ForConstructionPros.com

Construction News Article

   

Construction News

04-21-2009

ARTBA Sues EPA to Protect Transportation Construction Industry Firms from Morass of State-by-State Air Quality Rules


ARTBA

Washington, D.C. - Seeking to prevent the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from making a final determination that allows states to restrict or ban the use of certain heavy construction equipment under the Clean Air Act (CAA), the American Road & Transportation Builders Association Transportation Development Legal Advocacy & Education Center (ARTBA-TDLAEC) April 17 sued the federal agency.

EPA authorization of state preemption of the CAA could render unusable billions of dollars of construction equipment on jobsites nationwide, require contractors to purchase new or retrofitted equipment, and result in a morass of conflicting state-by-state regulations impacting transportation construction as well as a marked increase in the costs of infrastructure projects, ARTBA-TDLAEC said in a brief filed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit arguing the CAA does not allow state control levels.  The court has jurisdiction on CAA cases.

The lawsuit is the launch case for the ARTBA-TDLAEC, the only entity in the U.S. that exclusively focuses legal activities to help ensure that approved state, regional and local transportation plans and projects move forward expeditiously.  It monitors and becomes involved in environmental and business issues that have the potential to impact the planning, design and/or construction of transportation infrastructure projects.

"Whether it's building or maintaining public transit, high speed rail, interstate highways, city streets or bridges, every element of our transportation infrastructure network relies on heavy equipment," ARTBA Assistant General Counsel Nick Goldstein says.  "Amidst an economic recession, we should be taking every step to maximize the return on public infrastructure investment.  Permitting a hodge-podge of state rules - many far more restrictive and costly than others - complicates the ability of our industry to reduce congestion, improve infrastructure and add new transit, road and bridge capacity."

Due to the enormous expense of replacing the affected in-use off-road construction equipment - in some cases more than $1 million per machine - the cost of vital transportation and infrastructure projects will increase if EPA does not act to prevent states from enacting individual controls, the association's brief said. 

1 2 next
E-mail This StoryE-mail Article Print This StoryPrinter Friendly


Submit a Comment

Name: *
Subject:
Location:
  (display Email: )
 
 
Enter the characters you see in the image:
 
 
 
   
* = required
(comments will appear after this article, as well as on our Readers Respond Page)