Environmental groups oppose bridge replacement choice
|
For Immediate Release
August 28, 2007
Amy Pickle, SELC Attorney
919-967-1450
Melinda Pierson, SELC Communications Manager
919-464-7030
Chris Canfield, Audubon North Carolina Executive Director
919-929-3899
Groups ask for federal investigation of Bonner Bridge project
Violations of federal law will delay project’s completion
Chapel
Hill – The Southern Environmental Law Center and Audubon
North Carolina have asked the federal Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) to investigate whether or not the Bonner Bridge project, as laid
out by yesterday’s review board decision, will violate federal
law. Such a violation will undoubtedly delay the project’s
ultimate completion.
“By
ignoring the critical questions about what to do with the ever-eroding
Highway 12 south of Oregon Inlet, state and federal agencies have
punted on the most serious and important questions surrounding Bonner
Bridge’s replacement. Not surprisingly, because the law requires
that the agencies address these issues, their tactic is likely to delay
the ultimate completion of the entire project” said Amy Pickle,
attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center.
The
agreement at yesterday’s meeting to move forward with the plan to
build a short bridge next to the existing Bonner Bridge – Phase
one of DOT’s plan – avoided answering if, how, and when
other phases of the project would be carried out. In order to comply
with the National Environmental Policy Act, those phases must include a
more reliable transportation alternative than the existing Highway 12.
Noting
that such alternatives are “problematic,” the agencies
would not commit to their ability to grant permits for any future
phases, and in fact, were not even able to identify what future phases
would include.
“It
is clearly impractical and illogical to pretend that the bridge and the
connecting road are separate issues,” said Chris Canfield,
executive director of Audubon North Carolina. “This
approach tries to pass on problems in a piecemeal fashion to future
decision-makers.”
The
National Environmental Policy Act requires that the replacement of
Bonner Bridge fulfill a stated purpose and need to provide continued
daily and emergency access from Bodie to Hatteras Island and to improve
the reliability of Highway 12 in light of future shoreline movement.
In a
stunning admission, the four agencies that made up the state and
federal review board concluded that the replacement of Bonner Bridge
with a short bridge built parallel to the existing bridge will not
provide the reliable daily and emergency access that it must in order
to meet the project’s stated purpose and need, as required by
NEPA.
“If
they’ve already conceded that the short bridge by itself will not
meet the needs of the project, and no one knows what subsequent phases
of the project will look like, what they will cost or when they will be
completed, how can yesterday’s decision result in anything but
further delay? We are hopeful that CEQ can prevent this train wreck and
get the process back on track,” said Pickle.
CEQ,
an independent agency that is charged with implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act, has the power to monitor a project for its
NEPA compliance and to ultimately stop projects that violate the
federal law.
A
repair project is expected to start this fall that will guarantee the
safety of Bonner Bridge for the next 10 years while a replacement
bridge is designed and constructed.
Audubon
North Carolina is the state office of the National Audubon Society,
representing 9 chapters and 10,000 members in the state. Audubon
focuses on conserving birds, other wildlife and the habitats we share
with them through science, education and collaborative approaches to
sound conservation policies.
|
|
|
|