My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Vantage to Pomona FEIS Index 34
>
Meetings
>
2018
>
12. December
>
2018-12-18 10:00 AM - Commissioners' Agenda
>
Vantage to Pomona FEIS Index 34
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
12/13/2018 1:49:29 PM
Creation date
12/13/2018 1:34:21 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Meeting
Date
12/18/2018
Meeting title
Commissioners' Agenda
Location
Commissioners' Auditorium
Address
205 West 5th Room 109 - Ellensburg
Meeting type
Regular
Meeting document type
Supporting documentation
Supplemental fields
Alpha Order
a
Item
Conduct a Closed Record Meeting to consider the Hearing Examiner's Recommendation for the Vantage to Pomona Transmission Line Conditional Use Permit (CU-18-00001)
Order
1
Placement
Board Discussion and Decision
Row ID
50108
Type
Conduct closed record hearing
Jump to thumbnail
< previous set
next set >
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
980
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Vantage to Pomona Heights Table of Contents <br />230 kV Transmission Line Project FEIS October 2016 <br /> PAGE xv <br />TABLE 4.8-11 VISUAL RESOURCE RESIDUAL IMPACT SUMMARY BY ACTION ALTERNATIVE AFTER <br />MITIGATION............................................................................................................... 4-223 <br />TABLE 4.9-1 SUMMARY OF MILEAGE BY COUNTY, CONSTRUCTION COSTS, AND LABOR FORCE BY <br />ACTION ALTERNATIVE .............................................................................................. 4-227 <br />TABLE 4.9-2 ASSUMED SPENDING ON LOCAL GOODS AND SERVICES FOR CONSTRUCTION ......... 4-229 <br />TABLE 4.9-3 SPENDING BY ITINERANT CONSTRUCTION AND OTHER VISITING PERSONNEL ......... 4-229 <br />TABLE 4.9-4 SUMMARY OF IMPACTS ON EMPLOYMENT, INCOME, VALUE ADDED, AND OUTPUT <br />USING IMPLAN ........................................................................................................... 4-232 <br />TABLE 4.9-5 CURRENT AND PROJECT LABOR INCOME BY ACTION ALTERNATIVES ..................... 4-233 <br />TABLE 4.9-6 SALES AND USE TAXES PAID TO COUNTIES .............................................................. 4-235 <br />TABLE 4.9-7 PROPERTY TAXES PAID TO COUNTIES AND STATE, BY ACTION ALTERNATIVE1 ...... 4-236 <br />TABLE 4.9-8 BLM ROW BY ACTION ALTERNATIVE..................................................................... 4-238 <br />TABLE 4.9-9 ANNUAL ROW RENTAL PAYMENTS TO BLM, 2015 ................................................. 4-238 <br />TABLE 4.9-10 SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACT SUMMARY OF ACTION ALTERNATIVES ........................... 4-239 <br />TABLE 4.10-1 POTENTIALLY AFFECTED CENSUS BLOCK GROUPSE BASED ON MINORITY <br />POPULATIONS ............................................................................................................ 4-246 <br />TABLE 4.10-2 POTENTIALLY AFFECTED CENSUS BLOCK GROUPS BASED ON POPULATIONS WITH <br />INCOMES BELOW POVERTY LEVEL ........................................................................... 4-247 <br />TABLE 4.10-3 EJ IMPACT SUMMARY OF ALTERNATIVES................................................................. 4-249 <br />TABLE 4.11-1 TOTAL GROUND DISTURBANCE (SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM) BY ACTION <br />ALTERNATIVE ............................................................................................................ 4-273 <br />TABLE 4.11-2 CULTURAL RESOURCES WITHIN 75-FEET OF THE ROUTE SEGMENT CENTERLINE (150- <br />FOOT CORRIDOR) BY ACTION ALTERNATIVES* ........................................................ 4-275 <br />TABLE 4.11-3 CULTURAL RESOURCES WITHIN 250-FEET OF ROUTE SEGMENT CENTERLINES (500- <br />FOOT CORRIDOR) BY ACTION ALTERNATIVE* .......................................................... 4-276 <br />TABLE 4.11-4 VISUALLY SENSITIVE CULTURAL RESOURCES WITHIN 250-FEET OF ROUTE SEGMENT <br />CENTERLINES BY ACTION ALTERNATIVE* ............................................................... 4-277 <br />TABLE 4.12-1 IMPACT SUMMARY OF ACTION ALTERNATIVES FOR WILDLAND FIRE ECOLOGY AND <br />MANAGEMENT ........................................................................................................... 4-288 <br />TABLE 4.13-1 ESTIMATED PROJECT EMISSIONS .............................................................................. 4-295 <br />TABLE 4.14-1 WATER RESOURCE SENSITIVITY CLASSIFICATION ................................................... 4-297 <br />TABLE 4.14-2 LINEAR MILES CROSSED AND DISTURBANCE TO WATER RESOURCES BY ROUTE <br />SEGMENT (ACRES) .................................................................................................... 4-303 <br />TABLE 4.14-3 IMPACTS TO WATER RESOURCES AND IMPACT SUMMARY OF ACTION ALTERNATIVES ... <br /> ................................................................................................................................... 4-313 <br />TABLE 4.15-1 GEOLOGY AND SOIL RESOURCE SENSITIVITY CLASSIFICATIONS ............................. 4-315 <br />TABLE 4.15-2 LONG-TERM DISTURBANCE TO GEOLOGIC AND SOIL RESOURCES BY ROUTE SEGMENT . <br /> ................................................................................................................................... 4-329 <br />TABLE 4.15-3 LONG-TERM DISTURBANCE TO GEOLOGIC AND SOIL RESOURCES BY ACTION <br />ALTERNATIVE ............................................................................................................ 4-335 <br />TABLE 4.16-1 INTERNATIONAL GUIDELINES FOR ALTERNATING CURRENT (AC) EMF LEVELS .... 4-338 <br />TABLE 4.16-2 STATE REGULATED AC EMF LEVELS ....................................................................... 4-338 <br />TABLE 4.16-3 SUMMARY OF USEPA GUIDELINES FOR AUDIBLE NOISE ......................................... 4-339
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.