The Denver Post

Right-of-way permit in Utah gets pulled

- By The Associated Press

The U.S. Forest Service on Wednesday withdrew its approval of a right-of-way permit that would have allowed the constructi­on of a railroad project through about 12 miles of roadless, protected forest in northeaste­rn Utah.

The decision affecting the Ashley National Forest follows a U.S. appeals court ruling in August that struck down a critical approval involving the Uinta Basin Railway, a proposed 88-mile railroad line that would connect oil and gas producers in rural Utah to the broader rail network. It would allow them to access larger markets and ultimately sell to refineries near the Gulf of Mexico.

“It’s a victory for the Colorado River and nearby communitie­s that would be threatened by oil train accidents and spills, and for residents of the Gulf Coast, where billions of gallons of oil would be refined,” said Ted Zukoski, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, one of several groups that has sued over the project.

He vowed to fight any attempt to build the railroad. An attempt to reach the Seven County Infrastruc­ture Coalition, which is spearheadi­ng the project, was unsuccessf­ul Wednesday evening.

In the August ruling, the Washington, D.c.-based appeals court decided that a 2021 environmen­tal impact statement and opinion from the federal Surface Transporta­tion Board were rushed and violated federal laws. It sided with environmen­tal groups and Colorado’s Eagle County, which had sued to challenge the approval.

The court said the board had engaged in only a “paltry discussion” of the environmen­tal impact the project could have on the communitie­s and species who would live along the line — as well as the “downline” communitie­s who live along railroads where oil trains would travel.

“The limited weighing of the other environmen­tal policies the board did undertake fails to demonstrat­e any serious grappling with the significan­t potential for environmen­tal harm stemming from the project,” the ruling stated.

The Forest Service’s decision Wednesday to withdraw its approval was based on the appeals court ruling, but Ashley National Forest Supervisor Susan Eickhoff said the agency could issue a new decision if deficienci­es in the environmen­tal impact statement are addressed.

If approved, the railroad would let producers, currently limited to tanker trucks, ship an additional 350,000 barrels of crude oil daily on trains extending for up to 2 miles.

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