EPA: The Circ Highway Too Destructive of Vermont Wetlands

Jan 5, 2011 by  | Bio |  2 Comment »

In a boost for clean air and clean water, the mismanaged and ill-conceived Circ highway planned for Vermont’s Chittenden County faces a potentially fatal blow.  The head of EPA in New England described the project as environmentally devastating.

“Even if the mitigation were fully implemented, the proposed project would cause or contribute to significant degradation of waters of the U.S. in violation” of federal law and should not be permitted, according to the EPA.

The EPA concluded the highway “will have a substantial and unacceptable impact on aquatic resources of national importance,” in that December letter to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, a more forceful follow-up to the original letter and assessment EPA sent on November 15.  EPA makes a strong argument against issuing the environmental permits needed for the largest single destruction of wetlands in Vermont’s history.

EPA’s objections are bolstered by the support of a diverse coalition of organizations in Vermont, including CLF.  If the Corps issues permits despite these objections the EPA could block those permits with a veto.

CLF continues to support cleaner, lower cost and more effective solutions in place of a new highway that damages or eliminates hundreds of acres of wetlands, increases sprawl development, contributes to global climate change, wastes limited public funds and fails to meet modern transportation needs.   At a cost of tens of millions of dollars, the Circ only saves four minutes of travel time and offers less relief from traffic congestion in the areas most troubled traffic spots compared to cleaner and lower cost solutions that modernize existing roadways.

2 Responses to “EPA: The Circ Highway Too Destructive of Vermont Wetlands”

  1. Tony Redington

    The consultant for VAOT ironically is the same lead consultant on the disastrous Keene Bypass, killed by local efforts and a CLF court victory involving wetlands! NHOT gave up and the first of three roundabouts in place will give better service and safety at about at less than a quarter of the original grandiose design.

    VAOT and the consultant had to cook the books with inflated population and travel growth numbers…the 2010 Census numbers released last month confirmed the reality of almost no growth for the State and target area, consistent with the year-to-year estimates available to all from Census. Vermont peak age driving population..25-65..will suffer slight decline 2000-2030, a long term Census projection where total population is substantially higher 2000-2010 than the real ones just announced. Car miles of travel growth…not that far different than other NE states…grew 17percent in the 90s, high single numbers 2000-2010, and probably about zero in the future. Figures do not lie, but liars can figure!

  2. whome

    Take a good long look at the Mississippi, it’s entire length, it’s basin and it’s tributary system to get an idea of the quality of care rendered it by the Army Corps of Engineers especially regarding the impact of degraded wetlands areas.