Decision to Exempt Nationwide Permit Program to Help Speed Delivery of Transportation Projects
Feb 13, 2017
WASHINGTON - A Feb. 8 decision by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to exempt the Nationwide Permit (NWP) program from a Jan. 20 Executive Order freezing regulatory activity by federal agencies will help speed the delivery of transportation projects, the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) says.
The NWP program, which was reauthorized by the Obama administration on Jan. 6, saves time on transportation construction projects by freeing regulated industries from having to obtain individual permits for projects that “cause only minimal adverse environmental effects.” NWPs are usually obtained in an average of 10 months, while individual permits can take more than two years.
ARTBA has been involved in NWP program issues for decades, most recently supporting it in a comprehensive January 2017 report entitled, “Ripe for Reform: Federal Regulatory Issues Impacting Transportation Project Delivery,” which has been shared with leaders in the Trump administration and Congress. In the report, ARTBA states “an effective Nationwide Permit Program is essential in reducing regulatory delay and keeping transportation construction projects moving.”
On a related note, ARTBA in August 2016 urged the Corps of Engineers to consider the impacts of the controversial “Waters of the United States” (WOTUS) rule on NWPs. The WOTUS rule expands the jurisdiction of the Corps and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to virtually any wet area. If implemented, it would decrease the amount of activities that qualify for nationwide permits and increase the instances where individual permits are required.
Enforcement of the WOTUS rule is currently stayed by a federal appeals court ruling as part of ongoing litigation initiated by ARTBA and a number of other trade associations and states.
Established in 1902, ARTBA is the U.S. transportation design and construction industry’s “consensus voice” on regulatory and legal matters.
Follow us on social media: