The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) was perhaps the most significant and far-reaching of numerous statutes enacted during the 1970s, a period that some have called the "Environmental Revolution" in American politics and legislation. Most importantly, NEPA required the preparation of an environmental impact statement (EIS) of the environmental effects of significant federal actions. In this commentary, RFF Visiting Scholar Lynn Scarlett describes the difficult and as-yet unfinished evolution of the EIS requirement from a contentious process toward one characterized by much more meaningful public participation as well as more collaborative interaction among interested parties.
Forty years ago, the U.S. Congress enacted the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). In the intervening years, the act has become the bedrock for evaluating environmental and other social and economic impacts of federal actions. Equally significant, NEPA lays out the central architecture for agency collaboration, cooperation, and public participation in evaluating federal actions. A 1997 report by the Council of Environmental Quality (CEQ; see Further Reading) called this cooperative framework the act’s “most enduring legacy.” In particular, the NEPA process contains three elements essential to its role in facilitating collaboration: 1) public information and input; 2) interagency coordination; and 3) interdisciplinary place-based approaches to decisionmaking. Despite these requirements, achieving robust public participation and collaborative engagement has not been easy. For over four decades, critics have pointed to missed opportunities and, sometimes, to an emphasis on procedural fidelity rather than meaningful collaboration.
The 1997 CEQ report was the first of four key steps in this trajectory. Much of the report focused on streamlining processes. Implicit in the streamlining was, however, greater coordination, including with state agencies, where relevant. The report also examined ways to breathe life into NEPA as a process for strategic planning, including use of ecosystem-based regional planning.
Additionally, the report directly addressed the issue of coordination, proposing that agencies coordinate and share information and planning responsibilities with federal and other agencies. The 1997 report set the stage for strengthening NEPA collaborative processes and was, in many ways, a precursor to subsequent actions by the Bush administration.
Further Reading Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). 1997. The National Environmental Policy Act: A Study of Its Effectiveness After Twenty-Five Years. Washington, DC: CEQ. ———. 2007. Collaboration in NEPA: A Handbook for NEPA Practitioners. Revised Draft, March 16. Washington, DC: CEQ. McKinney, Matt, Lynn Scarlett, and Dan Kemmis. 2010. Large Landscape Conservation: A Strategic Framework for Policy and Action. Cambridge, Mass.: Lincoln Institute. NEPA Task Force. 2004. Modernizing NEPA Implementation. http://ceq.hss.doe.gov/ntf/report/index.html. National Environmental Conflict Resolution Advisory Committee. 2004. National ECR Advisory Report (NEPA Report). http://www.ecr.gov/Resources/NationalECRAdvisoryReportIntro.aspx |