Or. Admin. Code § 734-024-0015 - Definitions
As used in this division, unless the context otherwise requires:
(1) "Commission" means the
Oregon Transportation Commission.
(2) "Context sensitive and sustainable
solutions" means a philosophy that combines the principles of context sensitive
design and sustainability. A framework for implementing the goals that reflect
social values (community values; cultural, aesthetic, and historic resources;
and diversity), maintain safety and mobility, support economic prosperity,
achieve responsible stewardship of the natural environment, and facilitate
cost-effective solutions.
(3)
"Department" means the Oregon Department of Transportation.
(4) "Department Region" means the five (5)
established Regions of the Department responsible for development and delivery
of the Department's highway construction projects.
(5) "Director" means the Director of the
Oregon Department of Transportation.
(6) "Enhancement" means, with respect to the
environment, an opportunity to be considered, not a requirement. Enhancement
includes activities that go beyond the agreed-upon regulatory requirements
whether in planning, design, construction, maintenance, or
operations.
(7) "Environmental
Guiding Principles" means organizational values that help the Department
maintain a strong commitment to environmental stewardship. For highway
construction project design and construction activities, ODOT must consider the
following principles:
(a) Select, design, and
construct state highway construction projects in a context sensitive and
sustainable manner.
(b) Mitigate
impacts to natural and cultural resources, to the extent practicable.
(c) Consider cost-effective resource
enhancement opportunities to support natural and cultural resource
functions.
(d) Improve
environmental permitting processes to efficiently meet both the needs and
expectations of project delivery and the Department's environmental
commitments.
(e) Collaborate and
seek consensus with internal and external stakeholders to find balance between
resource impacts and achieving the purpose and need of highway construction
projects.
(f) Maintain
accountability and transparency for decisions and actions that affect the
resources entrusted to the Department and for the environmental outcomes that
result from Department projects.
(8) "Environmental performance standards"
means acceptable levels of environmental performance specified for project
activities.
(9) "Environmental
permit" means an approval or clearance that is needed to comply with an
environmental law or regulation.
(10) "Environmental permitting process" means
all the Department and regulatory agency activities and tasks that produce
environmental compliance products for state highway construction projects to
meet environmental laws, rules, and regulations.
(11) "Environmental stewardship" means the
responsibility for environmental quality while developing and managing the
transportation infrastructure. It means actively working to protect and enhance
our natural and cultural resources for current and future generations. It is
demonstrated through continuous improvement of environmental performance while
conducting the scope and purpose of ODOT's mission.
(12) "Foreign oil" means oil or its
derivatives that are imported to the United States from other
countries.
(13) "Highway," as
defined by ORS 801.305, means every public way,
road, street, thoroughfare and place, including bridges, viaducts and other
structures within the boundaries of this state, open, used or intended for use
of the general public for vehicles or vehicular traffic as a matter of
right.
(14) "Local Government
Highway Construction Projects Funded by the Department" means a public
improvement project on highways under the jurisdiction, control, and management
of local governmental bodies that are funded either in whole or in part with
either state or federal funds. Local government funding programs administered
by the Department include highway construction projects to which this rule
would apply.
(15) "Mitigation"
means:
(a) Avoiding the impact altogether by
not taking a certain action or parts of an action.
(b) Minimizing impacts by limiting the degree
or magnitude of the action and its implementation.
(c) Rectifying the impact by repairing,
rehabilitating, or restoring the affected environment.
(d) Reducing or eliminating the impact over
time by preservation and maintenance operations during the life of the
action.
(e) Compensating for the
impact by replacing or providing substitute resources or
environments.
(16)
"Programmatic agreement" means a document that specifies the terms of a formal,
legally binding agreement between a state Department of Transportation and
other state and/or federal agencies. A programmatic agreement establishes a
process for consultation, review, and compliance with one or more federal or
state laws.
(17) "Programmatic
permit" means a permit or other authorization that
(a) Covers a geographic or statewide area and
applies to a variety of projects, activities, or locales; or
(b) Covers certain activities within specific
size or impact thresholds. A programmatic approach may allow actions to proceed
without project-specific approval by each permit decision-making
agency.
(18) "State
highway construction project" means a public improvement project on state
highways under the jurisdiction, control, and management of the Department,
including interstate highways within the State of Oregon.
(19) "Sustainability," as defined by ORS
184.421, means using,
developing, and protecting resources in a manner that enables people to meet
current needs while providing for future generations to meet their needs, from
the joint perspective of environmental, economic, and community
objectives.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 184.616, 184.619, OL 2009, Ch. 865, sec 18
Stats. Implemented: OL 2009, Ch. 865, sec 18
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