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Who's Involved?
The Columbia River Crossing project involves relationships
and coordination among a variety of state and local agencies in
both Washington and Oregon, in partnership with the federal government.
Listed below are the groups involved and a short description of
their role in the project.
In addition to these groups, the project will
rely on the involvement of individuals, organizations, and businesses
to provide input to the decision making process.
Project
Development Team
Working Groups
Task Force
Project Sponsors Council
Federal Highway and Transit
Administrations
Interstate Collaborative Environmental Process (InterCEP)
Project Development Team
The Project Development Team is responsible for
the day-to-day management, development, and delivery of the Columbia
River Crossing Project. It includes staff from sponsoring agencies
(primarily WSDOT and ODOT) and is supported by contracted staff.
Working Groups
Working Groups are being formed to address specific
project issues as they arise. Groups are expected to include specialists
from agency and consultant staff as well as other organizations.
The project anticipates working groups to address public involvement,
freight issues, economic development, travel forecasting, engineering,
specific environmental disciplines, and financing. Other working
groups may also be formed as needed. Continue reading about Working
Groups.
Task Force
The 39-member Task Force is comprised of leaders
from a broad cross section of the Washington and Oregon communities
interested in the project, including public agencies, businesses,
civic organizations, neighborhoods, freight, commuter, and environmental
groups. The Task Force will provide recommendations regarding the
project to the Project Sponsors Council. Continue reading about
the Columbia River Crossing Task Force.
Project Sponsors Council
The Project Sponsors Council will receive recommendations from the Task Force, public input, and
advice from the Project Development Team and concur on whether to move forward based on those recommendations. It includes executive
staff or elected officials from:
- WSDOT
- ODOT
- RTC
- Metro
- C-TRAN
- TriMet
- City of Vancouver
- City of Portland
- FTA and FHWA (ex-officio)
Federal Highway Administration and
Federal Transit Administration
The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and
Federal Transit Administration (FTA) are co-lead agencies for the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process that governs proposed
actions requiring federal funding, federal permits, or federal approvals.
FHWA and FTA will sign the Environmental Impact Statement and the
Record of Decision, affirming the selection of project alternatives,
and allowing it to move forward into design and construction.
Interstate Collaborative Environmental Process (InterCEP)
The Interstate Collaborative Environmental Process (InterCEP) was
established to coordinate and streamline the regulatory reviews
and permitting functions of the participating agencies. Members
include representatives from key national and state agencies responsible
for protecting the region's air, water, wildlife and cultural resources.
This committee must formally concur on project decisions affecting
their areas of concern at major project milestones. In addition,
the committee provides advice and consultation regarding the NEPA
process to the Project Development Team at formal concurrence points.
They will use a "streamlining" approach patterned after Washington's Signatory Agency Committee processes
and Oregon's Collaborative Environmental and Transportation Agreement on Streamlining.
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