The Indian Lookout Alliance v. John A. Volpe, as Secretary of Transportation

484 F.2d 11
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1973
Docket72-1620
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 484 F.2d 11 (The Indian Lookout Alliance v. John A. Volpe, as Secretary of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Indian Lookout Alliance v. John A. Volpe, as Secretary of Transportation, 484 F.2d 11 (8th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

This case concerns the scope and extent of an Environmental Impact Statement relating to the construction of highways intended to be funded in part by federal funds. In other words, what is the minimum appropriate length of a highway project to be environmentally considered under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. § 4321 et seq.l

The Iowa State Highway Department (ISHD) in 1965 adopted a plan for the construction of 1,877.94 miles of road throughout the state. This earlier plan was revised in February 1968 as a Freeway-Expressway System to compliment the existing system of federal and state roads. The plan was submitted to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) that same year for informational purposes. The location of the Freeways and Expressways set forth in the plan are not precisely located but delineated within a three-mile corridor. No approval has been requested of the FHWA for the system, and it is contemplated that only piecemeal segments of specific projects will be submitted for federal approval as funds are available for its implementation.

Iowa has requested federal funding of the northern seven-mile segment^ of Project F-518-4, part of proposed Freeway 518. The plaintiffs 1 are environmental groups and individuals interested in preserving the Indian Lookout area through which an extension of the seven-mile segment would extend. The plaintiffs maintain that an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 4332(2) (C) and (D) is required on the whole 1,877-mile system or, at the very minimum, on the entire Freeway 518 project, which embraces a route from the Missouri line at Keokuk, Iowa, north and westerly to the Minnesota line. This project generally follows present U.S. 218 with some significant departures and would also be renumbered U.S. 218 when completed. The F-518 project was so designed by Iowa to qualify for federal assistance under 23 U.S. C. § 101 et seq. 2

Project F-518-4 is a 14-mile segment bypassing Iowa City from Interstate 80 on the.west to U.S. 218 and continuing south on 218 for seven miles. Iowa at this time has only sought federal funding on the northern seven-mile segment of this 14-mile project. The southern seven-mile segment cuts directly through the Indian Lookout area of thickly wooded hills and bluffs overlooking the Iowa River valley, an area of scenic, geological, historical and archaelogical significance. The District Court for the Southern District of Iowa, Judge William C. Stuart footnote. 3 at 13 required the Environmental Impact Statement to include the entire 14-mile project, but held that to require an Environmental Impact Statement over the entire system or even for Freeway 518 would be highly impractical. 3

*14 The plaintiffs maintain that since the Freeway-Expressway System plainly contemplates the completion of F-518 as a whole and the completion of the 1,877-mile system with at least partial federal funding, the construction of F-518 and the entire 1877-mile system constitutes a “major federal action” pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 4332(2) (C) & (D). 4 Further, to allow environmental impact statements to be filed as construction proceeds in a piecemeal fashion, thus limiting the impact and scope of an environmental analysis to relatively small segments under construction, would result in ignoring the environmental impact of the entire system, in determining its ultimate effect on the environment, and in weakening the consideration of alternatives. An added factor is injected into the problem in that the construction of a small segment after a limited impact statement could set the course or pattern for a considerable portion of the system so that little flexibility would be left in the later stages of the system’s implementation, and, therefore, no consideration of the environmental impact of the entire plan would ever have .been made. As pointed out, the Environmental Impact Statement filed only embraced the northern seven-mile segment of F-518-4.

We are confronted with a preliminary question of when the building of F-518 or of the entire 1,877-mile system constitutes major federal action so as to make NEPA applicable. Undoubtedly, the federal financing of four-lane divided .highways, which are designed and built by state highway departments, constitutes “major federal action,” but there is a difference of opinion as to when and at what point in planning or construction, the project, either considered as a whole or in segments, becomes a federal action.

The defendants contend that a highway project is not “federal” until the FHWA grants location approval, where *15 as the plaintiffs contend that a project is “federal” prior to location approval, because location approval must be preceded by a public hearing pursuant to 23 U.S.C. § 128(a) and preparation of a draft Environmental Impact Statement, as required by FHWA pursuant to PPM 9 0-1. 5

Since a major highway system is an ongoing continuing octopus of concrete and asphalt ribbons covering continuously more and more of the available land area of a state, yet necessary in significant respects to meet the transportation needs of our country, the highway problem and how is it to be considered and implemented under NEPA requires special consideration. It is not akin to a single project such as a bridge, dam, arsenal, or even a federal complex. It has unique characteristics, being not only statewide in scope, but interstate and international since these highway routes run throughout the country and even into foreign countries.

In considering when the requirements of NEPA become applicable to highway projects, it is helpful to set forth generally how the Federal-Aid Highway Program is administered. 6 The Federal-Aid Highway Act, 23 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. requires a state highway department to obtain two federal approvals in order to be reimbursed for project costs; program approval 7 and plans, specification, and estimates (PS&E) approval. 8

In addition to the above statutory approvals, FHWA regulations and PPM 20-8 call for three additional approvals. 23 C.F.R. § 1.12 (1972) provides: “No work shall be undertaken on any Federal-aid project, nor shall any project be advertised for contract, prior to authorization thereof by the Administrator.” PPM 20-8, supra

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484 F.2d 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-indian-lookout-alliance-v-john-a-volpe-as-secretary-of-ca8-1973.