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Calais, ME-St. Stephen,NB Border Crossing Project A Case Study
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Introduction Planning, coordination, and permitting Considerations during Design Considerations during Construction Lessons learned Agenda
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New crossing discussed for about 30 years 8 th busiest commercial crossing along the U.S. / Canadian border Annual traffic – 2.9 million vehicles 7,500 AADT including 550 heavy trucks Delays inbound to the U.S. can be up to 2 hours Truck traffic entering Maine has doubled since NAFTA implementation (70,000 to 140,000 annually) Introduction
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Maine and New Brunswick DOTs share the costs of bridge design/construction on a 50/50 basis MaineDOT: Bridge design lead MaineDOT: Project Manager for the bridge construction portion Project Management
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FHWA – lead federal agency MaineDOT GSA – cooperating agency U.S. Department of Homeland Security Customs and Border Protection U.S. Border Patrol U.S. Department of State Agencies — U.S.
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New Brunswick Department of Transportation Transport Canada Canada Border Services Agency Canada Revenue Agency Citizenship & Immigration Canada Foreign Affairs Canada Royal Canadian Mounted Police Agencies — Canada
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Four Alternatives including no action considered Alternatives 2A and 3 deemed viable Chosen: Alternative 3 Calais Industrial Park
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Preliminary design and NEPA compliance – started 1999 FHWA issued FONSI in July 2002 Final design and permitting July 2002 – September 2006 Construction Begins NBDOT - Spring 2006 MaineDOT – Spring 2007 GSA and CBSA - 2007 Open to traffic - Fall 2008 Timeline
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This Last Year… January 2006 – Reevaluation of 2001 Environmental Assessment May 2006 – Army Corps of Engineers request for details June 2006 – Maine DOT replies June 2006 - US Coast Guard Approval Sept 2006 – Army Corps of Engineers approval Project tendered September 27, 2006
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Maine and New Brunswick circulated studies at same time Changes in process (New Brunswick was very flexible) Public Involvement 9 PAC meetings, 2 public meetings, and 1 formal public hearing MaineDOT – GSA enter into a cost reimbursement agreement for NEPA Planning
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Partnership, respect for others’ process, flexibility International Stakeholders workshops Every 6 months to 1 year throughout the process International partnering agreement Master schedule discussed and developed Good forum for troubleshooting problems like labor issues Communication between workshops Find ways to maintain national focus for future funding purposes TBWG, BSPC, etc. International Coordination
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Required for an international bridge Cooperating agency under NEPA Bridge permit 40% plans required Approved Presidential Permit is also required Long lead time is necessary Permitting — Coast Guard Bridge Permit
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U.S. Department of State 2003-2005 No precedent for the northern border First one in at least 30 years Guidelines for complete application State Dept. distributes application to at least 55 agencies for comment and determinations Prepared and circulated own EA and FONSI as part of their process as well Permitting – Presidential Permit
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Transport Canada – New Brunswick agreement This project spurred a new Canadian equivalent of the U.S. Presidential Permit process International Boundary Commission approval International Joint Commission or exchange of diplomatic notes required between Foreign Affairs Canada and U.S. State Department MaineDOT - New Brunswick agreement to construct and reimburse Treaties and Approvals
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Inspection facility – increased in size from 20 to 50 acres. (Post 911) MaineDOT – GSA cost reimbursement agreements Advance notice for materials and people crossing the border Buy America clause for steel MaineDOT – NBDOT funding and management agreement Bridge contractor ‘fact sheet’ and prequalification Coordination between GSA and MaineDOT of design issues; staging issues, exchange of plans, etc. Design Considerations — U.S.
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Labor and requirements for foreign workers Human Resources Development Canada-Canadian Labor Market Opinion CBSA – immigration Maine Dept of Labor Security and background check Ideal worker – dual citizenship, no criminal record Considerations During Construction - Labor
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Security during construction U.S. Border Patrol RCMP Movement of workers; must be able to cross border within project limits No precedent on this issue Considerations During Construction - Security
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Considerations During Construction - Taxes U.SCanada Customs DutiesEXEMPT All international bridge projects are exempt Exempt – but imports need NAFTA certificate of origin Sales TaxEXEMPTNone Value Added Tax (GST/HST) None6% GST collected at border 14% HST Income Tax Withholding Non-resident withholding NB responsible for 15% non-residents
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Partnerships among agencies on both sides of the border that are built to last Respect for others and stay flexible Communicate and communicate some more Combine NEPA/Presidential Permit Process as much as possible Maximize the use of the cooperating agencies Taxation issues for international bridge projects are complex Lessons Learned
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Project Status International Bridge Construction (11.58 Million) March 2007 – Summer 2008 U.S. Inspection Facility Summer 2007 – Fall 2008 US Route 1 (9.33 Million): April 2007 – Summer 2008 NB Route 1: Spring 2007 Canadian Inspection Facility Summer 2007 – Fall 2008
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Calais, ME-St. Stephen,NB Border Crossing Project Calais, ME-St. Stephen,NB Border Crossing Project
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