S-3284-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
What it does
This bill would allow large transit agencies — those serving urbanized areas with populations over 200,000 that can demonstrate legal, technical, and financial capacity — to take over from the federal government the responsibility of determining whether transit projects qualify as "categorical exclusions" under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Categorical exclusions are a class of actions that have been found to have no significant environmental impact and therefore do not require a full environmental assessment or environmental impact statement. The bill would formalize this transfer through memoranda of understanding between the Secretary of Transportation and each participating transit agency, with oversight, monitoring, and termination provisions built in.
Who benefits
Large urban transit agencies (those serving cities over 200,000) that would gain faster project delivery by handling their own routine environmental reviews. Commuters and transit riders in major cities who could see reduced delays in transit construction and upgrades. Local governments and urban planners who depend on transit expansion timelines. Construction and engineering firms that contract with transit agencies and benefit from faster project approvals. Taxpayers if administrative efficiency reduces project costs. Federal Department of Transportation staff who would be relieved of routine categorical exclusion determinations.
Who is hurt
Smaller transit agencies serving areas under 200,000 that are ineligible and would remain subject to the existing federal review process, potentially creating a two-tier system. Environmental advocacy groups and community organizations that currently rely on federal NEPA oversight as a check on transit projects. Residents near proposed transit projects who may perceive local agency review as less independent than federal review. Federal agency staff whose roles may be reduced. Tribal governments, who are explicitly carved out — the bill preserves government-to-government consultation with Indian Tribes at the federal level, meaning tribes retain a federal point of contact but may face a more complex process when both federal and local responsibilities are split.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that NEPA categorical exclusion reviews for routine transit projects — such as station upgrades, track maintenance, or bus facility improvements — are well-understood, low-impact activities that do not require federal agency involvement to ensure environmental compliance. They contend that large transit agencies with established legal and technical capacity are better positioned than a distant federal bureaucracy to make timely, accurate determinations about local conditions, and that similar delegation models already exist in the highway program under 23 U.S.C. § 327, where states have successfully assumed NEPA responsibilities. Faster project delivery, they argue, means more transit capacity sooner, reducing congestion and emissions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that shifting environmental review responsibility to the very agencies seeking project approval creates a structural conflict of interest, since transit agencies have a financial and institutional incentive to classify projects as categorically excluded rather than subject them to fuller scrutiny. They contend that categorical exclusions can be misapplied — cumulative impacts of multiple "routine" projects can be significant — and that removing federal oversight eliminates an independent check that has historically caught environmental and community impacts that local agencies overlooked. Critics also note that the bill's liability transfer provision, making agencies "solely responsible," may deter smaller or less-resourced agencies from participating while concentrating power in the largest urban systems.
Constitutional context
The bill operates under Congress's Commerce Clause authority (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) to regulate interstate transportation infrastructure and delegate administrative responsibilities to sub-federal entities. The delegation of federal environmental review authority to transit agencies — which are then "deemed to be a Federal agency" for purposes of the relevant laws — raises questions under the Nondelegation Doctrine (Art. I, §1) and the post-Loper Bright framework: courts will now independently assess whether the statutory language in NEPA and Title 49 clearly authorizes this type of sub-delegation to non-federal entities, without deferring to the Secretary of Transportation's interpretation.
Checks and balances
The executive branch (Secretary of Transportation) gains flexibility to delegate federal environmental review authority, but is checked by mandatory memoranda of understanding, public notice and comment requirements, performance monitoring, and the ability to terminate delegations; federal courts retain jurisdiction over compliance through the transit agency's consent to federal court jurisdiction in the MOU.
Historical precedent
The Surface Transportation Project Delivery Program (23 U.S.C. § 327) established a similar model allowing states to assume federal NEPA responsibilities for highway projects, and has been in operation since the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act of 2005.