Title: FHWA NEPA Principles and Process
1FHWA NEPA Principles and Process
- Susan Haupt
- Oregon Department of Transportation
2Objectives
- Provide brief introduction to NEPA
- Provide a general overview of the FHWA NEPA
Classes of Actions, associated processes,
triggers, and documentation requirements
3What is NEPA?
- National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA)
- Primary purpose
- Ensure consideration of environmental impacts
prior to taking action - prevent or eliminate damage to the environment,
- stimulate the health and welfare of man,
- enrich understanding of natural resources
important to the nation
4What does NEPA require?
- NEPA requires a prescribed process, including
public involvement and scientific analysis in
order to reach an environmentally informed
decision. - NEPA requires full disclosure about major actions
taken by Federal agencies, including alternatives
to the actions, impacts, and possible mitigation.
5When does NEPA apply?
- NEPA applies to the actions of Federal Agencies
- What constitutes a Federal action?
- Federal Funding (full or partial)
- Federal Permit
- Federal Approval
- Federal Land (impact to or use of)
6 FHWA NEPA Nexus
- FHWA funds (entire or partial, even 1.00!)
- FHWA approval
- Where there is a FHWA nexus, the FHWA NEPA
process will be followed. - Note It is generally ODOT practice to implement
FHWA NEPA process on projects for which federal
funds may be identified or pursued in the future.
However, if there is no FHWA nexus, then FHWA
programmatic agreements do not apply to the
action!
7Multiple Federal Agencies Involved
- Potential lead agencies shall determine which
agency shall be the lead agency and which shall
be cooperating agencies. (40 CFR 1501.5) - Federal, state, or local agencies may act as
joint lead agencies to prepare an Environmental
Document. (40 CFR 1501.5) - Lead (and joint lead) agencies identify and
invite other agencies to be cooperating and/or
participating (SAFETEA-LU 6002)
8Lead and Cooperating Agencies
- Lead agencies (at least one Federal)
- Sponsoring agency
- Cooperating agencies may be
- Federal agencies with jurisdiction by law
(mandatory) or special expertise (optional) - State and local agencies
- Federally recognized Tribes
40 CFR 1508.5 1508.16
9SAFETEA-LU 6002
- Establishes an environmental review process for
transportation projects developed as
Environmental Impact Statements. - Creates a new category of involvement in the
environmental review process termed
participating agency
10Participating Agencies
- Federal, state, tribal, regional, and local
government agencies that may have an interest in
the project should be invited to serve as
participating agencies - Participate in the development of
- Project Coordination Plan
- Purpose and need statement
- Range of alternatives
- Methodologies and level of detail required for
the analysis of the alternatives (SAFETEA-LU
6002)
11Potentially Interested Agencies may Include
- FEDERAL
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (ESA)
- National Marine Fisheries Service (ESA)
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Sec. 404 CWA)
- STATE
- Department of Fish and Wildlife (Oregon TE
species) - Department of State Lands (Removal Fill Law)
- Department of Environmental Quality (NPDES)
- State Historic Preservation Office (Sec. 106)
- Department of Land Conservation and Development
(Statewide planning goals) - LOCAL GOVERNMENT
- TRIBES
12FHWA Regulations
- Environmental investigations, reviews, and
consultations be coordinated as a single process - Compliance with all applicable requirements be
reflected in the environmental document - Alternatives be evaluated and decisions be made
in the best overall public interest considering
23 CFR 771.105 Policy
13Subject Areas Considered
- Biological Resources
- Wetlands
- Water Quality
- Archaeological Resources
- Historic Properties
- Land Use
- Socioeconomics
- Parks and Recreation
- Air Quality
- Hazardous Materials
- Floodplains
- Hydraulics
- Geology and Soils
- Noise
- Energy
- Right of Way
- Traffic
- Visual
14FHWA NEPA Process Umbrella
- Endangered Species Act Section 7
- Civil Rights Act
- Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice)
- Section 4(f) of USDOT Act (49 USC 303) - Parks,
recreation, etc - Clean Air Act
- Safe Water Drinking Act
- Clean Water Act 404(b)(1)
- Farmland Protection Policy Act
- National Historic Preservation Act
- Floodplains
- Economic, Social, and Environmental Effects (23
USC 109(h)) analysis - Public involvement, interagency coordination
- Tribal consultation
- Location, design, and engineering
- Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 - Noise Standards
- Public Hearing Requirements
- Americans with Disabilities Act
15FHWA NEPA
- decisions made in the best overall public
interest considering - the need for safe and efficient transportation
- social, economic, and environmental impacts
- National, state, and local environmental goals
16Project Development
System considerations, coordination, conformity,
project need,
Planning
Need, alternatives and impact analysis, public /
agency coordination, documentation (CE, EA/FONSI,
EIS/ROD)
NEPA
NEPA Approval Location, design concept acceptance
Final Design
Post NEPA Project Development Activities
Right-of-Way
Construction
17NEPA Classes of Actions
- Class 1 Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
- major federal actions significantly affecting
the quality of the human environment (40 CFR
1502.3) - Actions that significantly affect the
environment (23 CFR 771.115) - Class 2 Categorical Exclusion (CE)
- Actions which do not individually or cumulatively
have a significant effect on the human
environment and for which, therefore, neither an
EA or EIS is required. (23 CFR 771.115 (b)) - Class 3 Environmental Assessment (EA)
- Actions for which the significance of the
environmental impacts is not clearly established.
For such projects, an EA is required to determine
the appropriate environmental document
required.(23 CFR 771.115 (c))
18What Informs NEPA Classification?
- Environmental Scoping to determine
- Context and intensity of the proposed action and
potential impacts - Applicable Environmental regulations and
implications - Potential controversy
- Overall complexity
19Categorical Exclusions
- Although CE projects are exempt from the
requirement to prepare an EA or an EIS, all other
applicable environmental regulations must be
complied with, and - Documentation supporting the CE is required
- Impacts must be avoided
- Unavoidable impacts must be minimized
- Measures to mitigate unavoidable adverse impacts
must be incorporated
20Categorical Exclusion Actions
- Do not
- induce significant impacts to planned growth or
land use for the area - require the relocation of significant numbers of
people - have a significant impact on any natural,
cultural, recreational, historic or other
resource - involve significant air, noise, or water quality
impact - have significant impacts on travel patterns and
do not otherwise, either individually or
cumulatively, have any significant environmental
impacts. (23 CFR 771.117(a))
21Categorical Exclusions
- A specific list of FHWA CEs normally not
requiring further NEPA approval by FHWA is set
forth in 23 CFR 771.117(c). - When appropriately documented, additional
projects may also qualify as CEs pursuant to 23
CFR 771.117(d).
22Categorical Exclusions Actions
- Actions which normally would be classified as a
CE but involve unusual circumstances will require
appropriate environmental studies to determine if
the CE classification is proper. - (23 CFR 771.117(b))
23unusual circumstances include
- Significant environmental impacts
- Substantial controversy on environmental grounds
- Significant impact on properties protected by
Section 4(f) of the DOT Act or section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act or - Inconsistencies with any Federal, State, or local
law, requirement or administrative determination
relating to the environmental aspects of the
action. (23 CFR 771.117(b))
24Environmental Assessments
- Document
- prepared for an action where the significance
of the social, economic, and environmental
impacts are not clearly established
25Environmental Assessments
- Lead Agencies shall consult with interested
agencies on scope of the project in order to - Determine the potential impacts
- Identify alternatives and measures that might
mitigate averse impacts - Identify other environmental review and
consultation requirements that should be
conducted concurrently with the EA process - (23 CFR 771.117(b))
26Environmental Assessments
- The EA should document compliance, to the extent
possible, with all applicable environmental laws
and executive orders, or provide reasonable
assurance that such requirements can be met - If no significant impacts are identified, the
applicant shall provide a copy of the Revised EA
to FHWA and recommend a Finding of No Significant
Impact (FONSI)
27Finding of No Significant Impact
- A document which briefly presents why an action
does not have a significant impact - It must include and reference the environmental
assessment - If significant impacts are identified
- CEQ QA 37A
- 40 CFR 1508.13
28Notice of Intent (NOI)
- Announces agencys intent to prepare an EIS
- Initiates the scoping process for the EIS
- Lead agency must prepare the NOI and publish it
in the Federal Register - Should announce the intent to prepare an EIS by
appropriate means at the local level - Should include logistic information for public
and interagency scoping meetings
29Environmental Impact Statement
- Required for major federal actions
significantly affecting the quality of the human
environment - (40 CFR 1502.3)
- Actions that significantly affect the
environment (23 CFR 771.115) -
30Environmental Impact Statement
- Major Federal Action (40 CFR 1508.18) includes
actions with effects that may be major and which
are potentially subject to Federal control and
responsibility - Significantly (40 CFR 1508.27) requires
consideration of context and intensity - Affecting (40 CFR 1508.3 and 1508.8) may or will
have a direct,indirect,cumulative or beneficial
effect on - the Quality of the Human Environment (40 CFR
1508.14) the quality of the natural, physical
environment and the relationship of people with
that environment
31FHWA actions normally requiring an EIS
- New controlled access freeway.
- Highway project of four or more lanes on new
location. - New construction or extension of fixed rail
transit facilities (e.g., rapid rail, light rail,
commuter rail, auto-mated guideway transit). - New construction or extension of a separate
roadway for buses or high occupancy vehicles not
located within an existing highway facility.
32EIS Process
- Scoping, Early Coordination
- Notice of Intent (NOI)
- Prepare and circulate Draft EIS (DEIS)
- Comment period/Public Hearing
- Final EIS (FEIS)
- ROD
33Draft EIS
- The initial draft of the study documentation that
is presented to the public for review and
comment. - Shall evaluate all reasonable alternatives
considered
34 EIS Document Includes
- Summary
- Purpose and Need
- Alternatives
- Affected Social, economic and natural Environment
- Environmental Consequences
- Impacts and Mitigation
- Comments and coordination
- List of Preparers
- Index
- Appendix
35Draft EIS Process
Early coordination, NOI, scoping process
State DOT prepares DEIS with FHWA assistance
FHWA Division circulates document
Make available for public review and comment
EPA - availability notice in the Federal
Register
Other Agencies for comment
Receive Comments
45 day minimum
Public Hearing
FEIS Process
36Final EIS
- After circulation of a draft EIS and
consideration of comments received, a final EIS
shall be prepared
37Final EIS shall
- Identify the preferred alternative
- Summarize public involvement and discuss
substantive comments received on the draft EIS
and responses - Describe the mitigation measures that are to be
incorporated into the proposed action. - Document compliance, to the extent possible, with
all applicable environmental laws and Executive
Orders, or provide reasonable assurance that
their requirements can be met.
38Final EIS Process
DEIS Process
State DOT Prepares EIS
HQ Prior Concurrence (if applicable)
Legal Sufficiency Review
FHWA Division Administrator approves
EPA for notice in the Federal Register
Make available for public review
Other agencies for comment
DEIS Commentors
30 day minimum
Receive Comments
Prepare ROD
39Legal Review and Adequacy
- Adequacy is based on
- Hard Look
- Reasonableness
- Not arbitrary and capricious
- Full disclosure
40Record of Decision
- Incorporate by reference and cross reference the
FEIS - Decision - identify selected alternative
- Alternatives considered
- Discuss values considered and basis of decision
- Identify environmentally preferred
alternative(s)
40 CFR 1506.9 23 CFR 771.125(g)
41Record of Decision
- Section 4(f) - summarize basis of approval
- Measures to minimize harm - describe mitigation
- Monitoring or enforcement program included
- Comments on FEIS - substantive comments and
responses
40 CFR 1506.9 23 CFR 771.125(g)
42NEPA Shelf Life
- Before you take further action on a draft or
final environmental document or NEPA decision, - you should coordinate with your local liaison and
FHWA to - ensure that the documentation you have is still
valid and can be built upon, and that you will - you will not be required to pursue additional
analysis before taking further action.
43Questions?
- Susan Haupt (541) 388-6021
- susan.haupt_at_odot.state.or.us