CCSFS

Falcon 9’s flight path as it roared into space this evening from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. This was the view from Cocoa Beach.
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

SpaceX placed another 23 Starlink satellites in orbit this evening after the company launched a Falcon 9 from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Liftoff was at 10:37 PM EDT.

Around 8.5 minutes after liftoff, the booster used tonight—B1067—completed its nineteenth mission successfully when it touched down safely on the Automated Spaceport Drone Ship (ASDS) ‘‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’ droneship, which was stationed in the Atlantic Ocean”’ to capture the booster after it flew downrange towards its intended orbit.

Spectators taking in the launch from near Lori Wilson Park in Cocoa Beach.
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Booster: B1067

B0167 successfully completed its nineteenth mission tonight and landed safely aboard ASDS ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’ which was stationed near the Bahamas in the Atlantic Ocean. The droneship will now return to Port Canaveral, where B1067 will be offloaded and transported to SpaceX’s Hangar X at Kennedy Space Center, where it will begin the refurbishment process prior to its next flight.

Booster 1067As of May 2, 2024
Flight NumberMissionDate
1CRS-22June 21, 2021
2NASA Crew-3November 11, 2021
3Türksat 5BDecember 19, 2021
4NASA Crew-4April 27, 2022
5CRS-25July 14, 2022
6Starlink 4-34September 19, 2022
7Hotbird 13GNovember 3, 2022
8O3b mPOWER 1 & 2December 16, 2022
9Starlink 5-2January 26, 2023
10Starlink 5-5March 24, 2023
11Starlink 5-9May 14, 2023
12Satria-1June 18, 2023
13Starlink 6-10August 17, 2023
14Starlink 6-22October 13, 2023
15Starlink 6-29November 22, 2023
16Starlink 6-35January 7, 2024
17HTS 113BTFebruary 20, 2024
18Starlink 6-45March 31, 2024
19Starlink 6-55May 2, 2024
Booster B1067’s record as of May 2, 2024
About 15-20 seconds before the Main Engine Cutoff, the plume Falcon 9’s Merlin engines illuminated the rocket’s body.
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Next Launch

SpaceX plans to launch more Starlink satellites aboard a Falcon 9 from Kennedy Space Center on Monday, May 6th. This is several hours prior to the planned launch of the Starliner Crewed Flight Test mission, which is scheduled for 10:34 PM EDT.

  • Date: NET May 6, 2024
  • Organization: SpaceX
  • Mission: Starlink 6-56
  • Rocket: Falcon 9
  • Launch Site: LC-39A
  • Launch Window: 11:34 AM – 03:34 PM EDT
  • Payload: 23 communications satellites

Keep in mind that launch dates and times change often. Launch attempts can be scrubbed anytime due to weather, technical reasons, or range conditions.

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Representative SpaceX Falcon 9 launch from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Another day, another Starlink launch from SpaceX, or so it seems lately. The company is regularly launching new batches of of the Internet service providing satellites, with a new set going up every few days on the average.

Averages can be a bit deceiving, of course, as is the case today: there was a Starlink launch late yesterday afternoon from Pad LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center, and today, just over twenty-four hours later, SpaceX is planning to send another 23 satellites to orbit from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. The launch window opens at 6:40 PM EDT and runs to 11:11 PM.

Today’s launch will be the 18th launch from SLC-40 this year, the 41st of the year overall from SpaceX, and could mark the 300th Falcon family booster landing. The pace and of course the number of booster landings is remarkable, and the company is making orbital spaceflight seem routine. It never is, of course, and the fact that SpaceX is making it seem as “easy” as they are testifies to their hard work and dedication.

Weather

As they did yesterday, the 45th Weather Squadron has forecasted a 10% Probability of Violation, meaning there is a 90% chance of acceptable weather during the launch window. Their primary concern is the Thick Clouds rule.

Trajectory

Southeast. If you are looking towards the ocean, the rocket will appear to travel left to right as it heads towards space.

Landing

Landing is planned to be on the autonomous spaceport drone ship (ASDS) ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’ (ASOG) which is stationed in the Atlantic Ocean northeast of the Bahamas.

After the landing, ASOG will return to Port Canaveral with the booster. It will then be returned to SpaceX’s Hangar X facility on Roberts Road inside Kennedy Space Center for inspection, refurbishment and preparation for its next mission.

Booster: B1080

SpaceX stated on their website that “This is the seventh flight for the first stage booster supporting this mission, which previously launched ESA Euclid, Ax-2, Ax-3, CRS-30, and two Starlink missions.”

That’s Booster B1080. It’s last flight was 28 days ago, on March 21st when it launched CRS-30 to the International Space Station.

Booster B1080 launches Axiom 3, Jannuary 18, 2024
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT
Booster B1080
Flight NumberMissionDate
1Axiom-2May 21, 2023
2EuclidJuly 1, 2023
3Starlink 6-11August 27 2023
4Starlink 6-24October 22, 2023
5Axiom-3January 18, 2024
6CRS-30March 21, 2024
Booster B1080 Flight Record as of March 21, 2024

Online Viewing

A live webcast of this mission will begin on SpaceX’s X account feed about five minutes prior to liftoff. 
Watch live on X.

SpaceX’s official web page has links to live coverage as well as up-to-date planned launch times. Starlink 6-52 Mission Page.

Spaceflight Now will begin its live launch feed one hour prior to liftoff.
SFN on Youtube.

Watching In Person

This evening’s planned launch is from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral, which means that the best direct views of liftoff are: the Banana River Bridge on FL-528 W near Port Canaveral, or the southern parks on US-1 / S. Washington Avenue in Titusville. Kennedy Point Park and Rotary Riverview Park (among others) are your best bets for free viewing sites.

If you would like to enjoy food and drinks during the launch, you have several options in the Titusville area:

  • Shiloh’s Steak and Seafood (3665 S Washington Ave, Titusville, FL 32780)
    • Casual fine dining, with an outdoor deck overlooking the Indian River and launch pads beyond that.
  • New York New York (5401 Riveredge Dr, Titusville, FL 32780)
    • A local’s go-to for a casual tiki bar on the riverfront without a lot of fuss, but with a very friendly staff. Their kitchen closes at 6:30 PM EDT, so if you’d like to have dinner, get there before 6 PM or so.
  • The Space Bar (6245 Riverfront Center Boulevard, Titusville, FL 32780)
    • On top of the Courtyard by Marriott just off of Kennedy Parkway, the Space Bar has an elevated view of the launch pad as well as food and drinks available. TSB is run by the same company that operates the Kennedy Space Center Visitors Center and is across the bridge from KSCVC.

Cocoa Beach, Cocoa Beach PierJetty Park Pier will have indirect views, meaning that liftoff will not be visible, but after the rocket clears the pad and any ground obstructions, you will be able to see Falcon 9 ascending clearly assuming there are no clouds between you and the rocket. Jetty Park does charge admission and they do not accept cash — visit their web site to purchase an entry pass before you go.

Being that the launch is in the early evening, if you plan to attend in person, don’t forget mosquito spray. Also be prepared for potential changes in the launch schedule, and keep up by monitoring the live stream links mentioned above.

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Booster B1062’s 20th Ascent Path
Seen from FL 528W in Cape Canaveral. Fishermen were lighting the edges of the river and enjoying the weather as much as the crowd that gathered there to watch the liftoff.
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 tonight from Pad SLC-40 at Cape CAnaveral Space Force Station and sent another twenty-three Starlink satellites to orbit. Liftoff occurred at 09:22 PM EDT on a crisp, clear spring evening on the Space Coast.

Booster B1069 nears Main Engine Cutoff April 12, 2024
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Crowds were heavier than normal along the usual spectator spots, and no one left disappointed — long after staging and for almost seven minutes the second stage could be seen rising and building orbital speed.

As one man said to someone beside me, “Enjoy this, [it] won’t be long until the air is thick and hot as soup.” He’s right. If anything, Friday’s weather was one of the last of Florida spring weather: cool, but not cold with pinpoint stars and crescent moon lighting the sky. It won’t be long until humidity rises and the nightly costal front storms will be a concern for mission managers and launch spectators alike.

Falcon 9 rising: Starlink 6-49 in flight on April 12, 2024
Photo: Ed Cordero, Florida Media Now

Booster Touches Down Safely Near Bahamas

About eight and a half minutes after liftoff, Booster B1062 touched down safely on SpaceX’s A Shortfall of Gravitas automated droneship located offshore in the Atlantic Ocean near the Bahamas, completing its 20th mission safely.

After returning to Port Canaveral several days from now, B1062 will be returned to SpaceX’s facilities at Hangar X at Kennedy Space Center, where it will be inspected, refurbished, and presumably prepared for its next flight. If it reaches the launch pad, it will be for the 21st time.

Booster B1062 Record

FlightMissionDate
1GPS III SV04
Sacagawea
11/05/2020
2GPS III SV05
Neil Armstrong
06/17/2021
3Inspiration 409/16/2021
4Starlink 4-501/06/2022
5Axiom-104/08/2022
6Starlink 4-1604/29/2022
7Nilesat-30106/08/2022
8Starlink 4-2507/24/2022
9Starlink 4-2708/19/2022
10Starlink 4-3610/20/2022
11Starlink 5-112/28/2022
12Starlink 5-402/12/2023
13OneWeb 1703/09/2023
14ArabSat 7B05/27/2023
15Starlink 6-707/28/2023
16Starlink 6-2310/18/2023
17Starlink 6-3011/28/2023
18Starlink 6-3801/29/2024
19Starlink 6-4403/15/2024
20Starlink 6-4904/12/2024
Booster 1062 flight record as of April 12, 2024

Payload

Tonight’s mission delivered 23 Starlink satellites to join other Group 6 satellites.

Next Launch

  • Date: NET April 17, 2024
  • Organization: SpaceX
  • Mission: Starlink 6-51
  • Rocket: Falcon 9
  • Launch Site: SLC -40, Cape Canaveral Space Force Station
  • Launch Time: 05:24 PM – 09:55 PM EDT (Tentative and subject to change)
  • Payload: 23 Starink Satellites

Keep in mind that launch dates and times change often. Launch attempts can be scrubbed at any time due to weather, technical reasons or range conditions.

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Booster B1062 lifts the OneWeb 17 Mission in 2023
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Starlink launches are almost as routine as airline flights these days, as SpaceX has had regular service from the Cape and Vandenberg Space Force Base in order to add to their ever-growing constellation of low-Earth orbit based communications satellites. Every few days, there’s another Starlink mission.

Key to the regular pace of their launches is the reuseability of the company’s Falcon 9 rockets. While the second stage is new for each flight, the fairings and of course the booster used for each launch is reused with regularity, greatly reducing the costs of payload delivery. This has not only allowed SpaceX to drastically reduce its cost through reducing the capital expenditure of building an entirely new rocket for each launch, its regular rotation of several boosters in its stable has allowed them to maintain a torrid pace where over 6,000 Starlink satellites have been placed in orbit by Falcon 9 rockets.

SpaceX has flown four boosters nineteen times so far: B1058, which was retired after a post-recovery incident led to the spacecraft toppling at sea and being damaged; B1060, now being refurbished prior to its next flight; B1061, which is awaiting flight assignment, and B1062, which is now being prepared for flight NET Friday for the Starlink 6-49 mission. Liftoff is planned to happen tomorrow, April 12th, between 9:22 PM and 12:48 AM EDT on April 13th.

B0162 Has Earned Its Soot

On their website, SpaceX confirmed this information: “This will be the 20th flight for the first stage booster supporting this mission, which previously launched GPS III Space Vehicle 04, GPS III Space Vehicle 05, Inspiration4, Ax-1, Nilesat 301, OneWeb Launch 17, ARABSAT BADR-8, and 12 Starlink missions. Following stage separation, the first stage will land on the A Shortfall of Gravitas droneship, which will be stationed in the Atlantic Ocean.”

While the company did not specifically mention B1062, as you can see from its flight record below, SpaceX has identified B1062 will be the first to get to 20 launches.

Booster B1062 lofting Starlink 6-23 towards orbit in 2023
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Booster B1062 Record

B1062 was first used for a GPS launch in 2020, and its last launch was in March of this year when it launched Starlink 6-44. Its most notable missions so far are Inspiration 4 and Axiom-1, both of which were crewed. Perhaps almost as notable will be the 20th flight, which could come as soon as tomorrow evening.

FlightMissionDate
1GPS III SV04
Sacagawea
11/05/2020
2GPS III SV05
Neil Armstrong
06/17/2021
3Inspiration 409/16/2021
4Starlink 4-501/06/2022
5Axiom-104/08/2022
6Starlink 4-1604/29/2022
7Nilesat-30106/08/2022
8Starlink 4-2507/24/2022
9Starlink 4-2708/19/2022
10Starlink 4-3610/20/2022
11Starlink 5-112/28/2022
12Starlink 5-402/12/2023
13OneWeb 1703/09/2023
14ArabSat 7B05/27/2023
15Starlink 6-707/28/2023
16Starlink 6-2310/18/2023
17Starlink 6-3011/28/2023
18Starlink 6-3801/29/2024
19Starlink 6-4403/15/2024
Booster 1062 flight record as of March 15, 2024
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SpaceX / Eutelsat 36 lifts off from LC-39A at KSC. This was the view from Playalinda Beach near Wilson’s Corner in Brevard County
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

SpaceX launched two Falcon 9 rockets to orbit Saturday: first, at 5:52 PM EDT Eutelsat 36D from LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center, then at 9:30 PM, Starlink 6-45 from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station — a three-hour, thirty-minute gap between launches. Not one to rest on their laurels, the company also has slated another Starlink launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California between 11:54 PM and 2:30 AM EDT later on this evening.

EUTEL 36D Mission

The Eutelsat mission opened today’s launches at 5:52 PM EDT on a day that Florida tourist boards dream of: a warm sunny day with light winds that brought crowds to the beaches and riverfront not only to enjoy seeing a launch but also simply enjoy the nearly perfect weather.

Falcon 9 created a “smoke ring” around the time it was reaching MAX-Q this afternoon.
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

Tourists and locals lined not only the usual spectator spots on US-1 in Titusville, but also with an at-capacity Playalinda Beach on Cape Canaveral National Seashore, where lines to enter were long and parking lots were eventually full. Those that made into Playalinda enjoyed a picture-perfect launch at the start of the launch window, with Falcon 9 climbing into a blue sky.

The payload was a telecommunications satellite, EUTELSAT 36D, which will replace the company’s EUTELSAT 36B at 36° East. According to Eutelsat, “36° East is a key orbital slot for broadcasters. Home to two powerful satellites, EUTELSAT 36B and EUTELSAT 36C, together they support the broadcast business of several major anchor customers.” Eutelsat 36D will eventually replace the 36B satellite, and will “[A]ssure all the main legacy missions of EUTELSAT 36B, with enhancements to coverage areas and performance.”

A boy sits on his father’s shoulders and watches Falcon 9 ascending from Pad LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center on March 30. 2024.
Photo: Charles Boyer / Talk of Titusville

EUTELSAT 36D Booster

SpaceX used Booster B1076 for the mission, which successfully completed its twelfth flight after safely touching down aboard the Automated Spaceport Drone Ship ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’ which was stationed in the Atlantic Ocean. Previously, B1076 had supported the NASA CRS-26 ISS resupply mission, OneWeb Launch 16, Intelsat IS-40e, O3b mPOWER, Ovzon 3, and six Starlink missions.

Starlink 6-45 Mission

Later Saturday evening, SpaceX sent another batch of 23 Starlink v2 Mini satellites to orbit, adding to the company’s ever-growing Starlink constellation used to provide global Internet connectivity. The launch was at 9:30 PM EDT, and was visible over much of Florida, with people as far as Crystal River, which is located about 90 minutes north of Tampa near the Gulf of Mexico.

Starlink 6-45 rising towards orbit as seen from the west coast of Florida near Spring Hill.
Photo: Mark Stone, Florida Media Now
Starlink 6-45 rising towards orbit as seen from the west coast of Florida near Spring Hill.
Photo: Mark Stone, Florida Media Now

Starlink 6-45 Booster

For that mission, SpaceX used Booster B1067 for the18th time. Previously launched CRS-22, Crew-3, Turksat 5B, Crew-4, CRS-25, Eutelsat HOTBIRD 13G, mPOWER-a, PSN SATRIA, Telkomsat Merah Putih 2 and now has completed nine Starlink missions. It safely touched down on ASDS ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’ about eight and one-half minutes after launching.

Next Launch

SpaceX will launch another tranche of Starlink satellites on Friday, April 5th from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on the Starlink 6-47 mission.

The launch window for this mission has not been announced by the company, but if it follows the bulk of other Group 6 Starlink missions, launch time will be sometime in the evening. Stay tuned to Talk of Titusville for a mission preview later this week as more information becomes available.

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Cargo Dragon on the launch pad at SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station with the Crew Access Arm attached.
Photo: SpaceX

SpaceX will launch its thirtieth resupply mission to the International Space Station on Thursday from Pad SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. Launch time is set for 4:55 PM EDT in an instantaneous window.

This is an RTLS (Return To Launch Site) mission, meaning Falcon 9 will return and land at LZ-1 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. A sonic boom heard across the Space Coast region will herald the arrival of the booster.

This launch will be the first Cargo Dragon 2 spacecraft from SLC-40 and will be the first mission-use of the newly installed Crew Access Arm on the SLC-40 launch tower. 

The Cargo Dragon spacecraft is planned to arrive at ISS at 7:30 AM EDT on Saturday, where it will autonomously dock to Station’s Harmony module on the zenith port.

After docking, the spacecraft is expected to spend about a month attached to ISS before it returns to Earth off the coast of Florida.

Weather

According to the 45th Weather Squadron, the Probability of Violation is 10%, meaning there is a 90% chance of acceptable weather. Prime concerns are the Thick Cloud Layers Rule, Cumulus Cloud Rule.

Trajectory

Northeast, along the orbital inclination of the International Space Station.

Booster

SpaceX has not yet announced which Falcon 9 booster it is using for this launch.

Dragon

Crew Dragon 2
Serial NumberC209
DestinationInternational Space Station
Flights3

Online Viewing

Official Webcast on YouTube: Click Here

  • 4:35 p.m. – Launch coverage begins
  • 4:55 p.m. – Launch

SpaceX generally provides live launch coverage starting fifteen minutes prior to launch on their account on the X platform. Click here

Spaceflight Now will provide launch coverage one hour prior to liftoff on their YouTube channel. Click here

In Person Viewing

Tomorrow’s launch is from SLC-40 at Cape Canaveral, which means that the best direct views of liftoff are at either the Banana River Bridge on FL-528 W near Port Canaveral, or the southern parks on US-1 / S. Washington Avenue in Titusville. The Banana River Bridge will offer both a direct view of the launch pad as well as an excellent view of the returning booster.

Jetty Park in Port Canaveral has good views, but viewers will not be able to see the launch pad directly. Once Falcon 9 rises over the sand berm on the north side of the Port’s inlet, however, an excellent view of the rocket rising is available. Jetty Park is also an excellent spot to see the booster landing.

Important Note: Jetty Park has an entry fee and requires advance purchase of a pass.  CLICK HERE to purchase parking passes.

The ascending rocket will also be visible on the beaches after liftoff when Falcon 9 clears any obstructions.

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SpaceX Starship
Photo: SpaceX

Today, the US Space Force (along with the Department of the Air Force) held the third of three in-person meetings in Cape Canaveral to provide information about a Proposed Action that would ultimately see SpaceX’s Starship launch and land at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

At these meetings, the public was able to ask public affairs officials about the ramifications of SpaceX using launch pad SLC-37 or building a new launch complex, SLC-50, between current pads SLC-37 and SLC-40 on the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Either of those facilities that could be used for Starship operations if they are chosen and later constructed.

Public Information Session at The Radisson today in Cape Canaveral
Photo: Charles Boyer / ToT

Officials from the Department of the Air Force, US Space Force, the Federal Aviation Administration, US Coast Guard, NASA, and the US Coast Guard were present today to answer questions from a large number of members of the public interested in learning more about the DAF / SpaceX proposed action. Visitors could also submit their comments in person, which many folks took the time to do in the past three days.

At today’s meeting in Cape Canaveral

Online Meeting Coming Soon

For those who could not attend the information sessions in Cocoa, Titusville or Cape Canaveral in person, there is one remaining meeting, this time online:

March 12 6:00 PM EDT: at spaceforcestarshipeis.com, under “Public Meetings.”

A registration link has not yet been posted, and is labeled as “Coming Soon.” It will be activated closer to the date of the meeting.

What’s An EIS Again?

An Environmental Impact Study takes a look at multiple factors that could be affected by a project like a re-engineered or new launch pad at Cape Canaveral.

  • Those factors include:
  • Airspace and maritime resources
  • Air quality
  • Climate change
  • Noise
  • Cultural resources
  • Biological resources
  • Water resources
  • Hazardous materials and wastes
  • Land use
  • Infrastructure and utilities
  • Geology
  • Socioeconomics
  • Environmental justice
  • Safety and occupational health
  • Section 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act of 1966

The American Bar Association explains it this way:

“[An] environmental impact statement (EIS) is a government document that outlines the impact of a proposed project on its surrounding environment. In the United States, these statements are mandated by federal law for certain projects. Environmental impact statements are meant to inform the work and decisions of policymakers and community leaders.

“In the United States at the federal level, an EIS is a report mandated by the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), to assess the potential impact of actions “significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.” This requirement under NEPA does not prohibit harm to the environment, but rather requires advanced identification and disclosure of harm.”

American Bar Association

New: The Role of the FAA

The Federal Aviation Administration is responsible for commercial spaceflight as well as its traditional roles in aircraft such as private planes, and commercial airlines, among others. One thing that was not included in the EIS public handouts was specifically what their role is in terms of Starship launches from the Cape:

The role of the Federal Aviation Administration in Starship potentially flying from Cape Canaveral was illustrated in a display at the EIS Public Meeting in Cape Canaveral on March 7, 2024.

Notable: the Environmental Impact Statement will fulfill the FAA’s obligation for an environmental review, and any mitigations deemed necessary will need to be completed in order for the FAA to issue SpaceX a launch license (after the pad is constructed.)

In-Depth Looks

Below are two links that can provide a great deal of information about the Proposed Action. First, the official site for the EIS has a great deal of information, and in particular, a PDF file of the information displayed at the in-person meetings can be downloaded. The second is our informational article published earlier this month. In it, Talk of Titusville gives additional information regarding Starship, Starship’s propellant and the risk of pollution from them as well as a look at the Proposed Actions.

Official Site: Starship-Super Heavy Operations At Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Environmental Impact Statement

Talk of Titusville: The US Air Force Is Studying Space Coast Launch Pads For SpaceX Starship

Timeline:

After the final Public Meeting on March 12, a relatively quiet period will follow where studies will be conducted and a draft Environmental Impact Statement is created.

After next week, work will be done behind the scenes where many of the factors that affect the project are studied, public sentiment from the meetings will be gauged and a draft EIS released by the end of the year.

Then, in December of this year, that Draft Environmental Statement will be publicly released, and a Public Hearing will be conducted. Public comments on the Draft EIS will be solicited, and finally, in the summer of 2025, the preferred altenative will be identified along with the release of the Final EIS.

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