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Georgia DOT Section 106 Programmatic Agreement Addresses Environmental Procedures for Construction Projects

Left to right: Walter Rabon, Administrative Services Director, GA DNR; Lt. Col Stephen Peterson, PE, PMP, Deputy District Commander, US Army Corp of Engineers; Moises Marrero, Division Administrator, FHWA; and Russell McMurry, Commissioner, GDOT.
Left to right: Walter Rabon, Administrative Services Director, GA DNR; Lt. Col Stephen Peterson, PE, PMP, Deputy District Commander, US Army Corp of Engineers; Moises Marrero, Division Administrator, FHWA; and Russell McMurry, Commissioner, GDOT.
ATLANTA, GA — An agreement signed among four agencies will streamline the completion of certain approval processes for historic preservation during highway construction in Georgia. This first-of-its-kind Section 106 Programmatic Agreement (PA) will set the framework to encompass all types of transportation improvement projects from major widenings to new location bypasses.

“This is a positive step forward in improving Georgia DOT’s ability to efficiently deliver quality projects that are fully compliant with environmental standards,” said Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) Commissioner Russell R. McMurry, PE.

Since December 2017, GDOT has worked with Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the Savannah District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP), the Georgia State Historic Preservation Office (GA SHPO) and Georgia’s 20 federally recognized American Indian Tribes to develop a programmatic approach for transportation projects throughout the state. Numerous meetings resulted in multiple drafts. The public reviewed and submitted comments on the final version.

“Section 106 review was conducted by FHWA, GDOT and the GA SHPO under 12 different agreement documents drafted between 1987 and 2015, each addressing a different aspect of Section 106 review for federally funded projects,” McMurry said. “Previous PAs focused on specific resource type (Historic Streetcars) or smaller project subset (Emergency Relief Projects) and have not included USACE.”

This PA was necessitated by GDOT’s growing program that uses both federal and state funds and includes numerous projects subject to Section 106 required by FHWA and the USACE for project completion. The previous agreements did not include the USACE, which resulted in reintroducing projects for new rounds of approvals. This delayed project delivery on state funded projects requiring a USACE permit. The PA streamlines the Section 106 process by putting in place procedures that all signatories will follow.

“With the breadth of Georgia DOT’s multi-billion-dollar program, resource agencies and American Indian tribes can expect consistency from GDOT regardless of FHWA or USACE involvement because the Section 106 Programmatic Agreement establishes one process and the agreed upon level of documentation,” McMurry said.

Other key aspects and benefits of the new PA include:

  • Federally recognized American Indian tribes with ancestral homelands in Georgia have been active participants in development of the PA. Currently, the Muscogee (Creek) Nation has elected to sign as an invited signatory and the Cherokee Nation and Catawba Indian Nation have elected to sign as concurring parties to the agreement.
  • The PA delegates routine Section 106 activities to GDOT Cultural Resources professionals and allows for GDOT to assist in coordination with federally recognized American Indian tribes.
  • The PA solidified and clarified how the agencies conduct tribal consultation, project review, post review discoveries and identification and treatment of human remains in practical application.
  • The PA addresses all resource types, both historic and archaeological, and ensures collaboration and efficiency in documentation where applicable.
  • USACE will adopt the benefits of streamlining efforts previously established between GDOT, FHWA, ACHP and SHPO.

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