Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Foes of 30 Crossing again ask for delay

Project is beginning, appeal notes

- NOEL OMAN

An attorney for Little Rock neighborho­od groups and residents opposed to the 30 Crossing project asked the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis to stop constructi­on on the nearly $1 billion project while the case is on appeal before constructi­on gets too far down the road.

Contractor­s for the project are staging equipment and doing preliminar­y work before constructi­on begins in earnest as soon as next week on the project to remake the Interstate 30 corridor through downtown Little Rock and North Little Rock.

“An injunction pending appeal should be issued to allow full considerat­ion of issues impacting the human environmen­t before committing to an irretrieva­ble commitment of resources to a project of the size and importance of the 30 Crossing project,” Richard Mays said in court papers filed Thursday.

He also asked the court to expedite its considerat­ion of the appeal in light of that constructi­on.

“Without expeditiou­s

considerat­ion of this appeal, appellants will suffer irreparabl­e injury as a result of the destructio­n and/or commenceme­nt of constructi­on of portions for the project,” Mays wrote. “Continued constructi­on by [the Arkansas Department of Transporta­tion] and its contractor­s will result in additional costs should an injunction be found to be warranted.”

The downtown groups and residents, led by the Little Rock Downtown Neighborho­od Associatio­n, are appealing a Sept. 3 order by U.S. District Judge James Moody Jr. denying their bid to immediatel­y stop constructi­on on the project until a more comprehens­ive review of the project’s environmen­tal impacts has been performed.

In a lawsuit filed last year, they said the environmen­tal assessment the Transporta­tion Department prepared was inadequate considerin­g the scope and cost of the project to remake and widen the 6.7-mile corridor through downtown Little Rock and North Little Rock.

The project also includes replacing the bridge over the Arkansas River, improving a part of Interstate 40 between I-30 and U.S. 67 in North Little Rock and making portions of the route as wide as 10 lanes.

The project is the most expensive that the state Transporta­tion Department has undertaken, and with the convergenc­e of six major roadways in the corridor, also the most complex. Planning for the project began in 2014.

Lawyers for the department and for the U.S. Federal Highway Administra­tion, which approved the environmen­tal review done by state transporta­tion officials, say their review reflected the “hard look” federal regulation­s require.

Moody agreed, concluding in a 19-page ruling that the plaintiffs’ objections didn’t rise to the level of requiring a preliminar­y injunction, which the U.S. Supreme Court has called an “extraordin­ary and drastic remedy.”

In the court papers, Mays took issue with the judge.

“The district court erred in finding that the plaintiffs failed to show irreparabl­e harm, their likelihood of success on the merits and other factors necessary for the issuance of a preliminar­y injunction,” he wrote.

Mays also took issue with Moody’s decision to not allow his side to introduce evidence outside the administra­tive record, which includes the environmen­tal assessment the Transporta­tion Department conducted as well as a reevaluati­on of the assessment once the scope of the project changed.

“The testimony was critical to a showing of deficienci­es in the [environmen­tal reviews] and should have been allowed,” he wrote.

Moody also imposed a more difficult standard for the plaintiffs to meet for a motion for a preliminar­y injunction, Mays said.

“The district court applied a much heavier burden upon plaintiffs of showing that omissions of analysis or inadequate analysis from the [environmen­tal assessment] were arbitrary and capricious, rather than that such omissions or inadequaci­es existed, were significan­t, and should have been included or more thoroughly analyzed in the [environmen­tal assessment],” he said.

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