportation
Plan: Fiscally Constrained Roadway Projects, map, Attachment 100; see also, UNION COUNTY WEEKLY, Business
leaders, NCDOT discuss Monroe Bypass (Feb. 8, 2013), Attachment 35.
325 SELC comments, Nov. 2012 at 9-10.
52
as to why NCDOT could have been so thoroughly involved with the Park outside the NEPA
process, but yet exclude it from the analysis of both indirect and cumulative impacts in the
NEPA documents.326
While we appreciate the increased attention given to this project in the DSFEIS, we do
not agree with NCDOT’s conclusion that the project is not reasonably foreseeable. CSX has
noted that the Legacy site is one of the “best” in the Charlotte region.327 The site continues to be
discussed in conjunction with the state’s Logistics Task Force and Seven Portals Studies, which
are being newly invigorated by the North Carolina Board of Transportation.328 The project was
even brought to the attention of the Secretary of Transportation recently via an inquiry on his
facebook page.329 Further, while the full 5000 acre site may no longer go ahead as previously
planned, there has been recent discussion of a new smaller 200-300 acre plan for the site.330
NEPA requires that this new plan be fully investigated and, if reasonably foreseeable,
incorporated into the EIS. Yet, it is not clear if NCDOT has ever followed up on the information
provided to them.331
C. Impacts to Air Quality
NCDOT’s cursory analysis of air quality largely suffers from the same flawed
assumptions that are noted above. The DSFEIS assumes that growth would continue unlimited
without any transportation improvements in Union County and thus assumes that there are very
few impacts associated with the Bypass. The flaw in this reasoning carries into the analysis of
air quality. Higher emissions associated with the increased traffic likely to result from the
Bypass and its associated development should be properly disclosed. Moreover, air quality may
be severely impacted as a result of redistributed growth. NCDOT states that it employed a
“conservative approach” to its analysis of induced growth because it did not “reallocate growth”
to locations further east, despite the reallocation that might be expected due to increased
accessibility occasioned by the Bypass.332 While this may be a conservative approach overall,
and is certainly conservative in terms of Goose Creek, the approach likely underestimates
impacts to air quality. Growth shifting east will necessarily result in longer trips in the corridor
with associated increases to VMT and air pollution.
We also remain concerned about the conformity determination made for the Charlotte
region. As noted above, CRTPO’s Metrolina Regional Travel Demand Model is insensitive to
the presence of the Monroe Bypass, yet this is the model that has been used to model
326 DSFEIS at A1-48.
327 NCDOT, Appendix D, Response to comments (DRAFT), at 9 (Response to Comment 20), Attachment 102.
328 See NCDOT Board of Transportation materials, at n. 297 and 298 above.
329 Message from Jeff Parker to Sec. Tony Tata, NCDOT, Facebook (Dec. 1, 2013), Attachment 93.
330 See, e-mail from Colin Mellor (NCDOT) to Scudder Wagg (Atkins), re: Response to USFWS letter comments
(Aug. 23, 2013) Attachment 103; e-mail from Chris Plate (MUCED) to Jamal Alavi (NCDOT), re: Legacy Park
(Aug. 21, 2013) Attachment 104.
331 See, e-mail from Ken Gilland (Baker) to Jennifer Harris (NCDOT) re: Response to USFWS letter comments
(Aug. 23, 2013), Attachment 105.
332 DSFEIS at E1-7.
53
transportation conformity. We believe this approach does not properly take into account the
impact of the proposed toll highway.
D. Impacts to Water Quality and Endangered Species
Like air quality, NCDOT’s analysis of water quality and endangered species is hampered
by its improper assumptions. Without an accurate analysis of the development likely to result
from the Bypass there can be no thorough analysis of the increase in impervious surfaces and
associated impacts to water quality and endangered mussels.333 Similarly, as discussed above,
the redistribution of growth due to the Bypass can be tremendously important to water quality
and associated impacts.
The analysis of water quality is also incomplete. As noted in the EIS, the full project has
not yet actually been designed.334 Final design will be completed by the design-build team.
Not only will this team be responsible for providing final designs for those sections of road not
yet at the final design stage but the team will be able to redesign even those portions of roadway
which NCDOT has presented to resource agencies as being fully designed. As such, important
details about bridge crossings, dredge and fill locations, run-off and stormwater management are
all currently unknown.
While generally these “design refinements” are supposed to decrease environmental
impacts, recent experience with a similar toll highway, the Garden Parkway, shows otherwise.
As reflected in the meeting minutes from a November 2011 meeting between DWQ, the Corps
and NCDOT, the impacts to streams from the Garden Parkway were greater in the permit
application than they were in the NEPA document.335 Even more troubling was the fact that the
Corps appeared to anticipate that “future modifications” may “result in larger impacts” requiring
the agencies to revisit “previous decisions/ concurrence points.”336 Such a scenario is not
anticipated by North Carolina’s merger process and runs counter to the purpose of NEPA, which
is to fully disclose all environmental impacts to the public, to decisionmakers, and to resource
agencies.
An additional inadequacy is the failure of the NEPA document to include a mitigation
plan for the project. While it is noted that mitigation credits have been purchased from EEP,337
there is no explanation as to where the mitigation is located or what it consists of. This is
contrary to the requirement of NEPA that an EIS should include a discussion of “the means to
mitigate adverse environmental impacts.” 40 C.F.R. 1502.16(h).
333 NCDOT’s internal documents reveal that even based on their flawed analysis some impact to pollutant loadings
in Goose Creek would occur. Email from Michael Wood, Catena Group, to Monroe Bypass team, RE: ICE
Comments (Aug. 1, 2013), Attachment 106.
334 DSFEIS at 3-11 to 3-12.
335 Meeting Minutes, Meeting between NCTA, DWQ, USACE (Nov. 22, 2011), Attachment 107.
336 E-mail from Monte Matthews, USACE, to Christy Shumate, NCDOT (Nov. 30, 2011) Attachment 108.
337 DSFEIS C1-1, C1-2.
54
1. Goose Creek
NCDOT’s failure to consider cumulative impacts, as noted above, has particular
importance for water quality and endangered species concerns. One recent action which is not
fully analyzed in the EIS is the lifting of the moratorium restricting the Goose Creek sub-basin
from the Inter-Basin Transfer (“IBT”) between the Catawba River basin and the Rocky River
basin.338 During the environmental review process, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service
(“USFWS”) strongly objected to the “Finding of No Significant Impact” (“FONSI”) ascribed to
the lifting of the moratorium.339 In comments, USFWS noted that the Site Specific Water
Quality Management Plan (“SSWQMP”) for Goose Creek was insufficient to protect the
federally endangered Carolina heelsplitter, and was therefore insufficient to support a FONSI.340
USFWS outlined suggestions of improvements to the SSWQMP that would better protect the
heelsplitter.341 Without those improvements, USFWS declined to endorse the installation of
water lines into the Goose Creek watershed noting that it would “contribute to already degraded
conditions and further comprise habitat in the Goose Creek system.”342 Despite these concerns
by a federal agency, there is no discussion if the DSFEIS of the cumulative impact of building
the Monroe Bypass and the installation of new water lines with regards to water quality and
endangered species.
The DSFEIS also fails to consider the cumulative impact of the proposed Charlotte HOT
lane projects and the Monroe Bypass on water quality and endangered species in the Goose
Creek watershed. While the DSFEIS asserts that growth attributable to the Bypass will largely
be in the western part of the county and thus well away from Goose Creek,343 the HOT Lane
projects connect to the Bypass in Mecklenburg County, and thus more likely to encourage
growth in the eastern part of Union County, exactly where the Carolina heelsplitter is located.
Any study of the combined cumulative effects of these major infrastructure investment and the
installation of new water lines in the Goose Creek basin is completely absent from the DSFEIS,
yet NEPA requires that precisely such impacts be analyzed and disclosed. “When several
proposals . . . that will have cumulative or synergistic environmental impact upon a region are
pending concurrently before an agency, their environmental consequences must be considered
together.” Kleppe v. Sierra Club, 427 U.S. 390, 410 (1976).
The DSFEIS also suffers from over reliance on the SSWQMP as a surefire way to protect
the Carolina heelsplitter from any impacts that the Bypass may have. For example, with regard
to direct impacts of construction, the DSFEIS states that impacts will be avoided due to the
338 See North Carolina Environmental Management Commission, Hearing Officer’s Report (April 2013),
Attachment 109.
339 Letter from Brian P. Cole, USFWS, to Lyn Hardison, NCDENR, RE: Environment Assessment for the Addition
of the Goose Creek Watershed to the Interbasin Transfer Certificate under Provisions of G.S. 143-215.221,
Mecklenburg and Union Counties, North Carolina (January 18, 2013), Attachment 110.
340 Id.
341 Id.
342 Id.
343 DSFEIS, Appendix A, Map 14, E1-87.
55
SSWQMP.344 As noted by USFWS, however, the SSWQMP is insufficient to protect the
Carolina heelsplitter.345 Similarly, NCDOT’s claim that it will “strongly discourage” their
contractors from working in the Goose Creek watershed has no meaning.346 Without an outright
prohibition in the contract NCDOT’s discouragement is inadequate. In fact, the DSFEIS
specifically anticipates that “construction, staging, storage, refueling, borrow pit or spoil areas”
may be used in the Goose Creek and Sixmile Creek watersheds by the contractor.347
V. PROJECT COST
Federal regulations require that a project receiving federal funding must be part of a
fiscally constrained State Transportation Improvement Program. 23 C.F.R. §450.222. FHWA
requires documents undergoing NEPA review to have at least one section as part of a STIP. 348
Further, FHWA, guidance requires that cost estimate in the STIP mirror that in the NEPA
documents.349
The Monroe Bypass can no longer be considered to be part of a fiscally constrained plan.
First, the financial plan behind the project, which was to cover at least part of the cost of the
project with toll revenue, is no longer viable. Several of the key assumptions behind the Traffic
and Revenue Study published in 2010 are no longer valid. Second, the costs of the project have
increased dramatically: While the STIP lists the cost of the project as $789 million, the EIS
suggests that the project will cost $898 million. Third, the true cost of the project is likely higher
even than that disclosed in the NEPA documents.
A. Traffic and Revenue Study
To assess whether the Monroe Bypass was financially viable in terms of toll revenue
NCDOT commissioned a Traffic and Revenue Study. A final draft of this study was published
in 2010. The study asserted to analyze the potential future growth in the study area, future traffic
patterns and the willingness of future travelers to pay the toll to use the road. The study relied on
2010 operating speeds in the U.S. 74 corridor that were much lower than todays speed to forecast
the travel time savings from the Bypass. 350 Moreover, the Traffic and Revenue Study was
based on a number of findings that were questionable in 2010 and are even more so today. In
addition, the report acknowledged that it relied on a series of assumptions and explained that if
any of those assumptions changed the report and its findings would no longer be valid. The
344 DSFEIS at C2-113.
345 Letter from Brian P. Cole, USFWS, to Lyn Hardison, NCDENR, Re: Environment Assessment for the Addition
of the Goose Creek Watershed to the Interbasin Transfer Certificate under Provisions of G.S. 143-215.221,
Mecklenburg and Union Counties, North Carolina (Jan. 18, 2013), Attachment 110.
346 Biological Assessment for the Monroe Bypass (2013) at 68, available at
http://www.ncdot.gov/projects/monroeconnector/download/DraftMonroeBA102313.pdf.
347 DSFEIS at PC-2.
348 Transportation Planning Requirements and Their Relationship to NEPA Approvals, FHWA (Feb. 9, 2011),
available at http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/tpr_and_nepa/tprandnepasupplement.cfm, Attachment 111.
349 Id.
350 Traffic and Revenue Study 2010, at 4-9.
56
original errors in the report and the deviation of recent experience away from those assumptions
is discussed below.
1. Improvements to other infrastructure
One fundamental assumption in the Traffic and Revenue Study is that there will be no
“additional capacity” added or improvements made to competing roadways such as U.S. 74.351
The report explains how important operating conditions on area roadways are to the financial
success of the bypass.352 Noting that, “[p]eople’s travel behavior and the number of vehicles that
would use the proposed Monroe Connector/Bypass would be heavily influenced by the operating
conditions on other area roadways in the study area.”353 This is common sense, the better U.S.
74 flows the less likely drivers will be willing to pay a toll to use an alternative route. The
report goes on to note that “it is important that reasonable assumptions are made regarding future
improvements, since such improvements could have considerable effect on the number of
vehicles that would use the Monroe Connector/Bypass.” 354
Since the report was published in 2010 a number of improvements have been made on
U.S. 74 and, as discussed in detail above, traffic flow has improved substantially. The most
recent observed average traffic speeds on U.S. 74 is 44 mph during peak times.355 These speeds
are between 5-10 mph higher than those analyzed in the Traffic and Revenue Study.356 As a
result, the travel time savings from the bypass are substantially lower than those forecast by
Wilbur Smith.
The change in these travel time savings has serious implications for Wilbur Smith’s
revenue projections. In order to project future revenue from the bypass and set a proposed toll
rate, Wilbur Smith conducted a “value of time” assessment to determine, essentially, how much
money people would be willing to pay to save a certain amount of time. The value of time for
travelers on the Bypass was determined to be approximately $8/hour for cars and $15-20/ hour
for trucks.357 This allowed Wilbur Smith to set an opening year toll rate of $2.58 for cars and
$10.27 for trucks (in 2010 dollars).358 Given the significantly decreased new travel time saving
projections, to keep with these same toll rates, values of time would need to be considerably
higher— $18.50/ hour for cars and $30-60/hour for trucks.
Furthermore, the Traffic and Revenue Study, which accounted only for future
improvements programmed into the 2035 Transportation Improvement Program (“TIP”), did not
recognize some additional improvements that have recently been programmed to further improve
351 Id. at 6-4.
352 Id. at 6-5.
353 Id.
354 Id.
355 DSFEIS at 1-7.
356 Traffic and Revenue Study 2010, at 2-15.
357 Id. at 2-16.
358 Id. at 6-11–6-14.
57
flow on U.S. 74.359 As discussed above, over $6 million in superstreet improvements has now
been programmed for U.S. 74, to be constructed by 2015. A new study recognizing past and
future improvements to the surrounding roadways is essential to properly determining the
anticipated future use of the Bypass and its ability to generate toll revenue. NCDOT cannot
change the value of time held by potential users of the Bypass, and so it is likely that toll revenue
will be significantly lower than previously projected. It is no wonder that behind closed doors
NCDOT staffer Jennifer Harris stated that NCDOT “would not be in favor of changes to US-74
that would have a competing interest with the bypass,” as such improvements would have a
negative impact on toll revenue.360
2. Traffic growth
As noted above, traffic levels along U.S. 74 have essentially been stable in the past
decade, with some periods of decline. This reality is, again, inconsistent with the projections in
the Traffic and Revenue Study. A check of the projections in the Traffic and Revenue Study
show that they rely on a minimum of 2.2% annual traffic growth between Wingate and Monroe,
1.2% growth around Monroe, 4.9% growth west of Monroe and 4.4% growth at the western end
of the corridor.361 This traffic growth has not occurred resulting in further questions as to the
validity of the Traffic and Revenue Study.
3. Socio-economic growth
In addition to traffic growth in the corridor, the Traffic and Revenue Study also relied on
high estimates of future economic growth. These estimates, which were reviewed by an
independent economist, were revised down from the absurdly high estimates in the 2009 EIS.
Nonetheless, they remain overstated based on the more realistic projections being estimated
today. 362 As discussed above, the most up-to-date socio-economic projections for Union
County, performed by Dr. Stephen Appold, estimate that levels of growth previously forecast for
2030 will, in fact, not occur until 2040. This shift in expectations is extremely significant for the
revenue projections. The Traffic and Revenue Study notes that a significant departure from the
economic growth predicted for the project study area could “materially affect traffic and revenue
potential on the proposed Monroe Connector/Bypass.”363
4. Local Traffic
Unlike the DSFEIS which completely ignores the question of what trips are currently
happening in the U.S. 74 corridor, the Traffic and Revenue study does make some (albeit
extremely limited) attempt to discover how many trips in the corridor are local, versus how
359 Id.
360 U.S. 74 Corridor Revitalization Study Stakeholder Interviews: Transportation Meeting Notes, at 4 (Jan. 18,
2012), Attachment 28.
361 Traffic and Revenue Study 2010, at 6-5.
362 FHWA also appears to recognize that the traffic and revenue study was flawed and based on a “flawed premise.”
See FHWA, NCDOT and Atkins, Comment Chart, excel sheet, at questions and responses 58-60, Attachment 53.
363 Traffic and Revenue Study 2010, at 6-5.
58
many are passing through the entire corridor. The analysis is incomplete, but based on the
information that was gathered the vast majority of trips in the corridor are local. 24%-40% of
trips originate in locations on either end of the Bypass.364 Of those trips it appears that over half
end in the study area.365 Thus, based on the scant information collected by WSA it appears that a
maximum of 12-20% of trips in the study area are travelling through the corridor from end to
end. Other data in the report suggests that this number is likely less, traffic counts drop off
sharply east of Monroe, suggesting that much of the traffic in the corridor around Monroe is
actually local trips.
Given the low percentage of “through” traffic in the corridor, for the forecasts in the
Traffic and Revenue Study to be correct a substantial number of local travelers would need to
use the Bypass. This appears unlikely. Monroe, the primary source of traffic, lies two miles
south of the Bypass and it is unclear that taking the Bypass would be beneficial for commutes
travelling from that city. The distance from Monroe to Matthews is 17% longer via the Bypass
that it is via U.S. 74. Given the recent and planned improvements on U.S. 74, and associated
reduction in travel time savings from the Bypass, it seems unlikely that many of these local trips
would, in fact, divert to the Bypass. Anecdotally, after numerous public meetings across Union
County, we have rarely heard a single driver state that they personally intend to pay the toll and
use the Bypass. Those who support the Bypass want it so that traffic can be taken off of U.S. 74,
not so that they themselves can travel on it.
A new Traffic and Revenue Study should be completed, with careful attention given to
the percentage of local and through traffic in the corridor. More analysis should be performed to
see if local travelers really will be willing to pay a toll and divert to the Bypass, particularly in
light of the recent and planned improvements to U.S. 74. Consideration should also be given to
recent trends, for example census data shows that the percentage of people commuting to
Charlotte from Union County has been decreasing.366
5. Other invalid assumptions
Several other assumptions in the Traffic and Revenue Study are also no longer valid.
For example, the study is based on the assumption that the Bypass will open to traffic in 2015, a
scenario which is now impossible.367 Additionally, the study assumes that gas will remain at $3
a gallon in 2010 dollars, another assumption that has not held true.368
364 Id. at 3-5. Marshville, Wingate, Charlotte Wadesboro and Matthews are all origin locations that might use the
Bypass — those account for 24% of trips. Another 15.8% of trips reported their origin destination as “other,” which
may include locations outside of the corridor.
365 Id. at 3-6.
366 DSFEIS at 1-4.
367 Traffic and Revenue Study 2010, at 6-4.
368 Id. at 6-5.
59
6. Traffic and Revenue Studies Generally
It is also worth noting that generally traffic and revenue studies in the United States and
around the world have tended to over-predict future toll revenue. Robert Bain, previously the
Director of Standard & Poor’s Infrastructure Finance Ratings practice and now the head of his
own technical consultancy which analyzes transportation projects for banks and institutional
investors, has made a study of this phenomenon. Bain’s significant study of traffic forecasting
demonstrates that toll road traffic forecasts are characterized by large errors and considerable
optimism bias. For example, in a recent report of what has been described as “the largest study
of toll road forecasting performance ever conducted,” in which Bain reviewed commercial-in-
confidence documentation released to project financiers and, over a 4-year period, compiled a
database of predicted and actual traffic usage for over 100 international, privately financed toll
road projects, Bain documented an “observed systematic tendency for overforecasting” such that
the predicative accuracy of traffic models is poor.369
Bain’s studies demonstrate that toll road forecasts have, on average, overestimated traffic
by 20-30%, some even more.370 For example, he has found every toll road that has opened in
Australia since 2005 has underperformed, many 40-60% below forecast revenues.371 He also
notes a JP Morgan study of fourteen American toll roads, which found many operating more than
30% below their forecasts.372 Bain cites issues such as optimism bias, overconfidence,
unjustified assumptions, insufficient attention to demand side issues, insufficient emphasis on the
impact of future events, unrealistic sensitivity testing, a lack of candor regarding uncertainties
and model limitations, insufficient independent peer review, and the practice of awarding bids to
those submitting the highest traffic (and hence revenue) projections among the many reasons
why traffic forecasting, particularly for toll roads, is systemically inaccurate.373
369 Robert Bain, Error and Optimism Bias in Toll Road Traffic Forecasts, TRANSPORTATION, Vol. 36, No. 5
(September 2009), Attachment 112.
370 Robert Bain and JW Plantagie, Traffic Forecasting Risk: Study Update 2004 (October 2004), Standard & Poor’s,
Attachment 113; see also Robert Bain and L. Polakovic, Traffic Forecasting Risk Study 2005: Through Ramp-Up
and Beyond (August 2005), Standard & Poor’s, Attachment 114; Robert Bain and JW Plantagie, Traffic Forecasting
Risk: Study Update 2003 (November 2003), Standard & Poor’s, Attachment 115.
371 Robert Bain (2013), Toll Roads: Big Trouble Down Under, INFRASTRUCTURE JOURNAL, 17 January 2013,
Attachment 116; N. Smith N, Robert Bain and S. Kanowski, An Investigation of the Causes of Over-Optimistic
Patronage Forecasts for Selected Recent Toll Road Projects, GHD (for the Australian Department of Infrastructure
and Transport), December 2011, Attachment 117.
372 Robert Bain (2009), Error and Optimism Bias in Toll Road Traffic Forecasts, Transportation, Vol. 36, No. 5,
September 2009, Attachment 112.
373 See, e.g., id.; Robert Bain, Big Numbers Win Prizes: Twenty-One Ways to Inflate Toll Road Traffic & Revenue
Forecasts, PROJECT FINANCE INTERNATIONAL, Issue 406 (8 April 2009), Attachment 118; Robert Bain and M.
Wilkins, The Credit Implications of Traffic Risk in Start-Up Toll Facilities, PROCEEDINGS OF THE EUROPEAN
TRANSPORT CONFERENCE (September 9-11, 2002), Attachment 119; Robert Bain, The Wisdom of Crowds: A
Survey of Forecasting Accuracy, DATA & MODELLING, Issue 8 (June 2011), 33-34, Attachment 120; Robert
Bain, On the Reasonableness of Traffic Forecasts: A Survey of Predictive Capability, TRAFFIC ENGINEERING AND
CONTROL, Vol. 52, No. 5 (May 2011), 213-217, Attachment 121; Robert Bain, And Now, the Traffic Report,
TOLLWAYS, Journal of the International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association (Fall 2010), 69-76, Attachment
122.
60
In sum, the Traffic and Revenue Study produced in 2010 was based on a number of
questionable assumptions and incomplete analysis. More recent data shows that many of the
assumptions were overly optimistic. To properly assess the economic cost of the Bypass, a new
Traffic and Revenue Study should be performed that looks more closely at the future users of the
Monroe Bypass and determines, based on current and future conditions in the US 74 corridor.
Given the frequent tendency of toll highways to underperform, such a study is imperative as a
matter of state fiscal policy in addition to fulfilling the important NEPA requirement of
disclosing project costs and benefits.
B. Consistency Between NEPA and the STIP
Federal guidance states that a NEPA document should include a discussion of a proposed
project’s relationship to the current TIP.374 The DSFEIS does include a discussion of the
project’s cost, but fails to relate that to the TIP, or explain the inconsistency between the most
recent cost estimate and that in the TIP. This is problematic. As explained in the guidance, “[i]f
there is a significant difference between the Project cost estimates in the final environmental
document compared to the MTP and/or STIP/TIP, this potentially may impact the overall fiscal
constraint demonstration and the mix of future projects selected for funding in the MTP and
STIP/TIP if the Project is underfunded.” The guidance thus explains that where a significant
difference exists between the dollar amount programmed in the STIP and the amount estimated
in the EIS a STIP amendment is necessary prior to the approval of a ROD by FHWA.375
The DSFEIS states that the Monroe Bypass is now expected to cost $898 million, with a
30% chance that costs will be higher. This is almost $110 million higher than the amount
currently programmed in the STIP—$789 million.376 $110 million (18 times the cost of the
Indian Trail superstreets project) is certainly “significant” difference in cost estimate. Indeed,
the vast majority of other projects in CRTPO’s MTP cost less than $110 million.377 Yet, there is
no discussion of this gulf in costs in the EIS. The DSFEIS states only that the project “is
included in the NCDOT 2012-2020 STIP” as a toll facility.378 The document then states that
“current fiscally constrained planning documents do not have sufficient funds available from
traditional sources in the foreseeable future to construct all priority projects in the state.”379
Given that, as explained above, toll revenues are likely to be much lower than initially
anticipated, and given that the cost of the project has sky-rocketed, the EIS should include
significantly more analysis to demonstrate that the project remains part of a fiscally constrained
plan.
374 FHWA, Office of Planning, Environment, & Realty Planning, Transportation Planning Requirements and Their
Relationship to NEPA Approvals: Supplement to January 28, 2008 Transportation Planning Requirements and
Their Relationship to NEPA Process Completion (Feb. 9, 2011), available at
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/tpr_and_nepa/tprandnepasupplement.cfm, Attachment 111.
375 Id.
376 North Carolina Statewide Transportation Investment Program “STIP” (last reviewed visited Jan. 5, 2013).
377 CRTPO, 2040 Fiscally Constrained Project List, Attachment 99; CRTPO, 2040 Metropolitan Transportation
Plan: Fiscally Constrained Roadway Projects, map, Attachment 100.
378 DSFEIS at 1-1.
379 Id.
61
C. True Cost of the Project
While the EIS presents $898 million as the expected cost of the project,380 internal
documents from NCDOT demonstrate that the true cost of the project is likely to be much
higher. Internal documents from NCDOT acknowledge that the project cost will be adjusted up
“by some unknown amount.”381 The reason for this unknown adjustment is that the groups of
contractors holding the contract to build the project, the Monroe Bypass Constructors (“MBC”),
have been attempting to negotiate a significantly increased price for the project.
After the Fourth Circuit ruled in 2012 invalidating the previous EIS for the Monroe
Bypass , MBC stated its intent to file a claim for damages if NCDOT’s contract with them was
terminated.382 Rather than pursue the matter in court MBC stated that its auditor could calculate
the cost of termination for $60,000.383 NCDOT agreed to pay $60,000 for MBC’s auditors to
work out what the termination cost would be.384 On October 3, 2012 the auditors came out with a
figure of $38 million — plus additional costs for “loss of opportunity” etc.385 This included
damages for other subcontractors including RK&K ($1.8 million)386 and Summit ($3.1
million).387
In the alternative, the MBC stated that they would hold off on a damages claim if
NCDOT agreed to a contract escalation fee. MBC estimated that the escalation fee should be
$56 million.388 In an e-mail NCDOT staffer explains that Mark Foster, NCDOT’s chief financial
officer surmised that this escalation fee was “fluffed up.”389 Nonetheless, NCDOT continued to
explore the escalation fee with MBC and proposed various types of index structures to justify the
increase.390
380 Id. at 3-11.
381 See, e.g., e-mail from Donna Keener, NCDOT, to Jennifer Harris, NCTA, RE: Monroe info (May 23, 2013),
Attachment 123.
382 Letter from James Triplett, MBC, to Shannon Sweitzer, NCTA, Engineered Ordered Suspension of Work (May
22, 2012), Attachment 124.
383 Letter from James Triplett, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, Change Order Due to Engineer Ordered
Suspension – Calculation of Termination Cost (Aug. 16, 2012), Attachment 125.
384 Letter from Rick Baucom, NCTA, to James Triplett, MBC, Notice to Proceed – Calculation of Termination Cost
(Aug 20, 2012), Attachment 126.
385 Independent Accountants’ Report on Potential Costs of Termination, Attachment 127.
386 Letter from JT Peacock, RKK, to Jim Triplett, MBC, Summary of Estimated Cost or Damages to RKK (Sept. 13,
2012), Attachment 128.
387 Letter from James Parker, Summit Design and Engineering, to James Triplett, MBC, Calculation of Cost for
Summit CEI Contract Termination (Sept. 7, 2012), Attachment 129.
388 Monroe Bypass Contract Extension/Termination Data, Attachment 130.
389 E-mail from Ricky Greene to Ronald Hancock, NCDOT, Monroe Bypass Meeting (Aug. 10, 2012), Attachment
131.
390 E-mail from James Triplett, MBC, to Ronald Hancock & Rick Baucom, NCDOT, Observations (Aug. 9, 2012),
Attachment 132; e-mail from Ronald Hancock to Jim Triplett, MBC, Construction Cost Index (Aug. 20, 2012),
Attachment 133; e- mail from Ronald Hancock, NCDOT, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, TA Project (Feb. 1, 2013),
62
In December 2012, the MBC gave details of its proposed escalation costs, including an
index related mechanism for adjusting the original bid. In January 2013 NCDOT responded to
the theory, and then added some additional details/adjustments in writing on April 1, 2013.391
On June 28, 2013 NCDOT followed up their April letter with a letter giving the MCB a deadline
to respond to the proposal.392 On July 24, 2013, one of the three contractors that comprised the
MBC group, Boggs Paving, and several of its key officers including Drew Boggs and Kevin
Hicks were placed under indictment.393
Since the indictment, NCDOT has continued to move forward as if MBC will retain the
contract for the Bypass. The most recent discussions between MBC and NCDOT occurred this
fall and centered around a series of potential agreement items, where various costs would be
indexed, other costs would be re-bid etc.394 The original document stated that NCDOT could not
terminate this agreement unless the total price came 10% above the “revised engineers’
estimate.”395 The new agreement would expire June 2015,396 and the understanding at that time
was that ROD would be issued Feb 2014.397
The most recent communications from MBC suggest an alternative arrangement. In a
letter dated October 29, 2013, MBC asked NCDOT to pay $9.2 million dollars prior to any
further engagement in the contract by MBC. The letter then explained that subsequent to a new
Notice to Proceed on the project MBC would “re-price” the project and amend the contract.398
We do not know if NCDOT agreed to this demand and in a recent news report the Department
stated that the Department “has not made a decision with Boggs and this existing contract.”399
What is clear, however, is that the future contract price for the Bypass is not yet certain, and
likely to be significantly higher than that forecast in the DSFEIS.
Attachment 134; e-mail from Richard Baucom, NCDOT, to Ronald Hancock, Ricky Greene, Ronald Davenport,
Donna Keener, and David Mincey, NCDOT, Monroe Bypass – Construction Cost Index Discussion, Attachment
135.
391 Letter from Rick Baucom, NCDOT, to James Triplett, MBC, Adjustment of Contract Bid Amount Due to Project
Delay (Apr. 1, 2013), Attachment 136.
392 Letter from Rick Baucom, NCTA, to James Triplett, MBC, Adjustment of Contract Bid Amount (June 28, 2013),
Attachment 137.
393 US v. Boggs Paving, Inc., Bill of Indictment, No. 3:13CR204_MOC (W.D.N.C. Jul. 2, 2013), Attachment 138.
394 Notes from September 6, 2013 Meeting, re Adjustment of Monroe Bypass Contract Bid Due to Delay,
Attachment 139; E-mail from Ronald Hancock to Ricky Green, Rick Baucom, Louis Mitchell, Terry Gibson, and
Lamar Sylvester, NCDOT, Draft Continuation Language (Sept. 27, 2013), Attachment 140.
395 Draft Terms & Conditions for Updating of Project Cost Estimate, Attachment 141.
396 Notes from September 6, 2013 Meeting, re Adjustment of Monroe Bypass Contract Bid Due to Delay,
Attachment 139.
397 Id.
398 Letter from James E. Triplett, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: MBC Position – Design Build T.I.P. Project
R-3329/R-2559, NCTA Project C202587: Monroe Connector/Bypass Project – Mecklenburg & Union Counties
(Oct. 29, 2013), Attachment 142.
399 Steve Harrison, To Build Monroe Bypass DOT staying with Indicted Contractor, for now, CHARLOTTE
OBSERVER (Jan. 4, 2013) available at http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2014/01/03/4586177/to-build-monroe-
bypass-dot-staying.html#storylink=cpy, Attachment 143.
63
It is worth noting that Boggs Paving has a history of poor work and cost overruns.400 For
example, recently City of Monroe officials have fought awarding an airport repair contract to
Boggs Paving, citing “late work, poor work quality and projects that went millions over the
contract budget.”401 They pointed to past experiences with Boggs Paving, such as a 2009
relocation of Goldmine Road and expansion of the Charlotte Monroe Executive Airport, in
which Boggs Paving went 191 days past the contract date, included $748,769 in additional
unsubstantiated monetary claims, and extended a traffic detour for eight months when the
contract called for just 30 days.402 Another project to extend a runway at the Monroe Airport
took 710 days when the contract stated it would be completed in 330 days, and cost an additional
$1,980,904 above the contract price.403 A subcontractor on this project also sued Boggs Paving,
claiming it was never paid for the work it did on Boggs’ behalf.404 Further, as the former
Director of Construction responsible for overseeing Boggs’ work on the Bypass noted:
“Trust has never been their strong suit.”[405]
In sum, the DSFEIS fails to demonstrate that the Monroe Bypass is part of constrained
financial plan. The assumptions behind the 2010 Traffic and Revenue Study are no longer valid,
and toll revenue is likely to be much less than expected. The cost of the project has increased,
and is likely to increase even further. There is no analysis or explanation in the EIS as to where
the additional money will be found to make up the difference.
And not only do these failures violate FHWA’s planning requirements. By failing to
disclose the true cost of the project while also overstating the likely benefits from the selected
alternative NCDOT once again violates the public disclosure requirements of NEPA. Courts
have been clear that an EIS which fails to disclose the accurate costs and benefits of a project is
necessarily arbitrary and capricious. In Hughes River Watershed Council, for example, the
Fourth Circuit found that the Corps of Engineers violated NEPA because its EIS for a proposed
dam construction project overstated recreation benefits, a defect which impacted 32% of the
project's total economic benefits. 81 F.3d at 447. By overstating the economic benefits of the
project, the EIS was unable to serve its function of allowing decisionmakers to balance the
environmental impacts and economic benefits of the project. Id. at 446-48.; see also Johnston v.
Davis, 698 F.2d 1088, 1094 (10th Cir. 1983) (unqualified use of artificially low discount rate in
economic analysis resulted in misleading EIS that violated NEPA); Sierra Club v. Sigler, 695
F.2d 957, 975-76 (5th Cir. 1983) (“The Corps cannot tip the scales of an EIS by promoting
possible benefits while ignoring their costs . . . . There can be no ‘hard look’ at costs and
benefits unless all costs are disclosed.”).
400 Monroe Paving Firm Still Wins N.C. Contracts Despite Lateness- Boggs Paving working on U.S. 74, Firm Says
Standards Exceed Rules, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER (DEC. 28, 2003), Attachment 144.
401 Heather Smith, State forced city to Use Boggs for contract, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Jul. 27, 2013), available at
http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/x533461416/State-forced-city-to-use-Boggs-for-contract, Attachment 145.
402 Id.
403 Id.
404 Id.
405 Email from Shannon Sweitzer, NCDOT, to Jennifer Harris, NCDOT, RE: Boggs Paving (July 25, 2013),
Attachment 146.
64
VI. THE PUBLIC DECISIONMAKING PROCESS
A core purpose of NEPA is to inform the public, decisionmakers and federal and state
resource agencies so that they may make knowledgeable decisions about major actions. DOT v.
Pub. Citizen, 541 US 752, 768-769 (2004). Consequently, “NEPA procedures emphasize clarity
and transparency of process.” N.C. Wildlife Fed’n, 677 F.3d at 603 (citing Pub.Citizen, 541 U.S.
at 756-57; Methow Valley, 490 U.S. at 350-51). Indeed, “clarity is at a premium in NEPA
because the statute . . . is a democratic decisionmaking tool.” Id. (citing Or. Natural Desert
Ass’n v. BLM, 625 F.3d 1092, 1121 n.24 (9th Cir. 2010)). “[A]gencies violate NEPA when they
fail to disclose that their analysis contains incomplete information.” Id.
The Fourth Circuit underscored this point in its review of the previous EIS for the
Bypass. N.C. Wildlife Fed’n, 677 F.3d at 603. The Court found that in its review that NCDOT
failed to disclose important assumptions underlying key data, provided the public with erroneous
information, and falsely responded to public concerns. Id. at 603-05. The Court noted that “[t]he
very purpose of public issuance of an environmental impact statement is to ‘provid[e] a
springboard for public comment,’” and that “agencies violate NEPA when they fail to disclose
that their analysis contains incomplete information.” Id. at 603. The Court held that due to the
agencies’ misleading actions the agencies failed to take the required “hard look.” Id. at 605.
Despite being called out by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit for this
behavior, NCDOT has continued to mislead the public in the new NEPA process, once again
ignoring the fact that an EIS is intended as a “springboard for public comment” and a
“democratic decisionmaking tool.” Id. (citing Pub. Citizen, 541 U.S. at 768; Or. Natural Desert
Ass’n, 625 F.3d at 1121 n.24).
In pursuit of the pre-determined Bypass project, NCDOT has colluded with, and even
funded, the project contractor to create a bogus Bypass support group espousing views contrary
to those stated in the EIS. At the same time, the Department has failed to acknowledge the
resolutions of four separate municipalities in Union County calling for alternative solutions to
the Bypass. As noted above, NCDOT has continued to perpetuate misconceptions about the
Bypass in order to “sell” it to local residents and has refused to correct frequent
misunderstandings and misstatements by public officials and other community leaders. In so
doing, NCDOT has once again rendered NEPA meaningless — rather than using the public
process to inform the public NCDOT has propagated a series of contradictions and untruths that
obscure the true purpose and impact of the proposed highway and prevent any meaningful public
review.
A. Misleading Propaganda
Public records demonstrate that NCDOT has actively and financially406 supported a
group espousing views completely contradictory to those embraced in the NEPA process. We
were deeply troubled to learn that outside of the NEPA process, NCDOT has been actively
406 We understand that once we brought this grave deception to the public’s attention, and after a conversation on the
matter between Division 10 Engineer Louis Mitchell and an SELC attorney, NCDOT has now asked the Monroe
Bypass Constructors to refund some of this financial support. This does little to cure the fact that such support was
offered in the first place. The damage of the misinformation disseminated with NCDOT funding has been done.
65
perpetuating a picture of the Bypass’s impacts and effect that is entirely at odds with the
information it has presented within the NEPA process. Public records produced by NCDOT
demonstrate that much of the purportedly local organized efforts in support of the Bypass were
in fact orchestrated by the MBC, and specifically employees of Boggs Paving.
1. Keep Union County Moving
NCDOT has paid over $1.8 million to the MBC since May 2012, when NCDOT issued a
stop work order to MBC following the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled NCDOT had
actively misled the public and resource agencies.407 These payments have been to support the
407 Our latest information from NCDOT indicates that NCDOT has paid at least $1.8 million to the Monroe Bypass
Constructors since May 2012. See Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered
Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending June 30, 2012 REVISED (Aug. 7, 2012),
Attachment 147; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension
Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending July 31, 2012 (Aug. 7, 2012), Attachment 148; Letter from Greg
Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For
Month Ending August 31, 2012 (Sept. 7, 2012), Attachment 149; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom,
NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending September 30,
2012 REVISED (Oct. 5, 2012), Attachment 150; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE:
Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending October 31, 2012 (Nov. 5,
2012), Attachment 151; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered
Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending November 30, 2012 (Dec. 6, 2012), Attachment 152;
Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending December 31, 2012 (Jan. 7, 2013), Attachment 153; Letter from Greg Miller,
MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month
Ending January 31, 2013 (Feb. 6, 2013), Attachment 154; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom,
NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending February 28, 2013
(Mar. 6, 2013), Attachment 155; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered
Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending March 31, 2013 (Apr. 5, 2013), Attachment
156; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending April 30, 2013 (May 6, 2013), Attachment 157; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC,
to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending
May 31, 2013 (June 7, 2013), Attachment 158; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE:
Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending June 30, 2013 (July 7, 2013),
Attachment 159; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension
Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending July 31, 2013 (Sept. 16, 2013), Attachment 160; Letter from Greg
Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For
Month Ending August 31, 2013 (Sept. 20, 2013), Attachment 161; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom,
NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending September 30,
2013 (Oct. 4, 2013), Attachment 162; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered
Ordered Suspension Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending October 31, 2013 (Nov. 7, 2013),
Attachment 163; Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension
Claim-Force Account Records For Month Ending November 30, 2013 (Dec. 5, 2013), Attachment 164; Agreement
between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 01 (Sept. 10, 2012), approved by FHWA
on Sept. 12, 2012, Attachment 165; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change
Order No. 10 (Sept. 10, 2012), approved by FHWA on Sept. 12, 2012, Attachment 166; Agreement between
NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 11 (Dec. 14, 2012), approved by FHWA on Mar.
4, 2013, Attachment 167; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 13
(Dec. 14, 2012), approved by FHWA on Mar. 4, 2013, Attachment 168; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC,
Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 14 (Mar. 1, 2013), approved by FHWA on Mar. 4, 2013, Attachment
169; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 15 (Mar. 13, 2013),
approved by FHWA on Mar. 15, 2013, Attachment 170; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental
Agreement: Change Order No. 16 (Mar. 13, 2013), approved by FHWA on Mar. 15, 2013, Attachment 171;
66
MBC’s “demobilization” and to keep certain staff on hand for whenever the project restarted. A
portion of these payments initially went directly to fund MBC staff time spent creating and
promoting a supposedly “grassroots” effort to push the Bypass forward, focused on delivering
the message that the project will bring dramatic growth and development to Union County, a
message which, as we have noted above, runs counter to NCDOT’s analysis within the NEPA
process.
These “outreach” activities are outlined in the force account records provided monthly by
MBC to NCDOT, which are reviewed by both NCDOT and FHWA and approved quarterly for
payment,408 and were raised to NCDOT staff during at least one conference call.409 The force
account records include detailed individual timesheets. Timesheets for Boggs Paving employee
Janie Auret demonstrate that NCDOT approved payments for at least 185 hours of staff time
spent creating and promoting a pro-Bypass “local” group called Keep Union County Moving
(“KUCM”). Under the guise of KUMC, NCDOT and FHWA paid Auret to work with Ron
Sachs Communications, a public relations company, to plan open house events, create and
maintain a facebook page, develop and maintain a website, and orchestrate publicity, all of
which is focused on the ability of the Bypass to resolve current levels of congestion on U.S. 74
and bring dramatic economic growth and development to Union County.
For example, Auret’s September 2012 individual time sheet lists 15 hours as “Stallings
Town Council Meeting - Communicating with PR Firm for Bypass.”410 Subtracting the 2 hours
from September 24, the night of the Stallings meeting,411 leaves 13 hours for the week
communicating with a public relations firm (later identified as the Ron Sachs Company) about
the Bypass. Appropriately, the KUMC Facebook page was launched in September 2012.412 The
page declares that “Union County needs the Monroe Bypass and other responsible transportation
solutions to improve traffic flow and stimulate business activity in the Highway 74 corridor.”413
The page describes the group as follows: “Keep Union County Moving supports building the
Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 17 (Mar. 13, 2013), approved
by FHWA on Mar. 15, 2013, Attachment 172; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement:
Change Order No. 18 (June 19, 2013), approved by FHWA on June 27, 2013, Attachment 173; Agreement between
NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 19 (June 19, 2013), approved by FHWA on June
27, 2013, Attachment 174; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 20
(June 19, 2013), approved by FHWA on June 27, 2013, Attachment 175; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC,
Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 21 (Sept. 10, 2013), approved by FHWA on Sept. 18, 2013,
Attachment 176.
408 See, e.g., Attachment 164; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No.
01 (Sept. 10, 2012), approved by FHWA on Sept. 12, 2012, Attachment 165.
409 Summary from Conference Call of Ron Hancock, NCDOT, Rick Baucom, NCDOT, and Jim Triplett, MBC
(Nov. 7, 2012) (“There is a another local group forming that is for the project, and MBC will be assisting that
community group in their efforts, including an upcoming Community Open House e Meeting.”), Attachment 177.
410 Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending September 30, 2012 REVISED (Oct. 5, 2012), Attachment 150 at 26.
411 Id.
412 Keep Union County Moving, About Facebook page (launched Sept. 1, 2012, last checked Oct. 31, 2013),
Attachment 178.
413 Id.
67
Monroe Bypass and other smart transportation ideas like making responsible improvements to
Highway 74 to help reduce congestion for local traffic, create jobs and boost our local
economy.”414 Despite the fact that NCDOT and FHWA originally paid for the staff time spent
creating and developing the KUMC’s facebook page,415 the page purports that “This page is not
affiliated with the North Carolina Department of Transportation.”416
Auret’s October 2012 individual time sheets show that NCDOT paid for over 15 hours of
her time spent “[a]ssisting with possible Open House meeting for the Bypass to be held in
November. Researching date and venue.”417 Auret’s November 2012 time sheet demonstrates
that these efforts were related to a planned KUCM open house meeting. NCDOT thus originally
paid for the following activities:
• Approximately 15.5 hours: “helping plan open house, organizing articles in
papers about bypass”418
• 15.5 hours: “Working with Communications Company to promote the Keep
Union County Moving organization”
• 14.5 hours: “working with Keep Union County Moving Group to help plan
their open house meeting”
• 15 hours: “Continuing to help with and plan open house, corresponding with
Communications Company”419
Auret’s December timesheet also included a claim for nearly 40 hours of work promoting
publicity for the Bypass, including “[c]ontinuing work with PR firm to discuss meetings, plans,
etc.,” and “[w]orking with PR Company to promote the web page.”420 Again, NCDOT and
FHWA approved payments for each of these claimed activities.421
Other sources help to detail some of Auret’s activities in October, November, and
December 2012. For example, the PR/communications firm used by the Monroe Bypass
414 Id.
415 Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 13 (Dec. 14, 2012),
approved by FHWA on Mar. 4, 2013, Attachment 167.
416 Keep Union County Moving, About Facebook page (launched Sept. 1, 2012, last checked Oct. 31, 2013),
Attachment 178.
417 Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending October 31, 2012, at 24 (Nov. 5, 2012), Attachment 151.
418 This listing also included a claim for “invoicing.” SELC does not know whether invoicing was in support of
KUCM activities, and therefore has attempted to remove Auret’s invoicing time from the claimed hours based on
invoicing hours from other months.
419 Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending November 30, 2012, at 24 (Dec. 6, 2012), Attachment 152.
420 Id.
421 Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 15 (Mar. 13, 2013),
approved by FHWA on Mar. 15, 2013, Attachment 170; Agreement between NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental
Agreement: Change Order No. 16 (Mar. 13, 2013), approved by FHWA on Mar. 15, 2013, Attachment 171.
68
Constructors, Ron Sachs Communications (now renamed as Sachs Media Group), registered at
least two Monroe Bypass-oriented domain names — StopTheMonroeBypass.com and
YesMonroeBypass.com — on November 26, 2012.422 The timing of the registration for the
StopTheMonroeBypass.com domain name came just weeks after a community meeting was held
for individuals opposing the Bypass, and the possibility of an anti-Bypass website was discussed.
Ms. Auret attended that meeting (refusing to give state any affiliation and not mentioning any
connection to Boggs Paving or NCDOT).423 Presumably NCDOT, through Ms. Auret and Mr.
Sachs was attempting to forestall any public opposition to the project.
The entity which registered for KUMC’s own website domain name,
www.keepunioncountymoving.com, is purposefully private;424 it was registered using Domains
By Proxy, a service specifically designed to allow the confidential registration of internet domain
names.425 Nonetheless, it is suggestive that the KUMC website was registered on the exact same
date that Ron Sachs Communications registered the other two Monroe Bypass websites noted
above: November 26, 2012,426 indicating that the website was likely also registered by the Ron
Sachs company and Janie Auret as part of the MBC staff time paid for by NCDOT and FHWA.
This website, initially part-funded by NCDOT, directly contradicts the facts contained in
NCDOT’s NEPA documents. For example, the website details the “unbearable” congestion on
U.S. 74 and argues that “[b]uilding the Monroe Bypass is a Fast, Responsible, and Realistic
Solution to this Major Problem.”427 The website also encourages visitors to submit an email
address to show support for the Monroe Bypass, stating that “[i]n Just 4 Quick Seconds You Can
Help Create Jobs, Reduce Gridlock and Grow Our Economy.”428 The website included a
petition which stated that constructing the Monroe Bypass is essential to “create jobs, reduce
traffic congestion and improve our economy” in Union County.429 As with the KUMC facebook
page, the KUMC website expressly states that KUMC is not affiliated with NCDOT, even
though Auret’s staff time devoted to creating and developing the website was approved and
initially paid for by NCDOT.
November and December also showed a flurry of posting on the KUCM facebook
page.430 Many of the postings present a picture of the Bypass that sits in direct contradiction to
422 See POLO DOMAINS, YESMONROEBYPASS.COM (Nov. 1, 2012), and STOPTHEMONROEBYPASS.COM
(Nov. 1, 2012), Attachment 179.
423 Monroe Community Meeting (see the 22/29 line), (Oct. 30, 2012), Attachment 180.
424 See POLO DOMAINS, KEEPUNIONCOUNTYMOVING.COM (Dec. 21, 2012), Attachment 181.
425 Id.; see Domains by Proxy, Your identity is nobody’s business but ours (last accessed Dec. 12, 2013), Attachment
182.
426 See POLO DOMAINS, KEEPUNIONCOUNTYMOVING.COM (Dec. 21, 2012), Attachment 181.
427 See Keep Union County Moving website, available at www.keepunioncountymoving.com (last accessed Oct. 31,
2013), Attachment 183.
428 Id.
429 See Keep Union County Moving (online petition), available at www.keepunioncountymoving.com (last accessed
Oct. 31, 2013), Attachment 184.
430 See the following: Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Do you have a right of way question? (Nov. 1,
2012), Attachment 185; Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Federal Judge OKs Plans for Monroe Bypass
69
the information presented by NCDOT in the NEPA documents. For example, one post shared an
a Charlotte Business Journal article which demonstrated a direct link between transportation
infrastructure investment and business development,431 a point which undermines the
fundamental assumption underlying the ICE analysis that transportation infrastructure has
extremely limited influence growth. The KUCM facebook page uses the article to demonstrate
“the great need to address transportation issues to protect our economy,” arguing that U.S. 74 is
“congested and in poor condition” and beseeching visitors to “[r]educe congestion and build the
bypass!”432
Another KUMC facebook post included a graphic comparing Union County commuting
times to cities such as Atlanta and Washington, D.C. with the catchphrase “Time flies, unless
you’re stuck on Highway 74. Union County has a longer average commute time than many
major cities. Let’s build the Monroe Bypass to reduce gridlock and save time.”433 The KUMC
facebook group posted another news story with the statement “Are you frustrated with heavy
traffic on Highway 74? . . . Watch this story on WSOC Channel 9 to learn more about the group
that has put the Monroe Bypass project in ‘time out,’ ” once more implying that building the
Bypass is key to addressing the existing levels of heavy traffic on U.S. 74.434 Another post pits
“Union County’s Future” against environmental concerns, stating the SELC “value[s] the
Carolina Heelsplitter over our [Union County’s] transportation and economic future.”435 Yet
another post cites building the Bypass as the solution to the “endless gridlock on Hwy 74.”436
Though NCDOT originally funded the staff time required to research and post this
information to the website and facebook page, the Department has maintained the opposite
within the NEPA process. As explained above, the transportation agencies have consistently
stated within their NEPA documents that building the Bypass will not improve current levels of
(Nov. 1, 2012), Attachment 186; Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Project Location Map (Nov. 1,
2012), Attachment 187; Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Charlotte Business Journal - 2012-11-02
digital edition (Nov. 13, 2012), Attachment 188; Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Time flies, unless
you're stuck on Highway 74 (Nov. 16, 2012), Attachment 189; Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), 9
Investigates: Group takes issue with some plans to alleviate traffic (Nov. 16, 2012), Attachment 190; Keep Union
County Moving (Facebook post), Union County's Future vs. Virginia Environmental Trial Lawyers (Nov. 26, 2012),
Attachment 191; Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Tired of endless gridlock on Hwy 74? (invite to sign
the Keep Union County Moving petition), (Dec. 6, 2012), Attachment 192.
431 Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Charlotte Business Journal - 2012-11-02 digital edition (Nov. 13,
2012), Attachment 188; Erik Spanberg, Transportation crisis taking a toll on N.C. economy, CHARLOTTE BUSINESS
JOURNAL (Nov. 2, 2012), Attachment 193.
432 Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Charlotte Business Journal - 2012-11-02 digital edition (Nov. 13,
2012), Attachment 188.
433 Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Time flies, unless you're stuck on Highway 74 (Nov. 16, 2012),
Attachment 189.
434 See Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), 9 Investigates: Group takes issue with some plans to alleviate
traffic (Nov. 16, 2012), Attachment 190
435 See Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Union County's Future vs. Virginia Environmental Trial
Lawyers (Nov. 26, 2012), Attachment 191.
436 Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Tired of endless gridlock on Hwy 74? (Invitation to sign the Keep
Union County Moving petition), (Dec. 6, 2012), Attachment 192.
70
congestion on existing U.S. 74, nor will it have any more than a 2% impact on economic growth
in Union County.
2. Union County Chamber of Commerce
NCDOT also originally paid for MBC staff to plan and support pro-Bypass events and
other undertakings in partnership with the Union County Chamber of Commerce, one of the
most active local proponents of the Bypass’s power to drive economic development, whose
mission is to “enhance business growth” in Union County.437 As with KUCM, NCDOT
originally paid MBC to work in congress with the Chamber to perpetuate pro-Bypass messaging
that sits in direct contrast to the findings presented in the NEPA documents.
For example, the NCDOT approved payments for close to 100 hours of MBC staff time
in January and February spent working with Ron Sachs Communication and the Union County
Chamber of Commerce for the MBC to sponsor and promote a February 5, 2013 “Business
Leaders’ Breakfast” on transportation, with a strong focus on the Monroe Bypass’s ability to
spur economic growth.438 KUCM also promoted the event on its facebook page.439 At the event,
attendees were provided with materials touting the expected results of the Bypass such as
“encourage[ing] and support[ing] existing local businesses along Highway 74,” and “provid[ing]
new opportunities for local businesses.”440 Ms. Auret’s time sheet demonstrates that NCDOT
originally paid for the staff time involved in creating and printing these flyers.441 NCDOT’s
support of the breakfast is further demonstrated by the fact that the breakfast featured John
Underwood, NCDOT’s District Engineer for Anson and Union counties, as its primary
speaker.442
Similarly, starting in early March 2013 until just recently, the Chamber promoted a
petition on their website’s homepage urging the transportation agencies to expedite construction
437 Union County Chamber of Commerce, Chamber Mission/Vision, available at
http://www.unioncountycoc.com/vision_mission.html, Attachment 194.
438 Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending January 31, 2012 (Feb. 6, 2013) at 29 Attachment 154; Lacey Hampton,
Chamber to focus on roads, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Jan. 28, 2013), available at
http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/x3714373/Chamber-to-focus-on-roads, Attachment 195; Lacey Hampton,
NCDOT reps talk road projects, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Feb. 2, 2013), available at
http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/local/x1733190139/NCDOT-reps-talk-road-projects, Attachment 196.
439 Keep Union County Moving (Facebook post), Business Leaders Breakfast Invitation (Jan. 31, 2013), Attachment
197.
440 Material from the Union County Chamber of Commerce’s Business Leaders Breakfast (April 2, 2013),
Attachment 198.
441 Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending January 31, 2012 (Feb. 6, 2013) at 29 Attachment 154, Agreement between
NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 17 (Mar. 13, 2013), approved by FHWA on Mar.
15, 2013, Attachment 172.
442 Material from the Union County Chamber of Commerce’s Business Leaders Breakfast (April 2, 2013),
Attachment 198.
71
of the Bypass.443 Ms. Auret’s March 2013 time sheet and the associated review form
demonstrated that the transportation agencies approved payment for 15 hours of staff time spent
“[w]ork[ing] with the Chamber of Commerce to get petition started, etc.”444 The petition calls
the Bypass a project that “create[s] jobs” and notes that it “will do wonders for employment
opportunities, positive economic outcomes, etc.”445 The signatures and associated comments on
the petition reflect a public understanding that the project will greatly impact the county’s
economic growth.446 The Chamber repeated these claims on its public Facebook page, averring
that “Building the Bypass will create hundreds of new construction jobs for area residents.”447
Also that spring, as discussed above, the Union County Chamber began pushing local
stakeholders to pass a resolution in support of expediting the Bypass.448 In February 2013, the
Chamber sent letters to local stakeholder groups across the county urging those groups to pass its
resolution.449 In these letters, the Chamber asserted the Bypass was essential to Union County’s
economic growth.450 Each letter included a sample resolution expounding on the specific ways
in which the Bypass would spur growth. Among other claims, the resolution states that the
Bypass would support and promote existing local businesses, attract new businesses to Union
County by providing better access the Port of Wilmington and a better quality of life, and
encourage student population growth at Wingate University, ultimately “creat[ing] hundreds of
jobs in [the] community.”451 In public discussions of the resolution, the Union County Chamber
explained that “there is a definite link between the bypass and economic development.”452
443 Union County Chamber of Commerce, Union County Chamber of Commerce Home Page, available at
http://www.unioncountycoc.com, Attachment 199.
444 Letter from Greg Miller, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Engineered Ordered Suspension Claim-Force
Account Records For Month Ending March 31, 2013 (Apr. 5, 2013), at 27, Attachment 156; Agreement between
NCDOT and MBC, Supplemental Agreement: Change Order No. 19 (June 19, 2013), approved by FHWA on June
27, 2013, Attachment 174.
445 Petition: Union County, NC Businesses and Residents in support of getting moving on the Monroe Bypass,
available at http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/union-county-nc-buinsesses-and-resident-in/, Attachment 200.
446 Id.
447 Union County Chamber of Commerce, FACEBOOK (Mar. 1, 2013), available at
https://www.facebook.com/unioncountycoc/posts/10151309350419327, Attachment 201.
448 Heather Smith, Chamber presses for DOT action on Bypass, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL, available at
http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/local/x1942451215/Chamber-presses-for-DOT-action-on-Bypass,
Attachment 202.
449 See, e.g., Letter from Sharon Roche, President, Union County Chamber of Commerce, to Dr. Mary Eillis,
Superintendent, Union County Public Schools (Feb. 28, 2013), Attachment 203; County chamber pushing Bypass,
THE HOME NEWS (Mar. 14, 2013), Attachment 10.
450 See, e.g., Letter from Sharon Roche, President, Union County Chamber of Commerce, to Dr. Mary Eillis,
Superintendent, Union County Public Schools (Feb. 28, 2013), Attachment 203.
451 Id.
452 Heather Smith, Chamber presses for DOT action on Bypass, THE ENQUIRER JOURNAL, available at
http://www.enquirerjournal.com/news/local/x1942451215/Chamber-presses-for-DOT-action-on-Bypass,
Attachment 202; see also Bypass resolution gains steam despite protests, UNION COUNTY WEEKLY (Apr. 1, 2013),
available at http://www.unioncountyweekly.com/news/2013/04/bypass-resolution-gains-steam-despite-protests/,
Attachment 204.
72
As noted above, SELC wrote a letter to Secretary Tony Tata, drawing NCDOT’s
attention to the many inaccuracies in the Chamber’s draft resolution and asking that NCDOT set
out clearly the purpose and likely impact of the project so as to address the deep
misunderstandings about the nature of the project which persist in throughout Union County, as
demonstrated by the resolution.453 SELC included a copy of the Chamber’s resolution annotated
to demonstrate the dramatic inconsistencies between the transportation agencies’ and Chamber’s
statements regarding the Bypass’s likely impacts and effects.454 Even after SELC demonstrated
that the claims made in the Chamber’s resolution were in direct contrast to the information in the
NEPA documents, NCDOT failed to respond until eight months later in the DSFEIS, and even
then the response was simply buried in an appendix as a response to comments. In the
meantime, the Union County Chamber of Commerce continued to publically promote the
contradictory image of the Bypass outlined in the resolution which was passed by eight separate
communities.455 No affirmative action has ever been taken by NCDOT to publicly address the
prevalent misunderstandings about the Bypass.
B. Community Opposition to the Bypass
While NCDOT has been keen to support, and even fund, groups setting forward
resolutions in favor of the Bypass based on false and misleading information, it has completely
ignored any voices asking for alternative solutions. Many local stakeholders have begun to
vocally call for alternatives to the Bypass. These stakeholders have taken the time to review
NCDOT’s actual data, rather than just listen to talking points. In doing so they have found data
showing that the Bypass will not, in fact, fix current congestion issues on U.S. 74 and come to
understand that the project has never been intended benefit local drivers.456 Given the high cost
of the Bypass, these stakeholders have begun to question if the money might be better spent.
For example, in a recent resolution the Town of Weddington resolved that “prudent
decision makers should focus on the most expedient and cost effective solutions for
transportation and consider improvements to existing roads which yield a higher cost benefit.”457
A resolution from Hemby Bridge recognizes that “there are other viable alternatives or solutions
to address any current or growing traffic congestion on U.S. Highway 74 in Union County.”458
453 Letter from Kym Hunter, SELC, to Gen. Anthony Tata, NCDOT (Mar. 6, 2013), Attachment 3.
454 Annotated Resolution, Attachment 4.
455 See n. 24 & 25, above.
456 See, e.g., Board of Alderman, Town of Hemby Bridge, Resolution of Opposition to the Construction and
Location of the Monroe Connector Bypass (June 27, 2013), Attachment 205; Mayor Walker F. Davidson, Town of
Weddington, Town of Weddington Resolution Acknowledging Support for Alternatives to the Monroe Bypass (July
8, 2013), Attachment 206; Mayor Frederick Becker III, Town of Mineral Springs, Resolution Expressing Support for
Alternatives to Construction of the Monroe Connector/Bypass (Sept. 12, 2013), Attachment 207; Mayor Pro Tem
Anthony J. Burman, Village of Marvin, A Resolution Expressing Support for Alternatives to Construction of the
Monroe Connector/Bypass (Nov. 12, 2013), Attachment 208; Letter from Rick Becker, Mayor of Mineral Springs,
to Sec. Tony Tata, NCDOT (Sept. 24, 2013), Attachment 209a.
457 Mayor Walker F. Davidson, Town of Weddington, Town of Weddington Resolution Acknowledging Support for
Alternatives to the Monroe Bypass (July 8, 2013), Attachment 206.
458 Resolution of Opposition to the Construction and Location of the Monroe Connector Bypass, Hemby Bridge
(June 27, 2013), Attachment 205.
73
Similarly, the town of Mineral Springs resolved to “encourage[] the NCDOT to research,
consider, and implement lower-cost alternative to the Bypass that will provide more effective
solutions to current traffic congestion problems on US -74.”459 The Village of Marvin adopted
nearly identical language pushing for alternatives to the Bypass which would actually address
current congestion on U.S. 74.460
These resolutions demonstrate both a public outcry for a solution to current levels of
congestion on U.S. 74, and a determination to spend transportation resources wisely. Other local
elected officials such as Mayor Lynda Paxton of Stallings,461 Councilman David Waddell of
Indian Trail 462 and Mayor Libby Long of Fairview 463 have voiced similar concerns. Despite this
widespread call for alternatives, NCDOT has failed to even acknowledge the resolutions passed
in Union County. The Comments and Coordination section of the DSFEIS does not include any
of the resolutions, although NCDOT has included such resolutions in the past.464 This non-
response from NCDOT indicates its failure both as a public agency generally, and also as a lead
agency for the NEPA process. Rather than inform state citizens with accurate information and
listen to the views of diverse stakeholders, the Department has instead chosen to foster false
propaganda and ignore any input that does not comply with its predetermined decision.
We note that NCDOT has recently stated to interested parties that it did not receive
copies of these resolutions, but this is simply not true.465
C. Public Involvement and Outreach
As noted above, a core purpose of NEPA is to inform the public and decisionmakers so
that they may make knowledgeable decisions about major actions. DOT v. Pub. Citizen, 541
U.S. 752, 768-769 (2004). Generally then, with the publication of a major document like a
DSFEIS, NCDOT performs specific activities to help communicate its findings to the public.
The previous DEIS for the project, for example, included a Citizens’ Summary.466 This time
459 Mayor Frederick Becker III, Town of Mineral Springs, Resolution Expressing Support for Alternatives to
Construction of the Monroe Connector/Bypass (Sept. 12, 2013), Attachment 207.
460 Mayor Pro Tem Anthony J. Burman, Village of Marvin, A Resolution Expressing Support for Alternatives to
Construction of the Monroe Connector/Bypass (Nov. 12, 2013), Attachment 208.
461 See, e.g., Stallings Mayor Lynda Paxton, website, Attachment 209b; Mayor Lynda Paxton, Facebook post (Nov.
3, 2012), Attachment 210; Mayor Lynda Paxton, Facebook post (Sept. 24, 2012), Attachment 213; Mayor Lynda
Paxton, Let’s put transportation planning in perspective, Letter to the Editor, UNION COUNTY WEEKLY (Nov. 9,
2012), Attachment 212.
462 See, e.g., Sharon Roberts, Monroe Bypass supporters make presentation at Indian Trail meeting; opposition not
invited, MECKLENBURG TIMES (Oct. 24, 2013), Attachment 74.
463 Town of Fairview, Facebook post (Oct. 8, 2013), Attachment 214; Town of Fairview, Facebook post (October 2,
2013), Attachment 215.
464 FEIS (2010) at Appendix D (including City of Monroe Resolution and Town of Indian Trail Resolution).
465 See, e.g., Letter from Mayor Frederick Becker, III, mayor of Mineral Springs, to Secretary of Transportation
Anthony Tata ( Sep. 23, 2013) Attachment 209a; see also e-mail from Amy S. McCollum, Town Administrator for
the Town of Marvin to Secretary of Transportation Anthony Tata, July 15, 2013, Attachment 217.
466 DEIS, Monroe Connector/Bypass Citizens Summary (March 2009), Attachment 216.
74
around, NCDOT produced no such summary, despite the fact that several key findings have
changed significantly. For example, in the previous citizens’ summary it was stated that in the
project’s opening year travel time savings for those using the Bypass from end to end would be
29-32 minutes.467 This estimate has now been revised down to 8-12 minutes, but no updated
citizens’ summary has been created.
Perhaps more egregious is that even the DSFEIS excludes key facts that would be
pertinent to decision makers. A review of earlier drafts of the DSFEIS show that many key facts
previously included were eliminated from the ultimate version presented to the public. For
example, initial drafts of the DSFEIS clearly stated the expected travel time benefits from the
Bypass.468 Such statements were eliminated from the final version, and the public was left
having to do the math themselves.469 Knowing how much time the Bypass is likely to save its
users is not a minor point, and the deletion of these clear statements was inexcusable. Other key
facts, such as the likelihood of the Bypass to redistribute growth away from downtown Monroe
were likewise removed from the final public draft of the document.470
NCDOT had a chance to correct some of the prevalent misunderstanding about the
Bypass at the three public hearings this fall. Unfortunately, the hearings were poorly managed
from the outset. NCDOT released the DSFEIS on the 18th of November, yet a press release was
not issue until November 21.471 The Department then scheduled public hearings for the 8, 9 and
10 of December, right around the holidays. Given the vast size of the document and the
complications of the holidays, Mayor Lynda Paxton of Stallings asked NCDOT if the hearings
could be postponed and the public be afforded more time to review and formulate questions.
This request was denied.472 Worse, NCDOT mixed up the dates and locations of the public
hearings in their initial publication, correcting the error less than a week before the public
hearings were held.473 These errors would seem to violate NCDOT’s responsibility to give
reasonable notice. 23 C.F.R. 771(h)(2)(iv).
The hearings themselves provided little pertinent information. Maps of the likely route
were on display, although staff did note that the final design for the project has not yet been
completed. The formal presentation focused primary on the ICE analysis and failed to touch on
key questions that NCDOT knows the public is interested in, such as: How much growth and
development is the project likely to bring to Union County; how much the current levels of
congestion on U.S. 74 will be improved; how many minutes travelers taking the Bypass from
467 Id. at 4.
468 NCDOT, Appendix A - Comments Since the Final EIS, Draft (June 2013), at 25-26, Attachment 55.
469 Compare id. with DSFEIS Appendix A.
470 Compare NCDOT, Appendix A - Comments Since the Final EIS, Draft (June 2013), at 3, Attachment 55; DSFEIS
at Appendix A.
471 NCDOT, NCDOT Hosts Public Hearings for Proposed Monroe Connector Bypass Project in Mecklenburg and
Union counties (Dec. 2, 2013), Attachment 218.
472 CRTPO meeting Nov. 20, 2013.
473 NCDOT, Public Hearing Notice, NCDOT to Hold Public Hearings Dec. 9, 10, & 11 for the Proposed Monroe
Connector/Bypass Project which will Provide a Controlled Access Toll Road from I-485 In Mecklenburg County to
U.S. 74 Near Marshville, Attachment 219.
75
end to end can be expected to save; how much truck traffic is expected to divert to the Bypass;
and how expensive the tolls will be. In fact, a common refrain during the hearings was that
“nothing has changed” despite the fact that, as noted above, significant factors such as the
current conditions on U.S. 74 and the success of alternatives are markedly different to those
presented back in 2009.474
In an attempt to get public clarification of some of the key misunderstandings about the
Bypass, SELC attorney Kate Asquith asked a most pertinent question of NCDOT during the
public comment period. Namely: Is the Bypass expected to improve current levels of
congestion on U.S. 74? NCDOT failed to give any coherent response to this straightforward
question.475 Ms. Jennifer Harris, P.E., the lead engineer for the project, claimed first that she did
not understand the question, then, that she didn’t have sufficient documents with her to answer
the question, and, finally, that she would need to discuss the issue privately with Ms. Asquith.
NCDOT refused to respond to any subsequent questions on any issue. This failure to publically
clarify a fairly basic, but commonly misunderstood, aspect of the Bypass again shows NCDOT’s
contempt for the NEPA process, and its abject failure to perform its duty to transparently inform
the public.
Other public comments during the two public hearings included a variety of concerns
about the project, including the very high cost, the inability of the Bypass to help local drivers,
the confusing Statement of Purpose and Need, the questionable growth projections and the
failure of the EIS to consider the percentage of local traffic in the corridor.476 Those in support
of the Bypass primarily focused their comments on the hope that the project would take truck
traffic off of U.S. 74, a contention that has not been studied in any detail by NCDOT.477
Another troubling aspect of the public meetings was the Monroe Bypass Supporters
Barbecue and Rally hosted by NCDOT’s paid (and indicted) contractor, Boggs Paving, at the
same time and location as the meeting.478 The rally took place in the room immediately adjacent
to the transportation agencies’ public meeting on the DSFEIS in the hour immediately preceding
the presentation and public comment portion of the hearing.479 Curiously, Boggs was able to
plan this large event for the same location and time as the transportation agencies’ public
474 SELC attorneys Kym Hunter, Kate Asquith and Frank Holleman all attended the public hearings, as did Clean
Air Carolina Executive Director June Blotnick.
475 Personal recollection from Ms. Asquith; Heather J. Smith, Hearing on bypass draws inquiry, ENQUIRER JOURNAL
(Dec. 11, 2013), Attachment 220.
476 Jane Duckwall, Monroe Bypass opponents, supporters speak up, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER (Dec. 24, 2013),
Attachment 211; Heather J. Smith, Hearing on bypass draws inquiry, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Dec. 11, 2013),
Attachment 220; Tenikka Smith, Marshville mayor remains staunch supporter of Monroe Bypass, WSOC-TV (Dec.
13, 2013), Attachment 222.
477 Jane Duckwall, Monroe Bypass opponents, supporters speak up, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER (Dec. 24, 2013),
Attachment 211.
478 Monroe Bypass Constructors, Union County supporters of the Monroe Bypass host free community BBQ and
rally, Press release (Dec. 2013), Attachment 16.
479 Id.; NCDOT, Public Hearing Notice, NCDOT to Hold Public Hearings Dec. 9, 10, & 11 for the ProposedMonroe
Connector/Bypass Project which will Provide a Controlled Access Toll Road from I-485 In Mecklenburg County to
U.S. 74 Near Marshville, Attachment 6E; NCDOT Bypass Suporter [sic] BBQ sign, Attachment 223.
76
hearing, though the transportation agencies’ initial public notice for that night’s hearing stated an
incorrect location, a mistake that was not corrected until less than a week before the hearing.480
The rally, although apparently not funded by NCDOT, did utilize the same network set
up by Boggs Paving employee Janie Auret in the past on NCDOT’s dime. Ms. Auret was listed
as the point of contact on the press release and the event was publicized on the KUCM facebook
page.481 The rally was set up such that attendees had to register at a table manned by Janie Auret
and sign a petition in support of constructing the Bypass in order to enter the room marked
“Bypass Suporter [sic] BBQ” and receive a free barbecue sandwich.482 Much like Ms. Auret’s
previous activities, the publicity for the BBQ included statements in opposition to facts found in
the NEPA documents. The press release stated that “This bypass is a crucial piece of
infrastructure that Union County needs to unlock our road congestion and improve transportation
in our county.”483 The post on the KUCM facebook page included the same information.484 In
an interview with the local Monroe newspaper Ms. Auret stated that the rally was aimed at
Union County residents who “believe the bypass will relieve traffic congestion.485
VII. PREDETERMINED DECISIONMAKING
The Council on Environmental Quality’s NEPA regulations specifically require that an
EIS be more than merely a “disclosure document,” stating that an “environmental impact
statement shall serve as the means of assessing the environmental impact of proposed agency
actions, rather than justifying decisions already made.” 40 C.F.R. §§ 1502.1, 1502.2(g). And the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit itself has recognized that NEPA requires
action and study based on “good faith objectivity rather than subjective impartiality.”
Fayetteville Area Chamber of Commerce v. Volpe, 515 F.2d 1021, 1026 (4th Cir.1975).
In the Fourth Circuit’s written opinion regarding the Monroe Bypass, the Court made
clear that the transportation agencies must reopen the NEPA process and fully reconsider its
analysis of impacts and alternatives for the Bypass and present that new information to the
public. N C Wildlife Fed’n, 677 F.3d at 605. The Court made clear that such “broad
dissemination of information mandated by NEPA” would allow “the public and other
government agencies to react to the effects of a proposed action at a meaningful time.” Id. at
601-02 (citing Robertson, 490 U.S. at 349). Despite this clear ruling that the decisionmaking
480 Heather Smith, Boggs Paving holds bypass rally inquiry, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Dec. 7, 2013), Attachment 224;
NCDOT, Public Hearing Notice, NCDOT to Hold Public Hearings Dec. 9, 10, & 11 for the Proposed Monroe
Connector/Bypass Project which will Provide a Controlled Access Toll Road from I-485 In Mecklenburg County to
U.S. 74 Near Marshville, Attachment 219.
481 Monroe Bypass Constructors, Union County supporters of the Monroe Bypass host free community BBQ and
rally, Press release (Dec. 2013), Attachment 16.
482 NCDOT Bypass Suporter [sic] BBQ sign, Attachment 6C; NCDOT Bypass Suporter [sic] sign-ing table featuring
Janie Auret, Attachment 225.
483 Monroe Bypass Constructors, Union County supporters of the Monroe Bypass host free community BBQ and
rally, Press release (Dec. 2013), Attachment 16.
484 Keep Union County Moving, Facebook post (Dec. 9, 2013), Attachment 226.
485 Heather Smith, Boggs Paving holds bypass rally inquiry, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (Dec. 7, 2013), Attachment 224.
77
process must remain open until NEPA’s requirements had been fulfilled NCDOT has moved
forward treating the NEPA process as a mere paper exercise to justify a decision “already made.”
40 C.F.R. § 1502.2(g).
A. Public Statements Assume Predetermined Outcome
In public statements following the Fourth Circuit’s ruling, NCDOT made several public
statements regarding its renewed NEPA review of the project, regularly asserting that it would
result in no change in the outcome of the decisionmaking process.486 In June 2012, SELC wrote
to both NCDOT and FHWA to express our clients’ concerns that such statements suggested that
any reconsideration of alternatives and impacts would be nothing more than an empty formality,
rather than the full public re-analysis required by both NEPA and the Fourth Circuit.487
Yet such statements have continued, with the effect of encouraging local stakeholders to
believe the Monroe Bypass a foreordained reality. For example, as Sharon Rosché, then the
president of the Union County Chamber of Commerce, has explained that local stakeholders
such as the Chamber’s Board of Directors and other locally elected officials “assume[]”
construction of the Monroe Bypass “is going to happen based on what the Secretary of
Transportation reported to us.”488 She went on to say that “they consider the dialog [sic] about if
it should happen closed.”489 NCDOT has also continued to assure citizens that the agency will
build the Monroe Bypass, responding to citizen emails in order “to convey the Department’s
commitment to deliver this much needed project,” and to assure citizens that NCDOT is
“working diligently to address the remaining issues in order to build the project.”490
NCDOT has also been publically planning other activities along U.S. 74 as if
construction of the Bypass was guaranteed. For example, NCDOT staff have regularly indicated
that the planned superstreet installations throughout Indian Trail, which were originally
recommended in the Stantec Study, will not include the other Stantec recommended superstreet
at Stallings Road because that intersection would be in the line of the Bypass were it to be
built.491 The transportation agencies have attempted to allege that they are not opposed to
alternatives for improving U.S. 74 that would compete with the Bypass,492 yet NCTA staff have
said exactly the opposite outside of the NEPA process, stating that the agency “would not be in
486 See, e.g., Sharon McCloskey, No Way Highway, NORTH CAROLINA LAWYERS WEEKLY (May 14, 2012),
Attachment 227; Heather Smith, Appeals court blocks bypass, ENQUIRER JOURNAL (May 2012), Attachment 228.
487 Letter from David Farren and Kym Hunter, SELC, to Scott Slusser, NCDOJ (June 13, 2012), Attachment 229;
letter from Farren and Hunter to Seth Wood, US DOJ (June 27, 2012), Attachment 230.
488 Email, from Sharon Rosche, Union County Chamber of Commerce, to Mayor Lynda Paxton, Stallings, RE: Your
resolution (March 3, 2013), Attachment 231.
489 Id.
490 Email from Jennifer Harris, NCDOT, to Edith Taylor (May 14, 2013), Attachment 232; email from Jennifer
Harris, NCDOT, to Tina Harris (March 21, 2013), Attachment 233 (“DOT is committed to moving forward with the
project and are working diligently to get the project back onto schedule”).
491 See, e.g., Email from Scott Cole, NCDOT, to Jennifer Harris, NCDOT, et al., RE: W-Project of Consideration
(June 21, 2013), Attachment 234.
492 DSFEIS, at A1-38, A1-40.
78
favor of changes to US-74 that would have a competing interest with the bypass,” as such
improvements would have a negative impact on toll revenue.493
Similarly, NCDOT officials have perpetuated a public misunderstanding regarding the
Monroe Bypass bonds, refusing to publically address the widely believed falsehood that the
bonds can be used to fund only the Monroe Bypass. For example, at the December 2013
CRTPO meeting, Stallings Mayor Lynda Paxton asked NCDOT Division 10 Engineer Louis
Mitchell what NCDOT was doing to correct the faulty impression that many legislators and
decisionmakers have that the bonds cannot be used on other projects.494 Mitchell gave the curt
reply that NCDOT was not responsible for educating the officials in Raleigh so they had not
made any attempts to clarify.495
B. Payments to Monroe Bypass Contractors
The transportation agencies have also continued to divert taxpayer money to private
contractors based on the assumption that the Bypass will be built. These payments have
continued since the Fourth Circuit’s ruling, before any local officials or other members of the
affected public have had an opportunity to review the new analysis required by the Court. Such
payments contravene the NEPA requirement that “[a]gencies shall not commit resources
prejudicing selection of alternatives before making a final decision.” 40 C.F.R. § 1502.2(f)
Moreover, NCDOT appears to have made payments for services beyond the preliminary design
work permitted by 23 C.F.R. § 771.113, again violated NEPA.
1. Premature contract with Monroe Bypass Constructors
In October 2011, SELC filed a notice to appeal our clients’ Monroe Bypass NEPA case
to the Fourth Circuit.496 At the same time two of our clients had an active case pending in the
North Carolina Office of Administrative Hearings challenging the 401 Clean Water Act permit
for the Bypass.497 Several weeks after our notice of appeal to the Fourth Circuit was filed —
November 21, 2011 — NCDOT signed a contract with MBC to construct the Monroe Bypass.498
The transportation agencies then issued a Notice to Proceed to MBC. Because we were
concerned that NCDOT might proceed with activities that would involve the divestment of
significant resources towards the Bypass project we asked NCDOT and FHWA to expedite the
Appeal in the Fourth Circuit.499 This request was denied.500
493 U.S. 74 Corridor Revitalization Study Stakeholder Interviews: Transportation Meeting Notes, at 4 (Jan. 18,
2012), Attachment 28.
494 Personal recollection of CRTPO delegate, Mayor Lynda Paxton of Stallings.
495 Id.
496 Notice of Appeal, NC Wildlife Fed’n v. NCDOT, No. 5:10-CV-476-D (EDNC Oct. 31, 2011), Attachment 235.
497 NC Wildlife Fed’n v. DENR, 11 EHR 2141 (2011) (voluntarily dismissed without prejudice), Attachment 236 and
Attachment 237.
498 Contract between NCDOT and the Monroe Bypass Constructors for the Monroe Bypass at 1, Attachment 238.
499 Plaintiff-Appellants Motion to Expedite in N.C. Wildlife Fed’n v. NCDOT (4th Cir) (Nov. 30, 2011) Attachment
239.
79
On May 3, 2012, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled that
NCDOT and FHWA violated NEPA in their review of the Monroe Bypass. Stressing the
important public decisionmaking process that NEPA was designed to protect, the
Court required the transportation agencies to conduct, and release for public review, a
new thorough analysis of the impacts of and alternatives to the Bypass. NC Wildlife Fed’n v.
NCDOT, 677 F.3d 596 (4th Cir. 2012).
2. Demobilization and readiness payments to Monroe Bypass
Constructors
About two weeks later on May 18, 2012, NCDOT gave a “stop work” order to the
MBC.501 Between the signing of the contract in November and the stop work order, the
constructors were paid for $35 million of work product.502
Following the stop work order, the Monroe Bypass Constructors demanded to be paid for
“demobilization” and for NCDOT to continue to pay monthly fees to keep certain staff on hand
for whenever the project restarted. The assumption at the foundation of these payments has been
that construction of the Bypass has only been delayed by the required additional NEPA process,
yet will be able to resume upon issuance of a new ROD, such that these monthly payments
would be less costly overall than fully demobilizing and then remobilizing at a later date.503
Even as recently as October 29, 2013, MBC requested that the transportation agencies commit to
payment of $9,192,500.00, what they claimed to be the balance of the mobilization costs
incurred by MBC, as such payment would “help MBC to stay poised for the issuance of an
unlimited notice to proceed.”504 These fees have continued to be negotiated since May 2012,505
the claims together totaling over $1.8 million as of November 2013, as detailed below.
500 Id.
501 Letter from James Triplett, MBC, to Shannon Sweitzer, NCTA, Engineered Ordered Suspension of Work (May
22, 2012), Attachment 124.
502 NCDOT spreadsheet totaling payments to MBC prior to stop work order, Attachment 240.
503 See, e.g., Notes from July, 13, 2012 Meeting, re: Monroe Bypass TA, Attachment 241; Letter from James
Triplett, MBS, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, Change Order Due to Engineer Ordered Suspension – Minimum
Maintenance Management (July 19, 2012), Attachment 242; NCDOT Comments and MBC Responses, Attachment
243.
504 Letter from James E. Triplett, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, RE: MBC Position (Oct. 29, 2013), Attachment
244.
505 Resumes for MBC Employees, Attachment 245; Additional Resumes for MBC Employees, Attachment 246;
Notes from July, 13, 2012 Meeting, re: Monroe Bypass TA, Attachment 241; Letter from James Triplett, MBC, to
Rick Baucom, NCDOT, Change Order Due to Engineer Ordered Suspension – Minimum Maintenance Management
(July 19, 2012), Attachment 242; NCDOT Comments and MBC Responses, Attachment 243.
80
Payments
Some Specific Cost Breakdown
Pay Period
Approved
Profit Labor Equipment
5/23/2012 -
6/30/2012 $ 469,471.71 $ 42,679.25 $ 214,203.34 $ 29,489.90
7/2012 $ 217,664.75 $ 19,787.70 $ 141,150.08 $ 20,397.08
8/2012 $ 133,002.96 $ 12,091.18 $ 46,350.90 $ 15,582.08
9/2012 $ 124,743.36 $ 11,340.31 $ 83,845.48 $ 14,821.30
10/2012 $ 136,363.63 $ 12,396.69 $ 78,011.82 $ 15,233.92
11/2012 $ 86,854.54 $ 7,895.87 $ 62,752.89 $ 13,851.38
12/2012 $ 71,004.34 $ 6,454.94 $ 43,129.15 $ 11,790.38
1/2013 $ 66,792.60 $ 6,072.05 $ 47,586.16 $ 12,834.38
2/2013 $ 81,168.71 $ 7,378.97 $ 60,652.94 $ 12,836.80
3/2013 $ 83,442.15 $ 7,585.65 $ 60,857.16 $ 13,499.34
4/2013 $ 67,950.10 $ 6,177.28 $ 47,819.44 $ 12,753.38
5/2013 $ 68,864.58 $ 6,260.42 $ 53,368.23 $ 13,235.92
6/2013 $ 48,072.42 $ 4,370.22 $ 34,303.40 $ 9,398.80
7/2013 $ 41,966.44 $ 3,817.86 $ 27,324.66 $ 9,653.92
8/2013 $ 40,876.64 $ 3,716.06 $ 27,193.90 $ 9,328.88
9/2013
$ 44,015.50
(amount claimed)
$ 4,001.41 $ 29,707.05 $ 9,021.84
10/2013 $ 44,913.18
(amount claimed) $ 4,083.02 $ 30,660.24 $ 9,869.92
11/2013 $
38,690.91 $ 29,588.07 $ 9,102.84
81
(amount claimed) $ 3,869.09
Total
$1,865,858.52
$ 169,977.97 $ 1,118,504.91 $ 242,702.06
Figure 5. Supplemental payments to MBC based on engineered ordered suspension claim-force
accounts.506 Please note that the figures for September-November 2013 are based solely on
MBC’s force account records.
As the force account records demonstrate, these payments include demobilization
payments to sub-consultants,507 MBC staff time (both project-oriented and idle time), equipment
costs, payments for utilities and space at the project office complex, and a 10% profit markup.
We are greatly concerned that such a large investment of resources towards maintaining the
contractors’ readiness to quickly remobilize necessarily predisposes NCDOT towards selecting
construction of the Monroe Bypass in direct contravention of NEPA and the court’s mandate to
keep the decisionmaking process open.
3. Preservation of the MBC bid
We understand that NCDOT believes it is important to continue paying the Monroe
Bypass Constructors LLC in order to preserve the low-bid secured in 2011, when the project was
in the midst of litigation.508 We first note that while the bid was well under the engineer’s
estimate, it was only about $34 million under the next highest bid.509 Though certainly a
difference in price, in the scheme of a $900 million project still under consideration, such
extreme efforts to preserve the MBC bid seem reckless, and have the effect of prematurely
locking the transportation agencies into an alternative before the NEPA process is complete.
This is particularly true given the poor quality of work that has generally been experienced from
Boggs Paving, as noted above.
Moreover, as detailed above, the transportation agencies also appear to currently be in the
process of negotiating an escalation price with the MBC.510 Negotiating the details of an
escalation price for construction of the Monroe Bypass strongly indicates that the agencies have
predetermined the results of their NEPA reanalysis, and are simply going through the motions.
Though the transportation agencies do appear to be under great pressure from the contractor to
506 See n. 407, above
507 In addition to the costs outlined in the force account records, see also, Letter from JT Peacock, RKK, to Jim
Triplett, MBC, RKK Invoice for May-June 2012 (June 28, 2012), Attachment 247; Letter from JT Peacock, RKK, to
Jim Triplett, MBC, Summary of Estimated Cost or Damages to RKK (Sept. 13, 2012), Attachment 128; Letter from
James Parker, Summit Design and Engineering, to James Triplett, MBC, Calculation of Cost for Summit CEI
Contract Termination (Sept. 7, 2012), Attachment 129.
508 See letter from Louis L. Mitchell, Division Engineer, NCDOT, to Lynda M. Paxton, Mayor of Stallings (Sept. 5,
2013), Attachment 248.
509 NCDOT, Bid Results for Monroe Connector/Bypass (Oct. 28, 2010), Attachment 249.
510 See discussion, at (V)(B)(6) above.
82
negotiate an escalation price, such outside pressure in no way alleviates the agencies’ NEPA
duty to perform a hard look at all alternatives.
Further, NCDOT’s actions appear to overlook the continued viability of the MBC’s bid.
As noted above, one member of the Monroe Bypass Constructors LLC, Boggs Paving, was
recently indicted in a major federal fraud scheme.511 Further, Styx Cuthbertson Trucking, Inc.,
another named co-conspirator in the Boggs indictment, was included as a subcontractor on the
Monroe Bypass bid.512 If found guilty, both Boggs Paving and Styx Cuthbertson would be
debarred from participating in any future federal contracts, and such a finding should raise the
issue of whether the transportation agencies should continue to move forward with the Monroe
Bypass contract. There is no mention of this indictment in the DSFEIS.
4. Payments for Aggregate Base Course
Following the Fourth Circuit’s decision, the Monroe Bypass Constructors informed
NCDOT that they had been stockpiling aggregate base course (“ABC”) for the Monroe Bypass at
the Lynches River Quarry, owned by an affiliate of MBC member Boggs Group called Buckhorn
Materials.513 MBC’s own consultant, Summit, estimated that the volume of ABC was
approximately 200,000 tons, while NCDOT’s consultant, Mulkey Engineering, estimated that the
volume of ABC was actually 25% less than MBC’s estimate.514 The MBC asked NCDOT to
purchase the entirety of the ABC on July 13, 2013.515 NCDOT appears to have agreed to
purchase 95% of the ABC at that time for $1.679 million as a “material pre-payment.”516
NCDOT did not negotiate a “buy back” provision in their agreement to purchase the ABC, and
when NCDOT later asked MBC to consider a “buy back” agreement, in the case the project did
not move forward, MBC refused explaining that neither they nor NCDOT had a use for the ABC
if the project does not go ahead.517
511 See United States v. Boggs Paving, Inc., No. 3:13CR204_MOC (W.D.N.C. July 24, 2013), Attachment 138; see
also FBI – Charlotte Division, Monroe Construction Company and Six Co-Conspirators Indicted for Government
Contract Fraud, press release (July 24, 2013), Attachment 250; Sharon Roberts, Monroe Bypass divides Union
County communities: DOT suspends work but continues payments to contractors, including one facing unrelated
felony charges, MECKLENBURG TIMES (Oct. 16, 2013), Attachment 251; Becky Bereiter, Contractor working on
Monroe Bypass faces fraud charges, NEWS 14 (July 25, 2013), Attachment 252.
512 Id.; see also excerpt from Monroe Bypass contract, Attachment 253.
513 Boggs Group, Buckhorn Materials website, available at http://www.boggspaving.com/buckhorn-materials,
Attachment 254
514 Email from Andy Heath to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, ABC Stockpile (July 10, 2012), Attachment 255.
515 NCDOT Comments and MBC Responses, Attachment 243.
516 Id. at 4, Attachment 243; see also Monroe Bypass Contract Extension/Termination Data, Attachment 130; Letter
from James Triplett, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, Initial/Informal Response to NCDOT/NCTA Comments for
Partial Demobilization and Minimum Maintenance Management Costs (July 30, 2012), Attachment 256.
517 Letter from James Triplett, MBC, to Rick Baucom, NCDOT, Initial/Informal Response to NCDOT/NCTA
Comments for Partial Demobilization and Minimum Maintenance Management Costs (July 30, 2012), Attachment
256; NCDOT Comments and MBC Responses, at 4, Attachment 243.
83
After NCDOT purchased the ABC, the MBC then demanded that NCDOT pay them to
either store the ABC or haul it to a prepared site adjacent to the Monroe Bypass right-of-way.518
MBC estimates that continuing to store the ABC at the Buckhorn Quarry would cost $670,000,
in addition to a $1,500 monthly rental fee, and a $30,000 maintenance fee.519 Alternatively,
MBC stated it would charge NCDOT $1.1 million for the hauling, citing the cost of $5.50 per ton
to haul 200,000 tons.520 The $30,000 annual maintenance fee would also apply to this section.521
It is unclear at this time how the ABC matter has been resolved; however, we note that
the purchase of such material following the rescission of the ROD, while in the midst of a full
NEPA review, necessarily constitutes the “commi[ssion of] resources prejudicing selection of
alternatives before making a final decision.” 40 C.F.R. §1502.2(f). Paying Boggs to haul the
materials to the construction site raised similar concerns. Further, the purchase of ABC is
exactly the type of activity expressly prohibited under 23 C.F.R. § 771.113(a), which forbids
“purchase of construction materials” until the Final EIS has been approved and the ROD has
been signed, and none of the limited exceptions listed under part (d).
5. Right-of-way acquisition and other activities in the Bypass footprint
We also note that since the court’s ruling NCDOT has continued to move forward with
activities to construct the Bypass. The agency has specifically given permission to the MBC to
carry out salvage activities to properties within the Bypass footprint.522 Surveying of Right-of
Way has continued unabated.523 Moreover, NCDOT has continued to purchase right-of-way
along the Monroe Bypass route – supposedly under hardship provisions,524 and has plans to
immediately begin efforts to restart full scale right-of-way acquisitions upon receipt of the
ROD.525 Upon receipt of the ROD, NCDOT has also indicated that they plan to engage in
acquisition preparation activities such as re-contacting all property owners and displacees,
updating appraisals previously received as needed, resuming negotiations on “priority” parcels,
ordering appraisals on remaining “priority” parcels not previously ordered, completing
Replacement Housing Payment calculations on “priority” parcels, ordering Asbestos Survey
518 Letter from Rich Moses, Buckhorn Materials, to Jim Triplett, MBC, RE: concerning hauling and storage of ABC
for MBC (June 20, 2013), Attachment 257.
519 Letter from Rich Moses, Buckhorn Materials, to Jim Triplett, MBC, ABC Stone Hauling versus stockpiling inside
Buckhorn Quarry (Aug. 27, 2012), Attachment 258.
520 Monroe Bypass Contract Extension/Termination Data, Attachment 130; Letter from Rich Moses, Buckhorn
Materials, to Jim Triplett, MBC, RE: concerning hauling and storage of ABC for MBC (June 20, 2013), Attachment
257.
521 Letter from Rich Moses, Buckhorn Materials, to Jim Triplett, MBC, ABC Stone Hauling versus stockpiling inside
Buckhorn Quarry (Aug. 27, 2012), Attachment 258.
522 Email from Joseph Jeffers, NCDOT, to Richard Baucom, NCDOT, RE: Acquired Monroe Parcels (July 22,
2013), Attachment 261.
523 DSFEIS A3-2.
524 See, e.g., Letter from Representative Dean Arp, NC House of Representative, to Sec. Tony Tata, NCDOT (May
21, 2013), Attachment 259.
525 NCDOT, Monroe Bypass R-2559/R-3329: Right of Way Acquisition Re-Start, Planning Document,
Attachment 260.
84
Reports on improved parcels acquired, ordering asbestos abatement, and ordering demolition of
improvements after asbestos abatement is completed.526 They also plan to “[c]ommence
normal acquisition activities on all remaining parcels” starting 30 days after the ROD issues.527
Other documents indicate even more detailed post-ROD plans. For example, within 90
days of the ROD being signed, NCDOT appears to intend to have finalized the purchase of all
parcels in the eastern three miles of the project’s footprint and 25-50% of the remaining parcels
in sections from the project’s eastern end to US 601, and plans to continue making full purchases
through the rest of the project’s footprint.528
Such detailed plans premature in the midst of a NEPA process that is intended to guide
the selection of a variety of possible alternatives, rather than justify a predetermined outcome.
VIII. COMBINED FEIS AND ROD
The DSFEIS states that NCDOT intends to follow the document with a combined Final
EIS and ROD. This is a new option made possible in MAP-21. Federal guidance, however,
shows that the Monroe Bypass NEPA process is ill-suited for such a combined document.529
As a primary matter, guidance states that if there are unresolved interagency
disagreements over issues or additional coordination activities that need to be resolved then a
combined FEIS and ROD is not appropriate.530 Several interagency issues remain with regard to
the Monroe Bypass. As noted in the EIS, NCDOT has not yet obtained concurrence from the
USFWS for its determinations under Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act. Moreover,
despite the fact that the resource agencies had significant concerns about NCDOT’s analysis,531
very few interagency meetings were held during the preparation of the DSFEIS. While usually
NCDOT would hold regular meetings with all resource agencies involved in the project, no such
meeting has been held since November of 2012, a full year prior the publication of this
DSFEIS.532 A mere three meetings with separate individual agencies have been held since that
time. As a result, it is likely that other resource agencies will have substantial questions
526 Id.
527 NCDOT, Monroe Bypass R-2559/R-3329: Right of Way Acquisition Re-Start, Planning Document, Attachment
260.
528 NCDOT, Monroe Bypass – Options / Timeline Bullet Points, Attachment 262.
529 FHWA, Interim Guidance on MAP-21 Section 1319 Accelerated Decisionmaking in Environmental Reviews,
available at http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/map21/guidance/guideaccdecer.cfm, Attachment 263.
530 Id.
531 See, e.g., DSFEIS C1-3, C1-36, C1-55, C1-73, C1-95, C1-170; email from Christopher A. Militscher, EPA, to
Christy Shumate, NCDOT, RE: Monroe Connector/Bypass (R-3329/R-2559) Update and Documentation (Feb. 28,
2013), Attachment 264.
532 DSFEIS at 5-4.
85
regarding NCDOT’s latest analysis. The publication of a separate FEIS is likely to help provide
an opportunity to “resolve such disagreements.”533
Importantly, federal guidance also states that a combined FEIS and ROD may not be
appropriate where there is “a substantial degree of controversy.”534 As shown above there is
certainly a substantial degree of controversy surrounding the Bypass. Our clients have already
pursued one round of litigation concerning the project, and continue to have significant concerns
about NCDOT’s analysis. Moreover, an increasing number of local elected officials and
residents are speaking out in opposition to the project.
Finally, an expert transportation planner, Dr. David Hartgen, has raised serious concerns
about the validity of the project’s traffic forecasts.535 “[W]here comments from responsible
experts or sister agencies disclose new or conflicting data or opinions that cause concern that the
agency may not have fully evaluated the project and its alternatives, these comments may not
simply be ignored.” Silva v. Lynn, 482 F.2d 1282, 1285 (1st Cir. 1973). As NCDOT itself relies
heavily on Dr. Hartgen’s work in the DSFEIS, we assume they believe him to be “responsible.”
His critique of NCDOT’s analysis requires NCDOT to produce either a new DSFEIS, or, at the
very least, a stand-alone FEIS with new updated traffic forecasts that can be reviewed by the
public, resource agencies and decisionmakers. Only then can any responsible decisionmaking
about this $900 million project occur.
We appreciate the opportunity to submit these comments at this time. Going forward, we
urge NCDOT to conduct a thorough analysis of the Monroe Bypass and alternative solutions
based on accurate data and taking into account changed circumstances. If it would be helpful to
discuss any of our concerns we are happy to meet with you at your convenience.
Sincerely,
Kym Hunter
Staff Attorney
Kate Asquith
Associate Attorney
533 FHWA, Interim Guidance on MAP-21 Section 1319 Accelerated Decisionmaking in Environmental Reviews, at
4, available at http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/map21/guidance/guideaccdecer.cfm, Attachment 263.
534 Id.
535 See generally Hartgen Report 2013.
86
CC (via e-mail and US mail):
Tim Gestwicki, NCWF
Dean Naujoks, Yadkin Riverkeeper
June Blotnick, Clean Air Carolina
David Hartgen, the Hartgen Group
Scott Slusser, NCDOJ
Secretary Tony Tata, NCDOT
Ned Curran, BOT
John Sullivan, FHWA
Brian Gardner, FHWA
Chris Militscher, USEPA
Liz Hair, USACE
Carl E. Pruitt, USACE
Marella Buncick, USFWS
Marla Chambers, NCWRC
Alan Johnson, NCDWR
Amy Simes, NCDENR
Bob Cook, CRTPO
Wyatt Dunn, Mayor of Stallings
Bobby G. Kilgore, Mayor of Monroe
Michael Alvarez, Mayor of Indian Trail
James P. Taylor, Mayor of Matthews
Kevin Pressley, Mayor of Hemby Bridge
John Ross, Mayor of Lake Park
Bill Braswell, Mayor of Wingate
Franklin Deese, Mayor of Marshville
Larry Simpson, Mayor of Unionville
Elizabeth Long, Mayor of Fairview
Frederick Becker, Mayor of Mineral Springs
Bill Deter, Mayor of Weddington
Joseph Pollino, Mayor of Marvin
Brad Horvath, Mayor of Wesley Chapel