Latest news with #NIRPC


Chicago Tribune
18-05-2025
- Politics
- Chicago Tribune
NIRPC balances Trump edicts, Northwest Indiana priorities for air quality
Trump administration edicts were woven like a thread through Thursday's Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission meeting as the commissioners weighed how to continue pursuing local governments' values without jeopardizing grants. Director of Transportation Tom Vander Woude ran through changes in an update of last year's Unified Planning Work Program, which outlines information about transportation spending. Among the language changes were removing tasks associated with climate change. And rather than referencing executive orders that relate to issues like environmental justice, the document now refers to the original legislation that prompted the executive orders that had been issued. President Donald Trump's flurry of executive orders so far this year have reversed previous presidential edicts aimed at preventing climate change or promoting diversity, equity and inclusion. Gary Councilwoman Lori Lathan, newly appointed to the commission, kick-started a discussion of how the agency can continue to push for things like air quality improvement without referring to climate change or otherwise running afoul of Trump's edicts. 'When they say advice, is that something that we're required to make those changes,' she asked. 'Do we have to do them? Yes, we kind of do,' Vander Woude said, because those federal agencies oversee grants. Various memos and formal communications with the U.S. Department of Transportation, all contracts and grant agreements have to comply with the new standards, he said. Latham asked why the NIRPC document approved Thursday would refer to the legislation instead of executive orders. The executive order related to environmental justice, for example, was rooted in civil rights legislation from the 1970s, Vander Woude said, so the document can refer to discrimination based on that legislation. Congress makes laws; executive orders deal with how agencies implement them but don't reverse the laws themselves. Regarding climate change, NIRPC will focus on air quality rather than climate change.e Under the Biden administration, there had been a movement for greenhouse gas analysis, but that since has been stopped by the Trump administration, so NIRPC and other agencies can't do that anymore, Vander Woude said. If organizations like NIRPC can't enact programs to protect constituents, who will, Beverly Shores Town Council President David Phelps asked. Lake County Surveyor Bill Emerson Jr., who chairs NIRPC's Environmental Committee, said a resolution proposed by his committee and unanimously adopted at the meeting addresses this issue. The resolution, on page 380 of a massive agenda packet for the meeting, noted that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency had announced the cancellation of over 400 grants, the effects of which are still being figured out. The resolution says NIRPC 'reaffirms its commitment to protecting and improving environmental quality of life in Northwest Indiana including, but not limited to, improving air quality including greenhouse gas reduction, community tree planting initiatives, brownfield redevelopment, environmental justice capacity planning and natural hazards readiness planning.' Vander Woude said even though the bulk of NIRPC's work involves channeling federal funds for local governments in Lake, Porter and LaPorte counties, the agency also serves as a council of governments. NIRPC can still pursue those activities without using federal funds to do so, Executive Director Ty Warner said. Impacts like resiliency, previously directly tied to climate change, can still be examined. 'The issues related to resiliency persist regardless of where they can be tied to climate change,' Vander Woude said. 'You can deal with the impact; you can't necessarily draw it back to that.' That's getting the job done without semantics getting in the way, Porter County Council President Andy Vasquez said. 'I think that's exactly what we're trying to do,' Vander Woude said. 'We can describe it in various ways, but ultimately it's about moving forward our vision, our values.' 'I think we're going to have to be creative if we're going to maintain our environmental justice and social justice focus,' Chesterton Councilman Jim Ton said. 'If you don't proceed with some of this, it's going to be gone forever.' That's focusing on the end result without attributing it to causes, Warner said. 'We're focusing on the end result, not any ideological issues.' NIRPC deals with local priorities as well as federal priorities, Vander Woude said. 'We're responsive to both.' 'I personally don't see substantial changes in the actual work being done,' he said. Lake County Councilman Randall Niemeyer urged the commission to focus on the nuts and bolts and stay out of the weeds on this issue. 'It's more window dressing than anything with the rhetoric,' he said. Focus on projects that have good results for the region, he said.


Chicago Tribune
22-04-2025
- General
- Chicago Tribune
Crown Point breaks ground on next phase of bike trail
Earth Day was on the calendar and in the mind of at least one participant at the groundbreaking held Tuesday for the next phase of the Veterans Memorial Bike Trail. Dale Brier, Deputy Director at Indiana Department of Natural Resources' Division of State Parks, spoke briefly at the ceremony held at the intersection of Grant and Monitor streets. Brier said he couldn't think of a more perfect day to celebrate the start of a new bike trail. 'Thanks to all participants. Happy Earth Day,' Brier said. This next bike trail phase, approximately one mile, will connect a section of the Crown Point trail that is already completed. The new trail will run east from the Erie-Lackawanna Trail along Summit Street and connect to the current Veterans Memorial Trail at Indiana Avenue and North Street, near the Sportsplex. The new trail is expected to be completed by this fall, city officials said. Crown Point Mayor Pete Land said going forward with the new bike trail 'a quality of life' issue for those who reside in the city and those who visit the city. He thanked all those who were part of the project including the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission (NIRPC), engineers and city officials. 'We can't do this ourselves. It takes a partnership and team effort,' Land said. The city was awarded a grant for the extension through the State of Indiana's Next Level Trails Program. 'We are looking forward to completing this part of the trail,' he said. Land also thanked veterans, including those from the American Legion who came to the event and were asked to participate in the ceremonial shoveling of dirt to start the project. 'It means a lot that you are here backing us up,' he said. Mitch Barloga, the active transportation planner for NIRPC, called the bike trail 'a great step forward going through the heart of an older historic city.' Barloga spoke of the many years that go into the start and finish with initial planning for this project going back some 25 years. 'I'm excited to say the least,' Barloga said. Barloga said he was also honored to bring honor to those who served. 'We believe we have the first trail dedicated to veterans,' he said. The first phase of the Veterans Memorial Bike Trail was completed in 2021. The entire trail will ultimately be 2.84 miles and will connect to both the Pennsy Greenway and the Erie Lackawanna bike trails. The trail generally follows the former Pennsylvania Railroad Corridor.